Firstly - sincere condolences on your loss. A cousin. We do know exactly what it does feel like to lose someone in a crash. You know the history of our family anyway.
But there is much more to simply closing a road down. Other people stuck in that queue may have very urgent, genuine and very reasoned logical matters which affect their lives, quality of life as well - and quite naturally - they just want to get back home or to work.
handy wrote:
smeggy wrote:
handy wrote:
As per my families case (referenced above), it did cause distress when we heard people whining about being delayed or having to choose a different route.
I assume you are referring to: “
Closing the M25 for 10 hours on a busy bank holiday wasn't necessary”. PS
clarifiedthis later on (perhaps the PR should have been clearer?).
That was one small aside buried within an otherwise focussed PR. That hardly warranted the level of your response; besides,
that wasn’t your original point.Nope, your assumption is wrong. Nearly 10 years ago, my cousin was killed (manslaughter, as the court found afterwards) by a professional driver who chose which aspects of the law he wanted to adhere to (probably using his skill and judgement to determine what was safe). The crash was a serious one, on a major cross-country artery, and the road was closed for such a long time that the delays made it onto national news.
Then this would have met the conditions which IG posted up - as in the standard of driving involved a real risk of death and that this standard was so bad in each circumstance possible - that in the eyes of a jury and court - it was downright criminally negligent or used as an instrument of attack. (The legal bods in the family cited me two case laws which set these as precedent - both are 1994/1997 respectively.)
This would have been an extraordinary incident - like the freak one which closed off a northern motorway for several hours when that chap hit Wildy with extreme force.
I think police will know very early on whether or not they are looking at complicated which needs a deep sweep of the entire area or a routine shunt. In the case of the texting lorry driver - they even drove a similar lorry down that road to check out his views of the queues ahead. To my mind - that warranted a "manslaughter" charge. As he had literally driven over the little hatchback as it the lorry were a tank - then a road closure whilst they investigated the wreckage at the scene and took witness statements from the drivers in that queue and approaching that queue at the time would be well justified.
As I recall the police officer on Traffic Cop quite rightly booked the muppet who tried to use the hard shoulder in atttempt to get to work but failed to do likewise to the other impatient copying twazak who nipped back into L1. (Had I been in L1 at the time - I think "courtesy of letting him zip merge would have been ignored and I would have blocked him on this one occasion

)
But a lot of incidents - tragic and traumatic as they always are to those directly involved with them - are the result of the stupid error and unlucky con-incidental chance - and experienced accident investigators should be able to determine fairly early on in their investigation - the most probable cause from the evidence and then work to get the evidence they need methodically and as efficiently quickly as possible thereafter.
Because, even though they are investigating the scene of a crash involving a fatality - there is still the matter of traffic management and keeping traffic flowing and other people not involved or even unaware of this incident from causing further carnage by impatient frustration.
(How many times have you been in a long queue? Not moving for several minutes at a time and concluded "Nasty accident ahead"? Only to find this was a "brake wave" jam

)
So - there is then some need to keep the traffic moving as we do not know what is in that queue.
For example handy:
In a recent incident on M6 which resulted in the motorway around Preston being closed for HOURS last autumn - whole area was completely gridlocked for hours. People were trapped on the motorway. They considered opening the South bound carriageway to the North bound traffic - changed their minds and then decided to do so very late at night. Some of those people had been in a car without food, water or even heat for hours that day.
Preston A&Es were dealing then with more casualties than the Brought in Deads (Colleagues down there try to rescuscitate - based on what paramedics tell them - but if they have not been breathing or taking in oxygen for over three minutes - we cannot bring them back to life as brain is dying out by then) and walking wounded from the original crash. They were dealing with dehydration in several cases.
They also had three almost comatose diabetics in that queue. (they were rescued by paramedics who also had to fight to get to them. One lady with high blood pressure (pregnant) and a couple of elderly in a very distressed state of getting cold as they had switched off engine in that queue. It was Autumn and chilly.

So we have other very potentially serious and even potentially life threatening human problems in these queues and what if one of those waiting got so upset at such a long wait that they suffered a heart attack or required some medication? What about any bloke taking a pregnant wife or sick child to hospital? Cases which are not urgent when they set off but become "urgent" because of getting stuck in a queue?
So there may well be very real and genuine reasons why people might "whinge" over being held up in a traffic jam for any reason for an unduly long amount of time.
handy wrote:
My family were made aware of whingers ringing into radio stations making almost exactly the same point as Smith does in his PR - They were delayed and had to find an alternative route, and they found this unacceptable.
So you are not disturbed when you cannot get to work and you do not find an alternative route so that you can get there.
Sally Traffic frequently says "Traffic dreadful due to an accident.
Police advise to take an alternative route" I find this acceptable as let's face it - more traffic adding to the gridlock increases the dangers to the police, fire crews and paramedics and any A&E crash teams at the scene and the gridlock also causes problems getting the injured away to hospital too.
Thus only logical to me that people will be asking for alternative routes and probably staying away is more respectful than "rubber necking" in any case
I am sure you must see this point as you come across to me as one of the nicest and most decent minded blokes I read on 't'internet anyway.
BUT
I do not find this "unacceptable" to want to find alternatives to a traffic jam for whatever cause - nor did I find it "unacceptable" when that police officer drove me to my wife at a very, very high speed (which did not seem fast enough to me at the time) and even remarked that because of the road closure as a result of that crash - he would have to "use an alternative route".
handy wrote:
My aunt and uncle didn't think "oh dear, what a shame for them, what a shame they've been inconvenienced". No, they were cut up that a tragedy that ripped the family apart was treated with such disdain.
I can't speak for the families of the people involved in this crash, but I can speak personally about a similar experience.
Unfortunately, people have their own lives to get on with and - Andy mate - no disrepect to you - but no one knows the needs of those people who need to get from A to B either.
Some would be parents with dependents and children to pick up from schools or creches. Others might have elderly or sick relatives waiting at home for them and worrying themselves because they have heard there has been a dreadful accident on that route.
So there is much more to "closing a road". The police will have to manage and control that traffic around that area to keep gridlock and inconvenience to a minimum - and in many of these cases - whether it's down to sheer volume of traffic, insufficient police resources assigned to dealing with this traffic management or just weak management of a situation - then this is another aspect of evaluation to learn from these accidents and improve response in the future.
As Big Tone has remarked too - it is not that people do not care or have no regard for others who are bereaved - but life goes on for them and they have decisions to make which affect their loved ones too.
Also - bereavement leave is only given as paid compassionate leave for direct relatives for 3/4 days. Most company policies (big and small concerns) do not grant weeks of leave as life and business go on. If someone dies - they recruit someone take over that job.
It sounds callous as if they do not care. They do as compassionate human beings - but they also have responsibilities to other human beings too.