I was bored and thought I would walk-through these numbers to see just how disproportionate our speed camera policy is.
We know that 3500 die annually in a road accident in the UK.
It is claimed that speed is the cause of 1/3 of all fatalities, but we know that figure to be exaggerated and the term ‘speed’ is open to interpretation. Let’s assume exceeding the speed limit accounts for 1/10 of all fatalities (a huge over-estimate but it will prove my point). This means that 350 people die annually due to exceeding the speed limit (over estimation).
There are 43 camera partnerships, some with over 100 staff. Assuming an average of 50 staff per partnership (I can’t find any concrete numbers), that would suggest a national total of 2150 camera partnership staff (excluding officers operating Lidar equipment).
There are over 6000 suicides annually in the UK (source: Samaritans).
For proportional effort to be allocated there would be:
6000/350 * 2150 =
37000 staff working to prevent suicides - the best we have is a charity.
There are 126800 deaths annually in the UK from to cancer
(
http://www.statistics.gov.uk/cci/nugget.asp?id=915)
For proportional effort to be allocated there would be:
126800/350 * 2150 =
780000 staff working to
prevent cancer - that’s 1 in 30 of our employed population working to prevent cancer (separate from caring for sufferers).
Makes you think!