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PostPosted: Sun Feb 19, 2006 01:27 
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SafeSpeed wrote:
ndp wrote:
SafeSpeed wrote:
While I'm sorting you out some evidence (because I like these 'disputes'), what do you make of these figures...

Proportion of vehicles 'speeding' at sample sites: ~60% on most road types.

Proportion of injury crashes with excessive speed as a contributory factor: 12% (includes inappropriate speed within the speed limit)


We've done that, accident reports are merely the opinion of the reporting officer, and (obviously) they won't stick their neck out if they don't have a good idea.

When you see the accident reports for single-vehicle-leaves-carriageway which state no contributory factors whatsoever, you'll get the gist.


It's fashionable to deride the contributory factor data because it is inconvenient. It's true that the data and the way it is gathered leave a lot to be desired.


And thats important. If you input poor data, you end up with poor results.

Quote:
But contributory factor data has similar and consistent messages irrespective of method and country.


But that misses the point that the accident records are based on the conservative opinion of the attending officer and usually nothing more.

The fact that "excessive speed" isn't cited doesn't mean it wasn't a factor.


Quote:
Exceeding the speed limit is ALWAYS a minor factor.


However, driving at excessive speed can be a major factor. Speed limits are merely one mechanism to reduce/prevent this factor occuring.

Quote:
Inattention is ALWAYS a major factor.


Does that include inattention to ones speed?

Quote:
Observation failure is ALWAYS a major factor.


Does that include driving too fast such that you leave insufficient time for observation?

Its not simply "why did the accident happen?", its also "how did the factors that resulted in the accident occur?"

ndp wrote:
Quote:
So is 'speeding' more than 5 times safer than not speeding?


How did you get to that?


60% speeding / (much less than) 12% 'speeding' as a contributory factor.[/quote]

That doesn't result in "speeding is 5 times safer than not speeding".

Quote:
If 'speeding' was dangerous, shouldn't it be more prevalent in the crash stats than the non-crash stats? Drunks are...


Except this is where the flaw in relying on simply the cited causation factors comes in.

A police officer (or pathologist) can much easier determine if a person has been drinking than if they have been travelling too fast. After all, the alcohol will still be in the bloodstream when the officer attends. The car won't be doing the same speed it was.


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PostPosted: Sun Feb 19, 2006 01:34 
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ndp wrote:
A police officer (or pathologist) can much easier determine if a person has been drinking than if they have been travelling too fast. After all, the alcohol will still be in the bloodstream when the officer attends. The car won't be doing the same speed it was.

As I understand it accident investigators have various means such as tyre tracks and skid marks of arriving at a reasonable accurate estimate of speed prior to a crash.

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PostPosted: Sun Feb 19, 2006 01:42 
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Does anyone even know what 'the question' is? I certainly don't. If you want an answer, can you restate the question? (preferably in a non-confrontational way)

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PostPosted: Sun Feb 19, 2006 01:44 
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johno1066 wrote:
Chaps!!! I implore you all, to leave this discussion until NDP has answered my question.

What was the question again? :roll:

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PostPosted: Sun Feb 19, 2006 01:52 
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In Gear wrote:
ndp wrote:
SafeSpeed wrote:
I've split to the most important bit...

ndp wrote:

Quote:
ndp wrote:
Quote:
There are very very few such places. If any. Can you offer any evidence at all that such a place exists?


Just about every urban road with a well set 30mph, for starters.


The accident records prove you wrong. Those millions of speeding drivers simply aren't crashing.



But that is missing the point.

As I'm sure you're aware, "an accident is a rare, random, multi-factor event always preceded by a situation in which one or more road users have failed to cope with their environment". If the other factors to conspire to create the accident aren't there, then the driver gets away with driving too fast for their environment.

Its a question of risk. The fact that most of the time people get away with it is neither here nor there - even playing Russian Roulette has a 83% "escape rate".


This is really the critical mistake in road safety policy. It's true that when you drive faster than a certain speed in a certain circumstance risk goes through the roof.

But driving at 30mph would put the risk through the roof in lots and lots and lots of urban circumstances. We don't have anything like enough crashes


Don't we?

And don't forget, an awful lot of crashes are thought to go unreported.


Usually minor shunts.


Indeed, and it has been estimated that large numbers of pedestrian / cycle accidents go unreported.

