http://www.thisisdorset.net/display.var ... s_fall.php
Safety group highlighting crashes fall
By Melanie Vass
DORSET safety campaigners have pointed to a third successive reduction in deaths and serious injuries as proof that speed cameras are working.
Figures released by the Dorset Safety Camera Partnership show an 11.3 per cent reduction in the number of people killed and seriously injured in collisions at safety camera sites across the county from April 1, 2005, to March 31, 2006.
This is in comparison to a 7.2 per cent reduction across the rest of Dorset at locations where there are no cameras.
The reduction in road deaths is even greater, with a 16.7 per cent drop in fatal casualties at camera sites, compared with a 3.03 per cent reduction in the rest of the county.
The Dorset Safety Camera Partnership has been in operation for four years, with road deaths and injuries decreasing year-on-year.
Johnny Stephens, operations project manager for the partnership, said: "This means that the partnership is getting it right in relation to where the cameras are being located. Lives are being saved.
"It is very encouraging that we continue to see a reduction in the number of people killed and seriously injured in Dorset, but that is not enough. The aim is to have zero deaths and injuries.
"Through a mix of education, enforcement and engineering, the message is getting across to people that excess and inappropriate speed kills and seriously injures, and if motorists decide to ignore speed limits they are breaking the law."
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I've already sent the following email to the journalist:
-------- Original Message --------
Subject: Dorset Road safety
Date: Thu, 20 Jul 2006 12:51:11 +0100
From: Paul Smith <psmith@safespeed.org.uk>
Organization: Safe Speed
To:
melanie.vass@bournemouthecho.co.uk
Hi Melanie,
I saw your article on the Camera Partnership claiming success. I beg to differ
and would like to point out that they are clearly 'lying with statistics'.
Official figures from Department for Transport for Dorset road deaths are as
follows:
1997 43
1998 31
1999 35
2000 40
2001 35
2002 54
2003 48
2004 44
2005 42
The Camera Partnership existed since July 2002. Being kind and ignoring 2002
(a very bad year) we have 110 (35+40+35) road deaths in Dorset in the three
years before the partnership existed, with 134 (48+44+42) in the three years
since. That's a massive 22% increase. There is NO WAY AT ALL to interpret
these figures fairly that indicates success for the camera partnership. Deaths
are higher than before they existed, Yet safety should be improving due to
safer cars, road engineering improvements and improvements in post crash
medical care.
As for the tiny reduction (11%) they are claiming at speed camera site, I'm
afraid that that's more trickery because most crashes are randomly located,
cameras are at least in part placed at sites of random clusters of crashes and
the random clusters do not recur, giving rise to a very substantial illusion
of benefit. This effect is know as 'regression to the mean' and is very well
understood in road safety circles. Try asking them about it.
As for the reductions claimed in 'KSI', it was recently published in the
British Medical Journal that KSI (official) statistics are showing a year on
year reduction while better data from the Hospitals shows no reduction in
admissions of road crash victims for a whole decade.
I'm on 01862 893030, and I would be pleased to back up my analysis to any
required degree.
PLEASE don't let them get away with misleading the public like this.
--
Best Regards,
Paul Smith
Safe Speed
web:
http://www.safespeed.org.uk
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promoting intelligent road safety