Another article here - Wilts & Swindle this time. Note the carefully picked examples of what £42,000
could buy.
http://www.thisiswiltshire.co.uk/displa ... _fines.php
Government set to pocket speed fines
By Daniel Knowles
ROAD safety funding is to drop across Swindon and Wiltshire over the next four years at the same time the Government creams off almost £1m in fines.
In a letter sent to Swindon Council, the Department of Transport says it will be giving the borough £493,909 in the 2007-08 financial year in a revamp of road safety funding.
At the moment, the Swindon and Wiltshire Road Safety Camera Partnership takes the camera running costs from fines before sending the rest on the Government.
Under the changes, the partnership will be given an annual grant and the fines go direct to the Government.
But that grant falls short of what is raised in fines - meaning the Government is taking off close to £1m from Swindon and county motorists.
At the same time, the road safety grant is expected to drop by £42,000 from £493,000 to £451,000 by 2010-11.
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Swindon Council cabinet member for transport, Coun Peter Greenhalgh, has criticised the cuts, saying it is another indirect tax rip-off.
The £42,000 being cut would pay for 10 flashing warning signs or another traffic education officer.
It would also pay for five zebra crossings, or more than 25 anti-slip strips on residential roads.
"It's another example of Swindon being short changed," Coun Greenhalgh (Con, Freshbrook and Grange Park) said.
"We take road safety very seriously but the Government seem to be taking the revenue.
"In 2004-05 they raised in £3m fines. They are taking £800,000 off the top.
"There are no other grants."
The latest figures released by the Government show 50,901 drivers were caught speeding in the year to March 2005, raising £3.05m in fines.
The Department of Transport says the new funding arrangements are fairer and give local councils more flexibility.
"The Road Safety Grant is a new funding mechanism to help local authorities improve road safety," a spokeswoman for the department said.
"For the first time, it allows local authorities to work with a set amount of funding that can be used on any measure they consider necessary.
"The grant will total £110m a year for its first two years, and has been allocated to individual authorities based on their local road safety need."
Swindon and Wiltshire Road Safety Camera Partnership has eight fixed cameras and 105 mobile camera sites.
Partnership manager Dave Frampton said the new funding structure removed any suspicion that councils got more money the more fines they issued.
He said the partnership was interested in reducing injuries and road deaths, not raising money.