gatsos forever wrote:
So smeggy - what a driver deems to be a safe speed and what actually is, are, I'm afraid, usually completely different.
The Highways Authority had no problems with this road when it was designated NSL - there were a couple of serious accidents, due entirely to driver error - one a last minute decision to pull into a filling staion, and the driver who anchored up was hit from behind by a car driving too close.
Then a Czech minibus driver clipped the kerb, and bounced back into the path of an oncoming motorcycle - and the rider and passenger were killed.
Both vehicles were travelling at 40mph in long lines of slow moving traffic (NSL was 20 mph above travelling speed), on the FAR SIDE of the village you can see on the right - it's bypassed by the main road.
So the VILLAGER'S (who are bypassed remember) decided they should have a 40 mph limit - and got up a petition.
For some inexplicable reason, the Highways Authority, and the County Council gave in to their demands and re-engineered the road - providing protected lanes for turning traffic, islands, a solid median (rather than the hatched one) AND a 40 MPH limit. The limited area did not even include the stretch where the deaths occurred, or several of the SI accidents!
Other villages on the same route (about two miles on) did NOT get any reductions or engineering despite their demands, and the deaths of two pensioners in their car being shunted off the road by a drunk (and speeding) driver.
However after the engineering, mobile SPEED cameras appeared, HIDDEN at the side of the road despite rules saying they should be visible.
These were later swapped for fixed cameras and it became obvious that their positioning meant large numbers of visitors to the Lake District who dont see the cameras in the MIDDLE of the road (rather than the sides) get fined for blipping over the limit on the busy tourist route.
The Safety Camera Partnership's own figures (which they tried to hide even from an FoI request) revealed NONE of the accidents at this sight had SPEED as a factor - not even as a CONTRIBUTORY factor.
It is simply a cynical revenue raising exercise - 18 drivers a week on average, or £56,160 a year.
So GF- what a villager deems to be a safe speed and what actually is, are, I'm afraid, usually completely different, but the SCP are quite happy to take advantage and collect as much money as possible, while all the time trying to hide the statistics which show that speeding never was, and still isn't a factor in the accidents which have happened here.
The last SI "accident" involved a drunken pedestrian who threw himself in front of a car, which had slowed and tried to avoid being flagged down!
No wonder the speed limit (the law), the people behind it, and the SCP get (and deserve) no respect. All it does is cause tailbacks as the visitors make their way home - and causes a potential hazard when the queues tail back a mile or so along the road...
to here!
Standing traffic just around a bend - caused by a speed camera!