The thing is most of the time the risk will result in nothing, or a near miss. Most of the rest of the time, it'd be damage only - most of the rest of the time it'd be injury only etc. The idea that "we don't have enough crashes" is simply flawed - the point is improvement. Those speeding drivers may not be killing children in their thousands - but they are adding an accident here, an accident there. And its the same with other factors, there is no one factor responsible for all these accidents. It drivers taking small risks, which occasionally results in a crash.


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anything like the crash severity to support the idea that this is actually happening.


We do have a pedestrian & cyclist fatality rate that is rather poor compared with many continental countries.


But then - they fine [edestrains who jay-walk! The 9 year old in Schaffhausen was charged with causing an accident through stepping off in front of traffic at a crossing. There - you have to wait from the green man to appear and it's not media hype - :roll: happened to me when I was aged 14 and visiitng those Swiss "rebels" :wink:


Of course, thats a complete non-starter here. It certainly isn't politically doable, and I'm far from convinced its legally doable.

And how much difference does it make?



Quote:
Also - they designed their roads to incorporate decent cycle lanes. More or less segregated. Cyclists rarely come into conflict with cars as a result - and Germany has some interesting stats in relation to areas flowing abundant with these lanes to its skimpier provisions.


However, Germany had its towns nicely rearranged by the RAF so that these facilities could be provided. We didn't (at least on nothing like the same scale).

Where would you put these cycle tracks? There isn't room for them.

And experience shows that you still end up with conflicts at junctions, and these conflicts often make these facilities more dangerous than cycling in the road.

I also understand that in Germany that motorists (insurers) have to pay out for cyclists or pedestrians they collide with unless it can be shown the pedestrian or cyclist was at fault - whereas here the pedestrian/cyclist has to prove the motorist was at fault. I imagine that focuses minds.

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Quote:

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So why isn't it?


I dispute the assertion that we don't have the number of accidents to support the idea.


But on the other hand - if accidents were as common place as you appear to suggest - then all premiums should be sky high die to claims - and the insiurance companies say they are receiving less claims for easy fixes,


Is this not possibly people simply not reporting shunts to their insurers to save on premium rises?


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It can't be the speed limit doing it - it can only be appropriate speed behaviour.


Plays its part, but the limit is needed where the behaviour isn't there.


But my customers ... does not matter if there is a camera there or not - if they have stolen a car or youngsters concentrating more on chatting to pals than on COASTing it - they'lll still have an accident


Oh indeed, no-one is saying that cameras are a panacea.


Quote:
Oh - and by the way hitting someone at 27 mph does not make them any less injured or dead - if you hit or they fall badly to be blunt.


Of course not, but it does give them more of a chance than they would have at 35mph.

Quote:
It is the behaviour, the attitude, the COAST skills which bring about the change in reaction required to avoid any collision course - and novices are slower at spotting them. They are also the ones who do not "feel" the speed as keenly as they do with experience.


I don't dispute that.

Quote:
Thus the spinal cord of safety led driving has to move towards promoting the idea that sharp observarton and hazard perceception skills are "cooler" aspirations than pushing a car to its limit.


I agree. Good luck selling that to Max Power etc ;)

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It isn't true in any practical or useful sense that risk increases as you exceed 30mph. Risk really only increases with speed if you can't stop (comfortably) within the distance that you know will remain clear.


In an urban environment, thats quite often at speeds over 30.


Most drivers on here drive below 30 mph when appropriate.... :roll:


Are drivers on here typical?

Quote:
But some of the 30 mph urban duals have no pelicans or zebras or any obvious hazard


Quote:
However on the A14 - a 70 mph 3 laner linking the M1/M6 to the M11 and the East - I have driven past signs warning me to expect pedestrians to be crossing this motorway type road


The A14 isn't a motorway type road (I think it should be but thats besides the point) - its an all purpose route (mostly dual 2 lane) which may be dualled and largely grade separated, but it does have footpath crossings, private accesses, even some crossroads.

Many drivers make the mistake of thinking its a motorway - they perceive it to be a motorway, and thus drive too fast. As a result the road has a poor accident record. It is in fact a very good place where drivers do need to be told - because their perception is inaccurate.



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Drivers are amazingly effective at this, and you can bet that where the 85th percentile speed is above the speed limit the speed limit is unecessarilly low.


So do you think the 30 limit should be raised, on major roads at least?

And theres the damage limitation issue, of course.


