ndp wrote:
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.
We have tried to get a message across of a need to evaluate a drive each time - and to try to consider how each action - however small - affects the other road user.
Once upon a time - when people were less
isolate and discussing this over a pint (not driving) or on the phone instead of via e-mail and rather nonnymous chat rooms - we obeserved those social niceties of polite and calm behaviour. Now - people tear out their hair if the mouse click does not deliver immediately - and I think this impatience is sadly overspilling into other areas of life.
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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.
I suggest you come up here and speed - People pulled here do not forget what we say to them in a hurry!

We do not always issue fines either - but we are constantly appraising our policy and seeking to reduce our incidents as a constant.
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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.
The small risks though - involve underestimating the speed of a car approiaching at a legal speed, assuming the cyclist will turn left or underestimating
his speed because he is using his own energy to power his bike. You would be amazed at the number of people who still think a bike is as slow as the heavy 1950s steel three-gear traditional.
Have one of these - it's like a shire horse - sturdy, strong - plods along....and reliable.

Does not quite go with my yellow leggings though...

and racy Giro helmet ...and super trendy and stylish Illuminite top.....
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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 -

happened to
me when I was aged 14 and visiitng those Swiss "rebels"
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?
a LOT... Look at their stats - you posted so yourself three pages ago ..
Of course it would be legally doable - if the EU issued a directive

to bring us into line....
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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).
Eh?
London in the Blitz.. my father was a Policeman based down there during the war. Various Aunts and Uncles tell me about Salford, Manchester, Liverpool, Preston, Nottingham, Coventry, Birmingham, Bolton, Dover (and visit the exhibition at Dover Castle - that'll tell you what Dover suffered during WW2) . Britain suffered badly during the Blitz and all archives show this for fact.
But what about the quaint towns in the uintouched Harz and other areas of Germany - the one to which they sent their evacuee kids... these medieval towns have
bike lanes Try riding a bike down from Strasbourg - through the wine road to Colmar and Riquewihr - and you will have one heck of a pleasant surprise!
Bavaria has less provision as does Dresden - but even so - they appear to have less incidents on basis that cyclists and pedestrians are fined if they misbehave.
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Where would you put these cycle tracks? There isn't room for them.
Darlington has a grant - a beacon town. Most of its plans can be applied anywhere.
Other areas make use of disused rail lines - landscaping and making them a pleasant cross country short cut.
Case of planning properly.
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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.
If they were jay walking - no contest.

But as I understand froimthe foreign based relatives - courts decide the outcome properly. Such a law can be flouted as some case in Holland apparently found - so things are being tightened - and it has to be abolutely obvious that the driver was fully liable - pretty much as here.really
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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?
Has to do with excess. Sometimes the repair is less than the excess charge or a marginal difference. Hence the parties will agree to treat knock for knock without filling in forms and drawing diagrams for something which really needs a T-cut job and not much else.
If one or other repair or both are costly - then makes sense to deal vial the insurers.
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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.
Why we prefer to be present and be seen
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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.
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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.
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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

Depends on
how you advise as much as
what you say.
We find people remember the first bit and the last bit - so we make sure message is in the open and close of the spiel
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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....

Are drivers on here typical?
Most are advanced and the ones who are not IAM - we appear to have motivated them to learn more. We hope our lurkers take on board the safety messages...
Especially the safe cycling ones ...
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But some of the 30 mph urban duals have no pelicans or zebras or any obvious hazard
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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.
Prone to micro-climates as well. Like Stocksbridge - poor design has led to a number of lethal blackspots - but having said that - [i] those cameras are nowehere near the blackspots and certianly not near the corssroads , footpath crossings and priovate accesses - and know this as travel on that road at least once per year..to a family do!
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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.
We find they settle at 34 mph...
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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".
You enforce with discretion. If you nit pick - people resent - and we all know that all drives will fluctuate to 5 mph above to 5 mph below a speed limit on any one normal urban non -motorway journey.
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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.

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.
Of course - and there are some really daft ones.