mpaton2004 wrote:
But where is the evidence? Injury crashes were almost 25% higher in the era of TrafPol.
I would suggest that going back to _entirely_ TrafPol will increase the incidence of reckless and aggressive driving as it'd be easier to get away with. A speed camera is always there, a Traffic Policeman can not be.
We need a combination of both. More Traffic Police patrolling the heavily used routes, and safety cameras (preferably SPECS to remove the stop/start effect) on roads which have a lower frequency of traffic or are difficult/impractical to patrol (most rural roads) coupled with speed limits set at the median speed for the roads in question.
Have your local SCP had a recent leafleting raid in your area?

This is exactly the sort of stuff THEY habitually come out with!
OK, let's just for the minute, as you suggest, conveniently IGNORE the "K" statistics shall we? After all, that's what my local SCP does - having just seen a substantial INCREASE in "K"s after nearly 4 years of their activities.
It best suits the purpose of anyone trying to defend the SCPs' lamentable record to consider "K"s and "SIs" together. For a start, there will always be far more "SI"s than "Ks". That will help mask the number of deaths quite nicely. Having done that, the next thing to do would be to make sure that whatever you did, you did NOT allow properly qualified medical personnel to have anything to do with the "SI" statistics!
I've often wondered why, after all it's spouting about "joined-up-government" that this government doesn't use the hospital casualty departments' own figures for "SI"s. These already exist and have done so for years. My wife works in a hospital. On arrival at any casualty department, a road traffic accident victim is "trauma-scored". The scoring system is well established and internationally recognised. It is carried out by medics in the hospital with all the necessary diagnostic equipment at their fingertips. So what do the SCPs do? They completely ignore it and ask the police attending the scene to do it instead.
They then have some bizarre system of classifying a "serious" injury that I've never quite been able to fathom. It seems to involve whether or not any bones have been broken (like you can always tell at the scene of the accident with your police-issue X-ray eyes!) and whether or not an overnight stay in hospital is required. Now I don’t know about your local hospital but my wife’s is certainly under immense pressure to “process” patients (sorry, I think we now have to call them “clients” or something daft!) faster and faster. Reduce the number that are kept in overnight for “observation” and “BINGO!”, without actually doing a thing to improve road safety, the SCPs’ figures start to improve!
It was this more than any other single factor that started me questioning the whole idea of camera-enforcement. I couldn't understand why "SI"s improved and "K"s didn't. I expect you’ve probably seen or heard tell of the recent (last summer) article in the British Medical Journal on precisely this topic? It was exactly what I’m on about. Someone looked at the “SI” figures for road traffic accidents over the period that cameras have been about and found that if you use the hospital figures, the number hasn’t really changed at all (bit like the “K”s really)!
Finally, I can’t quite see how one minute, you can be talking about the general calming influence that cameras have on traffic speed and the next, you say “preferably SPECS” to get rid of the speeding-up effect that happens immediately after a fixed camera? That sounds like wanting to have your cake and eat it if you’ll forgive me!