Follow up letters in The Times:
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0, ... 67,00.html
Moneyspinner or lifesaver? Camera curb reopens debate
Sir, From the inception of camera partnerships in 2002, Department for Transport guidelines have stated that speed cameras should be used only when other types of road engineering have been discounted. The policy reversal you note (report and leading article, November 5) can be seen as an admission that partnerships have abused this procedure.
The DfT aims to prove that cameras have saved 100 lives this year. This equates to one life for every 60 cameras, yet the DfT claims that all its cameras are saving lives. If a third of all accidents are caused by speed, then surely cameras should be saving about 1,000 lives a year. In reporting the siting of cameras near schools, you also hit upon one of the major flaws in this policy: when my child is crossing the road, the last thing I want a driver to be looking at is his speedometer.
S. CORKER
Manchester
Sir, I live on a road with two schools and have often seen a safety partnership van or bike taking pictures. However, I have never seen them when children are going to or from school, because it is then impossible to move at anywhere approaching the speed limit because of all the 4x4s and people movers. The cameras come out when the children are safely in their classrooms, leading me to believe that they are there for revenue, not children’s safety.
SEBASTIAN MARR
Chippenham, Wilts
Sir, As The Times points out, breaking the speed limit is breaking the law just like mugging and shoplifting. However, there is a difference: those convicted by speed cameras have not harmed anyone, and this is the cause of resentment.
It is clear that many people decide for themselves what speeds are safe much of the time, and that this works: accidents are infrequent and the majority are not caused by speeding. A law that is regularly ignored without serious consequences should be re-examined, not more rigorously enforced.
TIM HAMMOND
London SW6
Sir, The welcome news that speed camera numbers will not now increase and must be considered solutions of the last resort, is due in no small part to the efforts of those you describe (Comment, November 5) as a “voluble minority”. Some minority, given the Sunday Times poll of May 15 which shows that 93 per cent believe that cameras are primarily a revenue-raising tool.
Now that the Government has decided to stop digging this hole, we intend to help it to climb out of it by continuing to shout from the rooftops.
If, as your editorial implies, cameras were responsible in 2004 for the 8 per cent fall in road deaths, why did the ever-increasing number of cameras fail to have any such effect in even one of the years from 1995 to 2003?
IDRIS FRANCIS
Petersfield, Hants