We should have a good mention in the Daily Express cover story (I haven't seen it yet):
At 3:05am today, Safe Speed issued the following PR:
PR159: Worrying Rise in Police Crashes
News: For immediate release
The Daily Express exclusively reveals today another worrying rise in
Police road crash victims. Safe Speed says training standards are to
blame.
Just 12 or 15 years ago, Police Class One drivers were the most highly
trained drivers anywhere. The Police driver training establishment set
standards that were the envy of the world. "Hendon trained" was a
description that immediately demanded great respect in dozens of
countries.
But someone decided that the high standards were "elitist". The "Class
one" description was replaced with "Police Advanced" and standards
began to decline. In the old Class One days is wasn't uncommon for 70%
to fail the course. But now, at least in some areas, everyone passes.
Standards are lower.
When Police driver training standards fall there are more crashes.
When there are more crashes more people die. The response to rising
crashes hasn't been to restore training standards, but to introduce
restrictions on what Police drivers are allowed to do. Choices are
made in control rooms, not on the ground. These changes may be for the
better, but NOTHING can replace the skills and attitudes that the old
system created.
Paul Smith, founder of the Safe Speed road safety campaign
(
www.safespeed.org.uk) explains: "The present incumbents of the Home
Office and the Department for Transport have no idea how important the
Police driver training programme was to UK road safety. It's far more
than just Police crashes, because the valuable best practice
techniques from the Police driver training programme have been widely
incorporated in many aspects of UK road safety culture. The effect is
subtle, but very important."
Paul continues: "The golden combination of best practice advice from
the police driver training establishment and excellent science from
the likes of the Transport Research Laboratory gave us in the UK the
safest roads in the world. (And that was well over a decade before we
had speed cameras!)"
"The Police driver training establishment based at Hendon was the only
centre of driving excellence in the world for at least 4 decades. It
should come as no surprise that the only country with a centre of
driving excellence earned the safest roads in the world."
"But Hendon is now just a shadow of its former self. The skills pool
has been broken up. Safe Speed demands a most urgent return to former
standards. Road safety depends upon it."
<ends>