ndp wrote:
In Gear wrote:
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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.
Indeed - but I'm not sure what that has to do with my point.
We have one of the lowest sccident and KSI rate in the UK - and we do ti with policemen - deployed as policemen.

We only use qulaified staff to enforce and professionally judge the driving standards around here - and nothing is 100% as people are - well
people - but we appear to have less serious incidents than elsewhere - and we are the same urban/rural mix as anywhere else.
Out of interest, where is here?
Why - Durham of course!

And North Yorks also has a decent record given its mix of urban and seriously twisty rurals.

Neither police by speed camera - but still manage to prevent carnage all over the place - and both are delighted to report they keep it lower than average and manage to hit targets to get the rates down and maintained as "low"!
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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 approaching 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.

Its far from limited to that though.
The point is that everything in life involves a risk assessment - and most of the time we judge correctly. You could just as easily ban alpine sports and ball sports because there people run the risk of a foul of a broken limb in a dodgy tackle. I think the BBC comment on the downhill slalom was spot on - get it right and you win gold - get it wrong and you could lose your life.
Fact is we take risks Humans always have done - risked sassing the teacher, sassing the parents, stretching the bouindaries to get that little more lee-way here and there - and most of the amenities we enjoy today was due to a risky investement by an entrepreneur or some scientific boffin wondering what would happen if.....

Oh indeed that is correct. Which is why we don't simply ban vehicles.
But nevertheless you still aim to control the risks - hence the netting to stop your skier from plunging to their death.
You ever been off piste?

But un ant case - you lose a ski in a slalom and I believe the breakages are just a bit on the very severe side. (Cousin of mine - Wildy's sister - competed in this sport as youngster.)
But in general - most drivers assess and gauge traffic and speed well enough to negotiate and blend in the flow of traffic. we do this when walking in a crowd or cycling or riding en groupe as well. Humans have this extraordinary brain/eye/hand/body co-ordination skill and as we gain expertise and practice - so it sharpens.
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[jaywalking] Of course it would be legally doable - if the EU issued a directive

to bring us into line....
But then theres the politically feasibility too. I suspect the idea of 9 year old children being prosecuted for "jaywalking" would attract howls of nanny state from all sides.
Since much of the nanny state comes from the EU - I have not noted them whining over the 9 year old being done for jay-walking.
Its not the EU that would be an issue, more the civil liberties campaigners, pedestrians groups, the environmentalists and so on.
Well - they seem to want id cards and cameras all over the place...

Plus these same bodies seem to think drivers are making a "fuss over nothing" when they read tabloid reports of DVLA selling their details to various supposedly interested parties....
Oh - and on Sark I believe bicycles are taxed - so no cyclotopia of free rides

and "privacy" that way
But fining jay-walkers - no one complains in the countries (including some USA states) - and why would environmentalists be up in arms about fining hay walkers who saunter and moon walk across roads. I'd be inclined to serve these moon walkers and deliberate dawdlers inthe road with aan ASBO as this loitering is really what it is...
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I suspect the Daily Wail and the Grauniad would find common ground on the issue as well.
Yep - they were all livid with

bashing disgust when the girl got a caution for chucking a snowball at a t car. Only her scoop of snow contained stones and the force with which she threw it broke the window of the car. Fortunately for her - trained cop in an unmarked car and he was able to bring it under control without hitting anyone - including her.

