SafeSpeed wrote:
We can still move traffic to faster safer roads, especially by road building and providing motorway routes.
But, and it's a huge but, we can't explain away the massive differences in crash rates from country to country with roads engineering. We have to look at average drivers and the 'safety culture'.
I don't believe we have ever received a significant road safety benefit from driver improvement - but I do believe we're receiving a disbenefit right now - we're making drivers worse by lying to them, giving them oversimplified messages and by making them paranoid.
I think the key message from Leeming is that you won't improve road safety by blaming "bad drivers". The recent proposals to introduce prison sentences for those found guilty of "causing death by careless driving" may serve the interest of justice, but they won't improve safety.
I tend to believe that many on this forum exaggerate the benefits that could be gained from improved driver training. I don't see that any form of improved driver training
that doesn't significantly reduce participation in driving is going to improve overall casualty figures by more than about 5%. And if you reduce the number of drivers, you will have more cyclists and pedestrians, who are more vulnerable than car occupants.
Some of the gains in road safety over the past 40 years have resulted from building up a "critical mass" of car users, which is now being eroded - look at the greatly reduced figure of under-20s passing driving tests in recent years.
The key message from J J Leeming is that, when looking at accidents, we need to separate "cause" from "blame". Air accident investigators have long done this, and the result is that we have an impressive level of air safety, not from blaming "bad pilots", but from reducing the possibility of mistakes occurring, and of mistakes having fatal consequences.