mpaton2004 wrote:
I emailed the partnership and received this response.
To be fair, they didn't just roll out the same tired old lines.
Regards,
Martin
I'm afraid they did mate, they've simply dressed it up a bit. They realise that people are starting to question the effectiveness with a bit of a knowledge base, and they have had to smarten up their answers. It is largely smokescreen however.
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Dear Mr Paton
Thank you for your email through our website.
In response to the points you raise:
When asked about the current trend of 'panic' braking and speedo watching around camera sitesQuote:
1. Speedometer watching and panic braking only applies to people who are braking the law by exceeding their legal speed limit. Safe legal drivers would not need to "panic brake" as they would already be driving within the speed limit.
No!
Speedo watching and panic braking are completely separate items.
Panic braking occurs when you know you are over the limit and it's a mad effort to reduce to the limit or below. To use an example.
You're travelling at 85, lane two on a free flowing motorway watching an HGV in lane one close on a slower moving HGV. You check your mirror and assess that the approach of a higher speed vehicle should not hinder your move into lane three to allow the HGV to pass. You make this manoeuvre satisfactorily realising that by the time you have passed the HGV, the faster moving vehicle, having realised that you are on the ball, has pinched a little of the 2 second gap, but has timed his approach so that he will eventually pass you with little loss of momentum.
You then check the horizon view, and 1000 metres ahead on a distant overbridge you see the distinctive colours of the camera van. "Shit! I don't want points on my licence." You know that you have someone close behind you, but you are already in the camera zone. You have to get the speed off - "Should I simply engine brake? Might work, but what will happen behind me. Perhaps I should show my brake lights?... Yes, I'll have to now anyway, no choice." You brake and pull in close in front of the HGV thinking that you could perhaps indicate to the faster moving car that there is a camera up ahead. Your gesticulations to him as he passes are mistaken for aggression and he gives you a finger for your driving which initially seemed readable but fell apart at the end. He then takes a late horizon check, realises what the problem is, and anchors up himself. You both have a fortnight, or perhaps much longer to wait to see if your driving has been penalised.
This is a natural instinctive avoidance reaction and it invades normal safe driving behaviour.
We would attend and remove hazards from the road which were causing such instinctive unnatural behaviour.
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Drivers should check their speedometer as often as they check their mirrors. The notion that you need to constantly drive round with your eyes on the speedometer is absurd - you can tell from experience and one glance at the speedometer what speed you are travelling at and know if you have sped up/slowed down from that speed. In addition, most peoples' field of vision enables them to see the speedometer needle out of the corner of their eye whilst at the same time concentrating on the road ahead.
Again mixing two completely separate concepts. Under normal circumstances drivers will check their rear view mirror when appropriate or convenient. It adds to their overall safety. People check their speedo simply to see how their speed relates to the legal limit. It can be done when appropriate
and convenient, and will be a general glance to assess the 'ball park' figure.
If you or I approach a camera van or fixed camera, even if we are within the speed limit, you will take two or three instinctive glances towards your speedo to ascertain your speed. These glances will be neither appropriate or convenient in a purely road safety sense - as the positioning of a camera at that location would suggest heightened risk. The glances will be extended to provide you with some comfort that your speed is below the limit. This has to involve some hazard awareness compromise.
When questioning the relevance of "Hit someone at 40 and they have an 80% chance of dying" statisticQuote:
2. What proof do you have that "most fatal RTAs occur at speeds well under the speed limit"?
I agree with the respondent that most fatal accidents involve a speed in excess of the posted limit. But it is not as simple as that. The speed is not the 'causer', it is an aggravator of the consequences, and usually because the manner or type of driving was unacceptable or driver awareness was not adequate to mitigate the free travelling speed.
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At locations where there is a collision problem but no problem with speed we would not install a safety camera as other engineering solutions would be more appropriate. There is absolutely no point erecting a safety camera if vehicles are already travelling at speeds below the legal limit as cameras are there to ensure compliance with the limit - something which in this case would already be happening.
Again we have a completely false association between collisions occuring and speed causing them. Many cameras are sited at area which have a recent collision history, and have an 85th percentile speed above the legal limit, but closer analysis of the stats would suggest that the causal correlation between collision and speed is indistinct to the point of being wrong.
Questioning the 1/3rd lie and contributory factorsQuote:
3. The DfT statistic you quote relates to the main cause of collisions.
Speed is a factor in every single collision that occurs - two parked vehicles do not collide with each other if they are not moving. Simple physics also proves that speed has an influence on the impact of a collision and hence the subsequent injuries that are sustained by people involved in the collision.
Again the convenient confusion of 'factor' and 'cause'. Years of experience tells us that it is those who are unable to avoid the accident by use of concentration and anticipation and adequately reduce their free driving speed, who are our risk drivers. This is not a
'speed' thing. It is a
'concentration' thing. Current enforcement strategy is playing with reasonable drivers' abilities to drive properly and safely by adding unreasonable restraints.