Not just "kids being kids" - and chucking snowballs at moving vehicles and bicycles is not that far removed from chucking from a bridge. Apart form that - the shock element of something being thrown can cause a shock which can cause loss of control!
So her fine was justified as was the apple business - and I posted at the time I had tried steering my car in and out of the drive clutching a Granny Smith with a bit out of it ... and found there were indeed problems which more or less justifies the woman getting the ticket and our hammering those clutching mobile phones

(Wildy

on PH at one point likened this to a kid needing a "moo blanket")
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Nanny state is just a disguiese for a blatantly dictatorial Old Labour sect rto force their ideals on folk by feigning concern and taking responsiblity for self away from people whilst at the same time making it a crime of thinking for oneself.
Isn't that what you're doing by proposing we ban "jaywalking" ?
Jay -walking is different. It is a form of anti-social behaviour - if a deliberate act of trying toforce traffic to stop.
Some of the cyclist groups - including the CTC got their lycra lathered up into ball of foam when my colleagues down in the Met decided to clamp down on CM.
It is not "just a little bike ride amongst pals" This is an organised mass which involves hundreds and as such it involves the public. We have no problem with "protest marches and bike rides" so long as we have a warning and a planned route so that we can ensure peaceful progress without contravening Health and Safety issues and without disrupting the lives of other people who have a right to travel on their way without these people deliberately holding them up at a Friday rush hour. In short - we are clamping down on this unplanned and disorganised business because of safety matters and need to keep things flowing instead of something causing unnecessary gridlock which we cannot ease or redirect without being advised of the route.
Not "Nanny State of kill joying" - but sheer matter of "policing properly - serving and protecting all concerned!"
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That and I wouldn't want a situation where motorists assume pedestrians will obey signals, which is a dangerous situation.
Swiss, Germans and even the French do not always assume!
They only have to do it once, at the wrong moment.
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Never really found that much fault with their driving overall. Just as good as here - even if the French are a bit funny over red lights in the South

But basically any accident at the crossing and they do not automatically beat the driver over the head. They check what part the ped played and this is only right and fair.
That is of course perfectly fair.
Of course it - and we also play fair when dealing with incidents involving cyclists - and we do know what the the "cyclists who have never heard of Cycle Craft of Highway Code or any internet site"

do at red lights and one ways....
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Think Mad Doc posted a case in which the driver escaped a dangerous charge because the teenager he killed had consumed two bottles of vodka when she staggered into his path. Sure - he was twice the legal speed limit - but the court took the view that the accident and outcome would have been the same had he not been speeding and dropped the dangerous charge and he ended up with a short ban for the speeding and a large fine and costs - but no jail term.
Indeed it is important to recognise the failings of others (eg the speeding driver) no not excuse the failings of oneself (the pedestrian). But that can work both ways.
Lot of drivers who are involved in accidents are beside themselves in trauma and great distress. People seem to forget this side of the human tragedy and the driver's need for counselling to get over the shock. Guy who killed the Swiss chap - I understand he has never driven since and needed medical help to cope with depression.
Widow of the chap in Wildy's incident - she is still very upset and blames herself because she did not stop him that day!
But people just do not seem to realise this side in their eagerness to jump on the revenge bandwagon. Sure the infamously notoriously "

mischievious Mephistocats " in the Swiss family could have been arguing just as much for cameras on every lamp post given what happened in their family and funding BRAKE instead of other causes

including "Road peace", "Learn and Live" and "Safespeed" via odd donations - but they don't. They see the whole side of it.
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You may say this was the wrong decision. CPS act on the evidence we supply to them in any case - and in this case GMP (in this case) and CPS could only prove he was driving bove the speed limit and the drunken state of the girl late at night was also taken into account.
Well I'm not privvy to all the facts of the case - but as I say the failings of another are not an excuse for the failings of ones self, and this can (and should) cut both ways. So I'll take your word for it in this instance
Yep - guy was speeding - as I recall Mad Doc titlled it "Six of One /Half Dozen of the other" when he posted it up somewhere for discussion last year. But only reason why he escaped the more serious charge was because of the girl's druinken state at the time and had he been driving more slowly or even legally - the outcome would have been the same. Loss of a young life because of youthful desire to to get drunk, defy parents and a shopkeeper who sold her the drink. Personally - I'd like to throw away the key when we prosecute for selling to underages - but the CPS and the Bench Book apparently don't allow this ...
Was a sad case - but GMTV carried the nub behind this sort of potentially tragic and fatal problem on their show this morning - and showed GMP's finest clamping down on children as young as 11 years - and like my GMP colleague on the telly today - there is a parental repsonsibility to know where your kids are - and allowing them to roam the streets at night drinking, drugging and being a severe nuisance to other law abding people and then wringing their hands and blaming other people and screaming for speed cameras should they be run over by a driver, biker or cyclist or milk float just ain't on!
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(Darlington cycling beacon town scheme)
You have not seenhj the plans - nor those from the other Beacon towns. I would say they are excellent.
I haven't - are they online anyway?
They should be by now..
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Other areas make use of disused rail lines - landscaping and making them a pleasant cross country short cut.
The thing is these often don't go to places where people want to go, which have grown up around the roads.
Most of them follow the roads -or they do around here
Decent cycle facilities? Or the crappy 1.3m cycle lanes that run in the gutter with the drains, deteriorating surface and such? Or the off road paths with the bimblnig pedestrians, broken glass, and giveway lines at every junction if you're lucky, or at every private access if you're not?

