From the consultation document
Tomorrow's roads - Safer for everyone here
The Road Safety Initiative advised the public of the number of road traffic accidents on the Island over an eleven year period between 1993 and 2003. These included 112 fatalities, 1042 serious injury casualties and 3857 slight injury casualties. The Department is committed to reducing the number of road traffic accidents by 2% per annum despite traffic continuing to increase, and wide-ranging measures were proposed to assist with achieving this target.
Proposals and consultation responses as follows.
Introduce maximum speed limits according to road hierarchy designation with a maximum of 60mph on strategic routes and a maximum of 70mph on the Mountain Road.
General Support?
NO
Raise the age for passing the practical driving/riding tests to 17.
General Support?
YES
Extend the period of ‘R’ plate restriction from 1 year to 2 years.
General Support?
YES
Reduce the legal level of blood alcohol content from 80ml to 50ml.
General Support?
YES
Introduce ‘Route Alert’ schemes to raise awareness of hazards on the routes with the aim of reducing casualties.
General Support?
Limited response
Increase periodic testing of vehicles and aim to be testing cars over 10 years old by 2010.
General Support?
YES
Introduce further safety initiatives to promote safer motorcycling?
General Support?
YES
Parking enforcement to be undertaken by the Department of Transport in addition to the Police and Traffic Controllers
General Support?
YES
Introduce Safety Cameras?
General Support?
NO
Increase fines and penalties according to seriousness of the offence?
General Support?
YES
Other interesting snippets
Whilst it may be true that the speed of vehicles does not of itself cause accidents, it can be certain that excessive speed will lead to accidents. This is through driver error or the actions of other road users being more likely to occur and less likely to be avoided. Serious consequences of an accident occurring at high speed will be greater than if the accident happened at a lower speed, that is if the accident had not in fact been avoided by virtue of the low speed being more forgiving of driver error or unexpected actions by other road users.
One strong and undeniable consensus emerged from the public’s response, that whilst safety improvements may be made by engineering and road design or enactment of strict legislation governing speed limits, these improvements may be negated by drivers behaviour and taking greater risks so that the emphasis should be on modifying road user behaviour through better education, training, publicity and enforcement.
The speed limits proposed, i.e. 70mph on the Mountain Road, 60mph on strategic routes; 50mph on Secondary routes, 40mph on Local roads and 30mph on Local Access Roads have been determined as a result of analysis of traffic counts and speed surveys. The analysis shows that 85 percentile of users of these roads do not currently drive faster than the proposed limits. The 15 percentile drivers who occasionally exceed these limits are those who feel most threatened by the proposals but this should not prevent Government from setting acceptable limits and attempting to prevent excessive speeds and serious road traffic accidents.
Safety Cameras
Many also voiced the opinion that speed cameras have been abused by authorities in the UK, and that they appear by their positioning to be in non-logical locations i.e. that they are used principally as a revenue earner rather than a road safety priority.
The full report makes for an interesting read
edited to add accident data, D'oh!