entire article wrote:
Speeding drivers to be banned on second offence
Steven Swinford
DRIVERS will be banned after just two convictions if they exceed the speed limit by 15mph in urban areas or 25mph on motorways under a shake-up of road safety laws.
Tougher penalties, to be announced next month, will mean drivers get six points for travelling at 45mph in a 30mph area, 55mph in a 40mph zone or 95mph on motorways throughout Britain.
The regulations will be enforced by digital cameras that track average speeds over long distances rather than Gatso cameras, which record speeds at a single point.
Presumably though - there will be the "POLICE

Speed Enforcement/Monitoring" signs which we put up on our patch of the A1(M) along with the SLOW DOWN on our "dodgier" urbans. As for our rurals..
You would need a lot a cameras - all of which would work out more expensive than real police in the reality of capital expenditure and labour/admin costs - along with the police wasting resources tracking down those daft enough to fib or concoct wild stories to get out of the fine. If this goes on for those earning their first three points - I do have to wonder about further stupidity on the part of some.
But then 15 mph above the lolly in this area
never earned the FPN around here. Press or rather those pro-cams accuse us of "not doing much for road safety because we have a low FPN return." Err.. we have a higher than normal return for prosecuting for much more serious traffic offences - and 15 mph above the lolly in a 30mph zone would earn the hapless driver copped by us into a pit filled with poo!
article wrote:
Jim Fitzpatrick, the road safety minister, said: “In cases of extreme speeding only, there is a proposal to increase the penalty to six points to ensure the punishment corresponds better to the offence committed.”
So why not reduce the points for blippers down to two points and a lower fine down to the originally proposed £40 - if all this is really about bringing us in line with France and Germany

and increasing the fixed fine correspondingly along with incremental points as appears to be the case on the mainland continent.
But all the same - we have been draconian with those who try our patience in the past and will continue to be so.
article wrote:
Experts said imposing higher penalties on motorways, Britain’s safest roads, was punitive and unlikely to improve road safety. Over the past 30 years, motorways have accounted for 150-180 deaths a year - just 5% of those killed on the roads.
True. Mostly driver error at slip roads and lane changes. Too many just never
look around them
We do seem to come back to fails in COAST skills on the part of all who have a collision

- including police officers when they also have collisions whether on duty or not on duty
COAST .. alas .. requires the constant attention .. Too many become complacent.
article wrote:
By contrast, the toll on urban and suburban streets remains high. Last year 3,090 children were killed or seriously injured, mostly in built-up areas, including many pedestrians.
Where most of us do our daily business... in the towns.. on the roads where we live.
Driving and even cycling

at an appropriate speed matters in these areas and we have always leaned hard on those who blat along.
Having said that - we have been known to prosecute the person at the speed limit.. but still too fast for the actual condition - under the "inconsiderate driving" charge
Back then to professional judgement of a properly trained professional who can at least try to prevent and try to educate then
article wrote:
Police normally allow motorists to breach the speed limit by a significant margin without fear of prosecution. They rarely stop drivers on motorways unless they exceed 85mph.

I would not like to hedge bets on that on our patch though
We usually stop for a word at above whatever our threshold may be .. and I am not saying

as I do not want folks to start "testing us"
article wrote:
Government figures released last week show that 13% of fatal accidents and 8% of serious crashes are caused by speeding drivers. The main causes are failing to look properly, errors of judgment or careless driving.
Quentin Wilson, a former presenter of the BBC television show Top Gear, said: “Everyone knows motorways are the safest roads and a discretionary approach to prosecuting has always worked.”
Indeed - from the stats - I would appear to be correct in constantly hammering COAST on here.

Yes... I think we offer a decent professional judgement up here. Our public do not engage in bashing us over much anyway

(Apart from certain pro-s/camera folk who think we are "soft" but know little about the deeper hard strength in our "policing by consent approach" here.
article wrote:
Motoring organisations said it was unfair to penalise those driving at excessive speeds while abandoning proposals to reduce penalties for those who inadvertently creep over the limit.
Ministers dropped plans to introduce two-point penalties for those exceeding the limit by just a few mph after complaints from road safety groups.
Which was a little daft - but then we could have issued these points on silly 1-2 mph blips

as they do in Switzerland

(Ahh.. that's why the

prefers to be over here ..

)
article wrote:
Edmund King, president of the AA, said: “The system should work both ways. If greater penalties are given for worse offences, then smaller ones should be given for more minor infringements.”

I agree with this opinion.
Quote:
The new regulations are proposed in a Department for Transport consultation paper, which is to be launched at the end of October.
Ministers will also announce plans to toughen the regime for drink-driving, although they will reject calls from police and campaigners to reduce the drink-drive limit from 80mg of alcohol per 100mg of blood to 50mg.
They will also introduce £60 on-the-spot fines for careless drivers, and tighten legislation to ensure higher conviction rates for drug-driving.
The DfT has calculated that the combined measures could save up to 400 lives a year out of the toll of 2,714.
What? FPN for CARELESS

We keep our roads safer by really hitting the careless twazak harder .... but having said that - we will offer those who are careless a "get out of fine" card - by offering DIS to them all the same.
Oh and "toughen the regime for drink driving?"
Well..

It's a regular "campaign of the month" here already.

And still they .. take that chance