Oh - if you want awful cycle lanes - I gather the Mad Doc has locked his "Stag" horns with some bloke in his local Council over the ones in the Lakes. Gather the firm commissioned to do the paint job wanted the instuction in written triplicate before they started.
Sure some are dreadful and so badly planned by road planners that one wonders if whoever designed them has half a brain cell.
But Continent have a number of shared lanes with pedestrians and each get fined if they stray into the other's patch!
Swiss gendarmes and Germans are not very nice over this...

(They fined me you know when I was 14 and just visiting ... it was "so unfair "!

) Never forgot that lecture though...
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It should also be noted that cyclists are perfectly entitled to ride on the road, and that motorists should be expected to show the appropriate caution and courtesy around cyclists. Too many expect cyclists to be off the road.
Given we have no real cycling facilities - most of expect to share the roads with the cyclists. But we do share the roads and when on my bike (and I do clock up a fair mileage on my bike) - I am careful to ensure dirvers know my intentions and also careful to ensure that we make firendly eye contact and negotiate. I do the same in my car.
Indeed - it is important that everyone remembers that, at the end of the day, cars and bicycles are both vehicles, and thus rights and responsibilities are broadly the same.
As is a "crocodile" of people and a horse

.
But then we have tried to get the safety message across in boththe "Improve and Cycling" sections of this board.
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From observing the general public at large - I would even say the majority do likewise. Of the hard core of numpties - we have 10% nationally who really need the booster lessons or a ban - and all bans should include a set of lessons at the conclusion of the ban to help that driver not make such mistakes in future. It would also bring the driver back in line with the ephemeral traffic conditions.
I think thats reasonable, after all, all drivers get it right most of the time.
Still, we need enforcement to stop people drifting off the straight and narrow too much

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We do that perfectly well up here. We are very visible!

Even on the

road !

Where we try to ban the inmates escaping....
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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.
Indeed - but as a result alot of accidents are never recorded.
We just do not have the man power to nit pick every incident which is dealt with very effectively by insurance companies - and - if treated "knock for knock" - parties still learn and evaluate as a result of assualt on bank accounts to pay for all this

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Oh indeed - I'm not saying that the police so go through all the beaurocratic process for even the most minor shunt - clearly that'd be absurd (and would really get the Daily Wail going

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The apple case

The snowball case

The case of the kid, the

and the water pistol

- not to mention the man on the identity parade who was a bit peckish and not a diabetic
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My point was merely that this results in flaws in the statistics which need to be considered when analysing the statistics.
All our work has Returns to the Stat Offices...and insurers are also required to send - and all firms send in stuff to do with turnover, salaries, numbers employed and so on...
With that volume of stuff - there will be flaws anyway.
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Well the thing is with roads like the A14 is that pretty much the entire route has hazards like private accesses etc. As a result you need to treat the whole route.
The whole road should have been designed better - in fact like Stocksbidge - the motorway which never "made it"
I don't think anyone would really disagree - however its all constraints. When the A14 was built the finances and political will were only there for the current botch. Its was a question of the current situation or nothing at all.
Clearly not an ideal situation
Most of the problems is about trying to do things on the cheap - camera preoccupation is one of them .
Some interesting stats in papers today - New labour jobs advertised in the Grauniad throughout last year totalled to a whopping £787 billion

with public sector workers receiving pay increases well in excess of those engaged in the private sector and the average public sector wage was £35K - some £10k more than the priveate sector counterpart gets...