I think the general conclusion on the board was that some roads should be 20 mph, some should remian at 30 mph and a handful of existing 30 mph raised to 40 mph and 50 mph and some of the 50 mph/ 40 mph and even a couple of single carriage NSLs downgraded to 30 mph....


There is certainly scope for adjustment - I don't think anyone disagrees.

However, Paul stated that "Drivers are amazingly effective at this, and you can bet that where the 85th percentile speed is above the speed limit the speed limit is unecessarilly low.". On alot of major 30 limit roads with properly set limits, the 85%ile is above 30.

If you've got your reasonably set limits, you've got to be able to enforce them so people (even a mionority) don't get into the habit of "I know better" or "Its only a little bit faster".

Quote:
Basically - the fault lies with speeds set inappropriately on a lot of roads and this is in fact an issue which Meredydd Hughes plans to address. :wink:


I assume by speeds you mean speed limits, and that is an issue (both ways as you acknowledge). And it needs to be dealt with.


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PostPosted: Sun Feb 19, 2006 01:56 
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ndp wrote:

Aside from that, I am not privvy to all the information I would be were I secretary for state.


You have a funny idea of politicians - :lol: They do claim "they were not informed of something or other... when it all goes pear shaped - or blame the last lot..... :wink:



Quote:
So the first thing would be to see whats in progress and look at the new information available.


Ah - but then 45% of all statistics are made up on the spot .... :wink: None of it tells you much ... according to the stats the governement feed me - my kids have genius IQs and a larger and keener brain than I could ever aspire to - yet despite the fact that my son and self have same Grade of Advanced Level Chemistry - and I have not looked at a Chemistry book since I passed that exam aged almost 18 years - I still have a greater depth of knowledge of the subject than he does!


Quote:
Thats missing the point - whether you're interested or not is immaterial. The onus is not on those advocating the status quo to justify their position, but for those seeking change to provide an alternative and show it to be an improvement.


We had a change already - it removed traffic cops and beat bobbies and replaced them with cameras.

Public were told it would "free up officers to sort out crime"

Not noted better driving standards throughout the land - nor any less tragedy.

Not seen much evidence of the public feeling safer and fearing crime less. Have read that they appear to wait longer for any response though...and fear crime more.

Cannot say CCTV cam does that much for me other than give idea of what they look like (build - but since they usually wear hoods.... :roll: and if they had a bio metric lens doo dah (to be trendy Noo Labah - like) - you'd have to guarantee they'd look into the lens to captrure the data :roll: ) - but without knowing where they live and short of knocking on every door in the country on the off chance the scrote may be inside... not that helpful and fear of being seen on camera does not scare these" hoodies"

Have seen public at large begin to resent the police and lose faith in our ability to nab the bad guys.

And even when we do - we usually end up following a vicious circle of constantly arresting the same guy for similar offences because the politically correct system says we have to make allowances for the less privileged - but the white collars are supposed to know better and reputations matter to them of course.... :wink:


Looks like you swallow it all to me.


Tell me - were these high tech gadgets any good at finding weapons of mass destruction (assuming not the result of an over active imagination and perhaps a secret yearning to have a "piece of the action as previous inhabitants at No 10) :wink: ) or finding Bin Laden for that matter - :roll:

Now the quaint way of "soflty soflty catchee monkey" and "give'em plenty o'rope and they 'angs thesselves" :wink:

Old fashioned - we may be - but it works... :wink:

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PostPosted: Sun Feb 19, 2006 01:59 
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johno1066 wrote:
Funny how Mrs Miggins pipes up at the last minute!!! hmmmm interesting, you don't post on pepipoo by any chance do you?????????????

Well, I actually posted a while back in this thread asking you and ndp to cool it, so I'm not sure about the last minute comment.

I do also post on Pepipoo, but I'm not sure what that has to do with this thread either. :?

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PostPosted: Sun Feb 19, 2006 01:59 
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ndp wrote:
SafeSpeed wrote:
ndp wrote:
SafeSpeed wrote:
While I'm sorting you out some evidence (because I like these 'disputes'), what do you make of these figures...

Proportion of vehicles 'speeding' at sample sites: ~60% on most road types.

Proportion of injury crashes with excessive speed as a contributory factor: 12% (includes inappropriate speed within the speed limit)


We've done that, accident reports are merely the opinion of the reporting officer, and (obviously) they won't stick their neck out if they don't have a good idea.