Analyse the collisions at camera sites and ask the questions "Were these collisions caused by speed or was it simply a factor? Was there a dominant causal factor?" 99 times out of 100 you'll find that there was a dominant causal factor which had nothing to do with speed.
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Also, for example if a collision is caused by "inattention" such as a driver fiddling with the radio then the speed that he/she is travelling at would have a bearing on whether he/she could stop the vehicle in time.
Theory again trying to masquerade as reality. Think about it. You are much more likely to do some radio fiddling at lower speeds where you feel you have acres of time and space to make your adjustments. It is a misappropriation of concentration which is far more likely at lower concentration speeds.
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Reaction times and stopping distances are lower at slower speeds - hence tailgating is a bigger problem the faster you are travelling.
Tailgating has much more to do with time to react than stopping distances, and I have long since conceded that most higher speed tailgating, as given in my example at the start of this post, is part of our safe driving culture (anticipation and planning).
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It must also be noted that causes of collisions reported by officers at the scene of a crash can be very subjective and "box-ticking"
can mean limited recording of the exact circumstances of a collision as each one is completely different.
Yes, which begs the question of the effectiveness of a largely one dimensional attack on collisions which is not addressing the primary causal factors. Until we reduce primary causal factors, we will never reduce fatalities.
Questioning the focus on speed kills policyQuote:
4. We acknowledge that speed is not the only cause of road traffic collisions. The Safety Camera Programme is just one part of an overall road safety strategy to bring down the level of death and injury on our roads.
It is the main enforcement tool, and it is completely missing the mark as far as fatality reduction is concerned.
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The introduction of Safety Cameras has not had an effect on police officer numbers and the scheme is designed to work alongside other roads policing not instead of it.
We in Cumbria are fighting to retain our traffic numbers. Elsewhere trafpol numbers have diminished or disappeared altogether. We have additional responsibilities (ARV etc) which have allowed the retention of numbers, but for this reason many trafpol may have less of a traffic 'head' than was previously the case.
Of course the link between reduction of trafpol numbers and increase of cameras could never be related, could it?
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Billions of pounds are spent in the UK each year on road safety engineering schemes, road safety education ....
And the road safety education message is one dimensional, and incorrect.
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The money spent on the Safety Camera Programme (none of which comes from taxpayers - only from those who choose to break the law by exceeding their legal speed limit) is a very small amount in comparison.
It is really a question of technology driving and defying logic and reason. We can enforce rigidly and robotically so we will.
For the last 80 years or so we have created the safest roads in the world through a policy of policing with discretion and integrity(generally) and intelligence(occasionally

). We are at serious risk of spoiling that.
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Safety Cameras are working - at the majority of sites where cameras are used the level of death and injury has fallen quite considerably;
RTTM answers that quite straighforwardly. Also it is evident when the
primary causal factors of fatalities are analysed, that there will be almost 100% displacement of collisions. This is in fact what is happening and is evidenced by the fatality stats.
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thousands of people every year are asking for cameras in their communities to do something about speeding vehicles; there is widespread public support for cameras - generally only those who want to be allowed to break the law have a problem with cameras.
There is a misguided belief through the above
"billions spent on .........road safety education" that speed reduction through speed cameras would perhaps have saved 'little Joe's' life. Many bereaved will campaign for erection of a camera at the site of the collision, in the understandable but misguided belief that this monument may cause some good to come out of their loss. The sad reality is that the boy racers or drink/drivers, or unlicenced uninsured drivers, or weekend bikers will either not care or go elsewhere to kill or die.
Questioning lack of RTTM compensation in camera benefit reportsQuote:
5. A study into the effects of cameras in Cambridgeshire - including considerations for regression to the mean - showed that collision numbers were reduced by up to 45%. See this link for the full report -
http://www.cts.cv.ic.ac.uk/StaffPages/S ... c_2004.pdfDoesn't fully address RTTM or collision displacement.
Asking about inappropriate speed limitsQuote:
7. The Safety Camera Partnership does not set speed limits. This is undertaken by the highway authority for the road in consultation with a number of agencies. The speed limits around Safety Cameras in Cambridgeshire are all well-signed in advance (in accordance with the DfT Safety Camera Programme Guidelines) so motorists should be well aware of what the limit is and slow down accordingly.
Doesn't answer the question, but the respondent does not feel the need to.

However the enforcement of inappropriate speed limits has never been the raison d'etre of road policing. The real problem with a blanket speed limit (especially a recently imposed lower limit) is that for perhaps 25-30% of the road the lower speed limit might be appropriate, but for the other 70-75% it is not. The cameras will position themselves in the area where the speed limit is inappropriate, citing the collisions which happened in the 25-30% areas as justification for the positioning.
So it's perhaps convenient for the respondent to brush off this question as someone else's responsibility.
These might however be the precise areas where most speeders are caught.