#
It's called
wasting our money and I may get my salary courtesy of Joe the Public Tax Payer - but at least I try to earn it by delivering the sort of service required - and this per my colleague West Mercia's CC in a press interview - means being
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If you believe the hype -= but the Mad Cats have tangible evidence of 33/34 mph NIPs in Lancs because of the speed course. Only if you drove past all four of them on tsome roads in Blackpool - you get the Speed Course for one and still end up with 9 points or a ban.... They now have evidence of one such case apparently and are trying to get the bloke to post all on here - or send his stuff to Paul..
That is not particularily helpful. Prosecuting for 33mph is not something I object to in itself (indeed I think you'd need to occassionally so people don't come to expect tolerance - but then in these cases a policeman having a word may be a better option, with tickets dispensed to those with a bit of an attitude) - but if you end up with a situation where someone gets themselves disqualified before they know about the first offense then not alot has been achieved beyond a bit of a PR mare.
I beleive there was a case in Blackpool back in 2003 whereby person ran up 12 points but saved on one by opting for the course - Nine points for 34 mph along the prom....
Besides .. 33 mph - a non starter as cambers and tyres affect speed fluctuate and no human can keep steady - try a freewheel on a bike on a downward gradient. It picks up speed very gradually. Also speedos are not that accurate. You do not nit pick over silly blips - makes bad law and bad justice. Common sense applies and we do allow a fair tolerance and we judge on what is actually seen.
Also - most judges interpret the meaning of the statute and not the letter of the statute when deciding the wrong the legislation is supposed to be righting. This sets the precedential rules which bind these courts.
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Of course - and there are some really daft ones.
Well yes. But people need to have some patience - there are some perfectly valid limits out there which may seem a bit daft from the drivers POV.
I think there are a lot - from my spell with GMP
years ago - A666 and A6 come to mind. Urban A6 is 40 mph in Manchester suburb - whilst the parallel A666 - very wide road - is a 30 mph in same Manchester suburb. This road was always a good hunting ground

even before cams appeared

A "dupe" road....
We have some of these around here - road which on the eye look like a 40 mph but aren't. Agree - they should be ...
Well as I've said, the fact that a road looks like a 40mph it doesn't mean a 40 limit is appropriate - indeed, it may be the reason for the lower limit.
The roads I have in mind - have no hazards. Yet there is a 50 mph road which is residential around here ....

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Ideally of course in such circumstances reengineering the road to a 30mph design speed would be the way forward - but thats expensive (and we need the cash for the M67

). Which is why we have enforcement (both cameras and police) to encourage people to keep to limits even if the reason isn't apparant.
Except that traffic police are depleting in number and ending up as desk jockeys... they sure ain't chasing "terror supsects across the countryside... "
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I can't comment on the specific examples you give, I don't know the roads. But it is important that limits are consistant with the road environment and each other as far as is possible. Limits which are apparantly inconsistant with the road environment are sometimes a necessary evil - however, where the justification doesn't exist they do alot of harm IMV.
Ah.. but far too often - no more thought is given to a situation other than reduce a speed limit and enforce with a camera - which accounts for all the daftly sited ones - some of which were set up in the early dasy of scamera rule.
But - address the test and give a motivation and ethos of life time learning and put pride of a completing a job well - and accepting constructive criticism - and we may just start to get back to where we started before all the nanny nonsense set in.
