SafeSpeed wrote:
That said you can't have junction crashes without a junction or bend accidents without a bend. And where there's more traffic there will normally be more crashes...
That comment is both amazingly obvious and amazingly enlightening.
So if we have a junction - on a bend - on a busy road, it is quite possible that there will be a cluster of accidents there, but that doesn't necessarily make it an accident blackspot.
That said, it would be equally true to say that (eg) if you removed all the junctions you'd remove all the junction accidents, yes?
So whether you believe in "accident blackspots" or not, it still seems clear that accident "clusters" can probably be treated by re-engineering the road at such locations....
Meanwhile, back on topic, I'm generally against "shrines" and I'm specifically against them since I heard various tales about them typically being perpetuated by "do-gooders" with little or nothing to do with the person involved, just a belief that they are doing the community some sort of service, or perhaps salving their own "assumed grief" in a sort of Post-Diana-esque fashion. The net effect, I suspect, is a needless reminder of their loss to the family involved.
Anyway, far more people die in all sorts of other everyday situations, yet we don't feel the need to place flowers at the foot of people's staircases etc.
On a related topic there was a thought-provoking letter in our local paper a couple of months ago, by the mother of someone who had been (innocently) killed in a tragic accident at High Newton on the A590 (a notorious section of road awaiting a long overdue bypass). She was complaining about the signs that have been erected drawing attention to the number of casualties on that section of road, saying that she has to pass that way every day and it's like a constant kick in the face to be reminded of the needless and wasteful loss of her son.
A bit like the CSCP "hearse" stunt in Kendal last year...