The Rush wrote:
OK, now I think I might be ready.
Your question could be rephrased a number of ways ...
"What sort of duty of care does the state have regarding driver safety?"
Most of this forum started right at the beginning - education/training/testing, which is backsliding. That backsliding is a symptom of the state's priorities shifting towards profit and away from safety-first-mobility-second, which the members of this website are crying out against.
By educating/training/testing the driver to higher standards, you increase the likelihood of both drivers predicting and avoiding dangerous conditions, and negating or mitigating their dangers when 'surprised' by them.
I generally feel irked by the idea that the state send some sort of yearly warning in the mail with the same mechanism as a website checkbox - "By checking agree, we can hold you responsible for what you probably didn't read anyway." That is tantamount to using human nature against the constituency for profit - again, another raison d'etre for SafeSpeed.
The sea change in attitude and culture of the DfT and the state didn't happen in a day, and couldn't possibly be corrected that fast; a definitive turn back in the right direction is what we are working for.
However, none of these solutions would show results as quickly as you'd like to see ...
Really.......thank you for bringing your expertise to this debate
Although just one part of the safety-equation, statutory duties about highway-condition are essential IMHO, and particularly that part most recently amended to deal with winter-conditions. I
have received negative-backlash from experts who work in the participating-industries , mainly because they've sniffed out what they suspected was litigation-motivated questions from yours truly. I'm left with the impression, from those forums, that there is a 'shrug-of-the-shoulders' attitude towards the latest speight of winter smashes. As if it's a fact of life, and somehow acceptable, that people are killed and injured because they've driven on winter-roads. I fully understand the view that if you drive you are responsible for maximising personal safety, at least.
Back to statutory duties. It's currently not acceptable to me to presume that the experts
are fulfilling those duties, and that's nothing to do with limits to available expertise and technology. It's to do with confirming, without defensiveness or confusion, that the duties
were followed. If profit motive is the root of this, then the balance of profit and performance needs to be challenged. And what better focus can you have than a specific like winter roadsafety?
Sure, let the experts do the job that we pay them to do. But don't accept that, for example, because micro-climates represent a wintertime challenge at the boundary of that expertise, this somehow relieves local-government of part of their wintertime-duties. Or that drivers should, therefore, take a greater share of responsibility for wintertime-safety. Unless a challenge is made to confirm that the duties were followed then, IMVHO, we get the roads we deserve.
I've heard the ..........state's priorities shifting towards profit and away from safety-first......view before, thank you for that, and it's from a much revered source (the uk's senior traffic-accident investigator). I am hearing enough to start to agree.