When you see the accident reports for single-vehicle-leaves-carriageway which state no contributory factors whatsoever, you'll get the gist.


It's fashionable to deride the contributory factor data because it is inconvenient. It's true that the data and the way it is gathered leave a lot to be desired.


And thats important. If you input poor data, you end up with poor results.

Quote:
But contributory factor data has similar and consistent messages irrespective of method and country.


But that misses the point that the accident records are based on the conservative opinion of the attending officer and usually nothing more.

The fact that "excessive speed" isn't cited doesn't mean it wasn't a factor.


Quote:
Exceeding the speed limit is ALWAYS a minor factor.


However, driving at excessive speed can be a major factor. Speed limits are merely one mechanism to reduce/prevent this factor occuring.

Quote:
Inattention is ALWAYS a major factor.


Does that include inattention to ones speed?

Quote:
Observation failure is ALWAYS a major factor.


Does that include driving too fast such that you leave insufficient time for observation?

Its not simply "why did the accident happen?", its also "how did the factors that resulted in the accident occur?"

ndp wrote:
Quote:
So is 'speeding' more than 5 times safer than not speeding?


How did you get to that?


60% speeding / (much less than) 12% 'speeding' as a contributory factor.


That doesn't result in "speeding is 5 times safer than not speeding".

Quote:
If 'speeding' was dangerous, shouldn't it be more prevalent in the crash stats than the non-crash stats? Drunks are...


Except this is where the flaw in relying on simply the cited causation factors comes in.

A police officer (or pathologist) can much easier determine if a person has been drinking than if they have been travelling too fast. After all, the alcohol will still be in the bloodstream when the officer attends. The car won't be doing the same speed it was.[/quote]

If we were talking about the odd 10% then your concerns about the data would be entirely valid. Since we're talking about way over 500% any misreporting is swamped and swamped again by real data.

Perhaps you would like to speculate about the cause of the 'strangeness' in the data instead?

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Last edited by SafeSpeed on Sun Feb 19, 2006 02:02, edited 1 time in total.

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PostPosted: Sun Feb 19, 2006 02:00 
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PeterE wrote:
ndp wrote:
A police officer (or pathologist) can much easier determine if a person has been drinking than if they have been travelling too fast. After all, the alcohol will still be in the bloodstream when the officer attends. The car won't be doing the same speed it was.

As I understand it accident investigators have various means such as tyre tracks and skid marks of arriving at a reasonable accurate estimate of speed prior to a crash.


Most accidents aren't investigated to that level though.


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PostPosted: Sun Feb 19, 2006 02:07 
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In Gear wrote:
ndp wrote:

Aside from that, I am not privvy to all the information I would be were I secretary for state.


You have a funny idea of politicians - :lol: They do claim "they were not informed of something or other... when it all goes pear shaped - or blame the last lot..... :wink:


Well politicians claim lots of thing :)



Quote:
Quote:
So the first thing would be to see whats in progress and look at the new information available.


Ah - but then 45% of all statistics are made up on the spot .... :wink: None of it tells you much ... according to the stats the governement feed me - my kids have genius IQs and a larger and keener brain than I could ever aspire to - yet despite the fact that my son and self have same Grade of Advanced Level Chemistry - and I have not looked at a Chemistry book since I passed that exam aged almost 18 years - I still have a greater depth of knowledge of the subject than he does!


Thats a fair point - but you do consider these things.

At least if you've looked at these things you can then decide how reliable they are. If you haven't looked, yuo can't really comment.


Quote:
Quote:
Thats missing the point - whether you're interested or not is immaterial. The onus is not on those advocating the status quo to justify their position, but for those seeking change to provide an alternative and show it to be an improvement.


We had a change already - it removed traffic cops and beat bobbies and replaced them with cameras.

Public were told it would "free up officers to sort out crime"

Not noted better driving standards throughout the land - nor any less tragedy.

Not seen much evidence of the public feeling safer and fearing crime less. Have read that they appear to wait longer for any response though...and fear crime more.

Cannot say CCTV cam does that much for me other than give idea of what they look like (build - but since they usually wear hoods.... :roll: and if they had a bio metric lens doo dah (to be trendy Noo Labah - like) - you'd have to guarantee they'd look into the lens to captrure the data :roll: ) - but without knowing where they live and short of knocking on every door in the country on the off chance the scrote may be inside... not that helpful and fear of being seen on camera does not scare these" hoodies"

Have seen public at large begin to resent the police and lose faith in our ability to nab the bad guys.

