Date Published: Monday 30 January 2006
Report says cameras cut number of road injuries
SPEED cameras are dramatically reducing road casualties across Hampshire, a new report claimed today.
The number of people killed or seriously injured across the county in 2004/5 has fallen by an average of 63 per cent on roads where speed cameras have been installed.
In Southampton, the number of fatal crashes at camera sites has decreased by ten per cent, according to Hampshire Safety Camera Partnership's annual report.
Partnership spokesman Julian Hewitt said: "We are very pleased with the results. This is very good news for everyone in Hampshire and the Isle of Wight. Speed cameras make a small but very valuable contribution to the wider casualty reduction initiatives. In doing so they save the pain and suffering that victims of road traffic accidents suffer."
However John Evans, Hampshire co-ordinator for the Association of British Drivers, claimed the figures used were misleading and selective.
He said: "It's a selective release of information designed to paint a picture the partnership wants to paint and not to present the facts.
Overall figures for fatalities on Hampshire Roads are up by just under 50 per cent.
"Where there has been a decrease in accidents on speed camera routes the partnership isn't prepared to accept it could be down to other measures such as traffic calming, the introduction of pedestrian crossings and changing priorities at road junctions."
Mr Evans also argued that speeding is not the main cause of fatalities on the roads and more should be done to tackle uninsured drivers and those with no road tax and MoT.
Mr Hewitt said he recognised that speeding is just one cause of accidents but believed cameras were a successful way of tackling that problem.
He said: "Speed cameras are designed to catch people speeding and reduce road collisions in the areas where they are placed. The figures in the report, which have been presented to us by the police, prove they are doing this very well."
Last month the Daily Echo revealed how motorists caught speeding on camera in Hampshire paid out more than £4m in fines in three years. Nearly £1m of that went to the government.
The county's 70 fixed and mobile cameras raised £4,245,360 from 2002 to 2004.
The full report can be read at
www.safetycamera.org.uk.
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Speed limit sign radio interview. TV
Snap Unhappy“It has never been the rule in this country – I hope it never will be - that suspected criminal offences must automatically be the subject of prosecution” He added that there should be a prosecution: “wherever it appears that the offence or the circumstances of its commission is or are of such a character that a prosecution in respect thereof is required in the public interest”
This approach has been endorsed by Attorney General ever since 1951. CPS Code