GreenShed wrote:
... but you have not said you have approached them.
well much is available online and why assume that he has not ?
GreenShed wrote:
While it is clear that members of this forum have a view
as you have a view to it is just an opposing view and that is fine, but we expect you to debate that than condemn it outright. As for fact well they are on the website for all to see.
GreenShed wrote:
... you will be hard pushed to find any information based upon facts from Safety Camera Partnerships or government figures...
well we can but try and ask some is available - Thames Valley SCP used to publish a lot of information online but recently not so much. With 44 now separately running organisations it is very hard to collate all the data.
Curious that you 'back' their approach yet also admit that it is so hard to obtain facts. With ours online at least we are open and frank.
GreenShed wrote:
I would say a good place to start on the "does it make money?" question is the high level accounts operated and published by the Treasury and the DfT that can be used as a simple profit and loss account. The principle operated by the 2 government departments is that there is no direct link between money in and money out and the money collected in fines is usually quite close to the money paid out in the cost of running the system, net profits being close to £0.00.
Got any sources for that ? You also forget that the SCP and it's closely linked Companies, obtain direct funding from their Speed Awareness Courses and that brings in profits and prevents 'some/much' of the money even arriving at the Treasury as they can pocket this directly, and hence why the Courses have become so popular to run and shortened in length from a day to 2 hrs in some cases.
GreenShed wrote:
In that simple accounting the answer must be "to save lives" but further consideration should be given to just simple accounting as this answer.
Road Safety is not about totting up pennies and to consider simple math can equate to it is extreme !
GreenShed wrote:
It is the considered opinion of road safety experts from many areas of the industry and governments that speed management yields reductions in the amount and seriousness of casualties as a result of road traffic collisions;
Whilst during the recession they are showing a reduction in fatal accidents as we predicted, as have others involved in Stats, the SI accidents are climbing in many areas. The fact that hospital data showing higher numbers of SI than the police figures, has never been publicly explained. Care to Comment Officially ?
GreenShed wrote:
in that respect a reduction in government spending in the investigation of death and the care of those either affected by he deaths and those seriously injured may be considered in some way as "making money" because it is a saving in a high level government budget thereby making a notional "profit" from that reduced spending.
The money making as you phrase it, is the enforcement for illegal actions of motorists that
might not necessarily have any effect of safe travelling at all. In other words they are penalised by numeric values for the 'sake' of it yet may otherwise be traveling safely at the time of offence. That become a dis-respected policy and seen as persecution of the motorist. We are as the UK used to be in favour of intelligent and genuine road safety policies, that help to prevent the accidents in the first place. That way there is less need to have in place expensive after care, as less accidents mean less cost. The Dft website (within their docs online/downloadable), admits that cameras are the cheaper option than police so yes it does look for cheap options, cameras fund themselves. Penalties continue, people still travel at above the limit.
GreenShed wrote:
You will find it difficult to find the price of a camera installation because they differ in cost depending on the amount of cameras bought by each county at any time or even the amount of cameras they say or are assessed as possibly buying.
Yep totally agree. Each County needs to be very open about the figures yet look how hard it is ! Why? This is public funds they are spending or wasting as in our view.
GreenShed wrote:
Digital cameras can be used 24/7 and catch thousands of motorists a week (potentially) and need no roadside attention whereas wet-film cameras, the biggest installed population in the UK, require roadside attention so do not operate a high duty cycle.
Exactly it is all about the bottom line - business NOT Road Safety.
GreenShed wrote:
... wet-film cameras don't work often,
So why have them? If in your view as you do, think that you see a benefit why have them empty? That just creates a 'cry-wolf' and encourage paranoia - hardly attributes of good motoring attitudes and behaviours to instill on the public ?
GreenShed wrote:
The costs are dependent therefore on the type of camera, the amount it detects and the way in which it is operated and will change from county-to-county.
See the business bottom line again - not road safety, where is the benefit to the motorist?
GreenShed wrote:
The process of cases through the courts when they leave the fixed penalty procedure places a huge financial load on the courts and hence the government; you would need to mention this and make an estimate based upon courts service figures.
Again it is all a bit hidden and hard to source, and find yet this is all public money and meant to be for 'the common good'. Why the Gov has not got these figures already to 'hand' and at least openly available make a serious question as to the viability of this policy. A judge recently question all the Court motoring fines and questioned the police allocation ... so even the Courts are objecting now ...(
here)
GreenShed wrote:
IMHO, cameras are operated on a fixed budget enforced by central government and that fixed budget now exceeds the revenue from number of fines collected,
So they need to collect all the fines possible. hence the business attitude so apparatus in the scheme.
GreenShed wrote:
so in respect of a simple cash analysis it runs at a loss.
Appreciate this is your opinion but if the figures are not possible to source and find accurately you cannot assume that at all, then you will have to taken into consideration the benefir to the 'common good' too. That is IMO the real heart of the question. And rightly he is looking for all views. Be wrong if he didn't too. Shame the government cannot do their job properly and be as unbiased too !
GreenShed wrote:
If you include savings from a reduction in injury and death
And where are the source for those figures ?
And how do you account for the recession effect on them, or do you not? Or is that not part of your job?
GreenShed wrote:
then you have an area of fiscal and social profit that could be mentioned. If, as is proposed by the membership of the forum here and the site founder in materials elsewhere on the site, the system creates more death and injury then the government and society are loosing £100M's so running it to make money is failing.
What most concerns us is the loss of life and further injuries caused from this failed and fundamentally flawed policy. There is a lot said on the website, that takes time and effort to fully understand - I agree it is a complex issue. There are many camera enforcement companies that are making money that is very clear - some show their figures look at SPECS just to start with.
GreenShed wrote:
It would be interesting to see your bibliography and of course to understand who was going to make the assessment of your answer as there are very few who would be able to make that assessment. Perhaps they are simply going to assess you breadth of research and analysis technique. My recommendation is to learn to asses the efficacy of Internet content as much of it is unreliable and questionable at best.
Yes I woudl be interested too to know and understand the outcome after also I hope receiving a copy of his findings.
So the figures obtainable though the Gov resources /SCP or other official sources over the internet, might not be honest or reliable that is most interesting ?
Bearing in mind that much of our own data is government sourced directly, by mail and from official sources that makes us more reliable than others - wonderful.