And even when we do - we usually end up following a vicious circle of constantly arresting the same guy for similar offences because the politically correct system says we have to make allowances for the less privileged - but the white collars are supposed to know better and reputations matter to them of course.... :wink:


Thats fair comment, though it seems to digress massively from my point ;)

Quote:
Looks like you swallow it all to me.


Er, no. Clearly the police have a vital role to play. However, there is a role for speed enforcement also - so why not have cameras as one tool in that? I can't imagine that using up one valuable officer to run a speed trap at a site with a speeding problem it a good use of police resources.


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PostPosted: Sun Feb 19, 2006 02:08 
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FWIW here was one reply which johno took great trouble to ignore:

Quote:
I will not hypothesise on the answer to a question asked when I am hypothetically in a particular position, when I am not in the position to assess the question, the issues it raises, the full picture of data that would be available and so on. The answers can come after the deliberation and consideration, and as this is all dependant on me being in a hypothetical situation, and cannot do that unless and until that hypothetical situation arises and I am in a position to answer the question.



Peter also quoted this from my blog - however it carries the disclaimer that it doesn't really fit within political constraints etc, and only deals with some of the speed issue, rather than being the complete solution

Quote:
So how do we go about doing this? Well, my opinion is that the authorities need to take a grip, decide what they want to do with speed limits and enforcement, and then do it consistantly. How about this for a plan-

a) Set the national speed limits to be 30 in urban areas, 60 outside of urban areas on both single and dual carriageways, and 80 on motorways, with a provision to raise the speed limit locally to 70mph on major, high quality routes (this provision could be restricted to primary or trunk roads; I'd also suggest that long distance largely-grade separated trunk roads, such as the southern section of A34, or the A14, should be upgraded to motorway)

b)Local speed limits should be set in accordance to something broadly similar to DfT roads circular 1/93[1], but with more emphasis on ensuring any frontage is sufficiently sparse or well set back for limits higher than 30 mph, and additionally with provision for 20 limits in town around schools (ideally on a variable basis arrived to in partnership with the schools), or where footways, sightlines etc are substandard.

c) 20mph zones should be standard for residential side streets, and for busy shopping streets.

d) Highways authorities should be expected to adhere to b and c, and this should be enforced in order to ensure limits remain fair, consistant, and thus credible.

e) Speed limits should be enforced as local authorities deem appropriate. Speed cameras should be easier to install, and should not be dependant on statistics regarding accident rates or whatever. Additionally there should be no requirement for the cameras to be made artifically visible (eg by means of diamond grade on the camera, or by speed camera repeater signs) - however, deliberately hiding speed cameras should be discouraged (this practise does nothing for public confidence). There should be no guidelines on prosecution tolerances, and tolerances should be set as low as the accuracy of the speed measuring device, or 3mph, whichever is higher (though practical considerations may dictate higher tolerances - this should ideally be considered on a site by site basis).

f) Speed camera warning signs should be optional, and should only be used when and where enforcement is taking place.

Of course, this isn't all of the package, there would need to be real educational efforts to get people to understand what affects the appropriate speed they can drive at so they can recognise hazards as they develop and react accordingly (hardly anyone seems to be able to realise that they can't see over a blind crest and should slow down for instance - you won't solve this aspect of the problem with speed limits).

Controversial? Maybe. But we're not getting anywhere by fudging policy to attempt to appease everyone in both sets of trenches, all of the time.


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PostPosted: Sun Feb 19, 2006 02:15 
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SafeSpeed wrote:
ndp wrote:
SafeSpeed wrote:
ndp wrote:
SafeSpeed wrote:
While I'm sorting you out some evidence (because I like these 'disputes'), what do you make of these figures...

Proportion of vehicles 'speeding' at sample sites: ~60% on most road types.

Proportion of injury crashes with excessive speed as a contributory factor: 12% (includes inappropriate speed within the speed limit)


We've done that, accident reports are merely the opinion of the reporting officer, and (obviously) they won't stick their neck out if they don't have a good idea.

When you see the accident reports for single-vehicle-leaves-carriageway which state no contributory factors whatsoever, you'll get the gist.


It's fashionable to deride the contributory factor data because it is inconvenient. It's true that the data and the way it is gathered leave a lot to be desired.


And thats important. If you input poor data, you end up with poor results.

Quote:
But contributory factor data has similar and consistent messages irrespective of method and country.


But that misses the point that the accident records are based on the conservative opinion of the attending officer and usually nothing more.

The fact that "excessive speed" isn't cited doesn't mean it wasn't a factor.


Quote:
Exceeding the speed limit is ALWAYS a minor factor.


However, driving at excessive speed can be a major factor. Speed limits are merely one mechanism to reduce/prevent this factor occuring.

Quote:
Inattention is ALWAYS a major factor.


Does that include inattention to ones speed?

Quote:
Observation failure is ALWAYS a major factor.


Does that include driving too fast such that you leave insufficient time for observation?

Its not simply "why did the accident happen?", its also "how did the factors that resulted in the accident occur?"

ndp wrote:
Quote:
So is 'speeding' more than 5 times safer than not speeding?


How did you get to that?


60% speeding / (much less than) 12% 'speeding' as a contributory factor.


That doesn't result in "speeding is 5 times safer than not speeding".

Quote:
If 'speeding' was dangerous, shouldn't it be more prevalent in the crash stats than the non-crash stats? Drunks are...


Except this is where the flaw in relying on simply the cited causation factors comes in.

A police officer (or pathologist) can much easier determine if a person has been drinking than if they have been travelling too fast. After all, the alcohol will still be in the bloodstream when the officer attends. The car won't be doing the same speed it was.


If we were talking about the odd 10% then your concerns about the data would be entirely valid. Since we're talking about way over 500% any misreporting is swamped and swamped again by real data.[/quote]

Why?

Surely, given that the accident report is written by the attending officer who only so much time, expertise and resources to write these reports, the fact that it is hard for the officer to judge whether the speed was excessive is a serious issue, which may well be repsonsible for such an anomoly given the rare and random event of accidents? Don't forget, most accidents are not investigated beyond the attending officers investigations, and that the investigating officer won't want to stick his neck out and speculate too much.


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PostPosted: Sun Feb 19, 2006 02:19 
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johno: Read what what I wrote and what Peter posted, then get back to me with comments.

No-one cares about your little game.


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PostPosted: Sun Feb 19, 2006 02:21 
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There's not much debate going on here to add to. TBH, I'm kinda surprised the thread hasn't been locked.

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PostPosted: Sun Feb 19, 2006 02:23 
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MrsMiggins wrote:
There's not much debate going on here to add to. TBH, I'm kinda surprised the thread hasn't been locked.


I'm not sure thats fair. Paul, Peter and In Gear have made some good valid points, even if johno insists on prattling on in between them.


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PostPosted: Sun Feb 19, 2006 02:33 
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ndp wrote:
MrsMiggins wrote:
There's not much debate going on here to add to. TBH, I'm kinda surprised the thread hasn't been locked.


I'm not sure thats fair. Paul, Peter and In Gear have made some good valid points,

Fair enough.

edited

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Last edited by MrsMiggins on Sun Feb 19, 2006 15:26, edited 1 time in total.

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 Post subject:
PostPosted: Sun Feb 19, 2006 02:44 
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I give up! This thread is growing (and changing emphasis) faster than I can read it. In the time it took me to read and digest 5 pages (among other activities), the topic grew by another 5. Skipping to the last page convinced me I probably shouldn’t bother anyway!

Note: Thread locked at 01:50 by PeterE as deputy moderator, and Paul PM'd to advise him of this


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PostPosted: Sun Feb 19, 2006 04:22 
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I've re-enabled the thread.

I don't want it to return to endless futile questioning. I want it to return to intelligent debate.

Please think carefully before posting and ask yourself if the wider community will be interested in the point you're making. If they won't then take it to PM or email.

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 Post subject:
PostPosted: Sun Feb 19, 2006 14:28 
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Well, I for one have skipped every one of ndp's excessive diatribes.................:yawn:


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 Post subject:
PostPosted: Sun Feb 19, 2006 18:52 
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Oscar wrote:
Well, I for one have skipped every one of ndp's excessive diatribes.................:yawn:


Well I'm sorry they may be a hard slog, or boring, or whatever - but its a complex issue. Trying to squeeze it into soundbites doesn't give a fair representation (which is a problem we all seem to be agreed upon with regard to government publicity campaigns).

I think there was an intelligent debate happening in the thread between Paul Peter, In Gear and myself, and it would be good to pick up where we left off.


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