Manwithaview1 wrote: persecution of motorists
Thanks for that MWAV, needed a good chuckle this morning.
Manwithaview1 wrote: persecution of motorists
I agree with you Stuart, but I have also had people walk into the path of my car reading something on their phone and the most very annoying thing, watching parents take the hands of their children and run across the road when there is a zebra/pelican crossing just a few yards away. I hate it when I see parents doing that, it sends the complete opposite and very necessary message.stuart wrote:The problem is that people are people. We try to be good but sometimes we forget or there is something else pressing. No matter how may times you go through the green cross code - children will, if they see something excitingly happen on the other side of the road, just rush out. A motorist is just checking their sat-nav or whatever. Collisions will happen. We can work out trying to reduce them but collisions will still happen.
Who is at fault is secondary. What is primary is the outcome. If a car is travelling at 30 mph or more it is a KSI. If its 20 its avoidable or at worst surviveable. That is all. The statistics are pretty convincing. The difference between 30 and 20 is lifesaving.
Unless you believe those at fault should die. That is all.
Stuart
I was chatting to some officers at Lewisham police station the other day and apparently the 20mph limit in Lewisham isn’t enforceable. The council apparently put the signs up without the necessary legislation and the speed limit actually remains at 30mph. I personally haven’t researched this assertion in detail.Mayowthorpe wrote:Speeding in Sydenham seems to be getting worse by the day.
Why arent the police doing more about this? Surely, mobile speed cameras are an easy solution.
Who can we escalate this to, before we see more carnage on the roads. God help the day a family or small children are seriously injured or killed by these maniacs.
Chris?
There is no such offence in England and Wales.syenhamboy wrote: Want to stop road incidents then let's start prosecuting Jay Walkers.
bensonby wrote:There is no such offence in England and Wales.syenhamboy wrote: Want to stop road incidents then let's start prosecuting Jay Walkers.
Jaywalking: How the car industry outlawed crossing the road:syenhamboy wrote:Exactly my point. make it law
Quite correct. To be legal the prevailing speed of traffic, when they were introduced, had to be 20 mph. The evidence suggests 20mph limits are a cause of accidents and do not contribute to road safety. Meanwhile they are responsible for a considerable increase in pollution and road humps contribute to increased noise and damage to vehicles resulting in accidents elsewhere.bensonby wrote:I was chatting to some officers at Lewisham police station the other day and apparently the 20mph limit in Lewisham isn’t enforceable. The council apparently put the signs up without the necessary legislation and the speed limit actually remains at 30mph. I personally haven’t researched this assertion in detail.Mayowthorpe wrote:Speeding in Sydenham seems to be getting worse by the day.
Why arent the police doing more about this? Surely, mobile speed cameras are an easy solution.
Who can we escalate this to, before we see more carnage on the roads. God help the day a family or small children are seriously injured or killed by these maniacs.
Chris?
jgdohertyVerified23h1
And here is a starter for ten on 20mph TMO’s
https://www.lewisham.gov.uk/myservices/ ... imit.aspx2
A table in the middle of the link makes reference to Traffic order applications commencing in Mar 2016 and finishing in July 2016.
There is no evidence it was completed and from preliminary searches it would seem TMO’s are not so frequently published now.
My legislative knowledge is insufficient to comment on whether there is an obligation to publish.
Oops duplicating with @armadillo.
There is hard evidence from other matters where officers have not complied with or departed from their standard processes as exampled during the listing of the Bell Green gasometers…
Reply
ThorNogsonVerified21h
here are public record of notice of two Lewisham 20mph traffic orders. Along with everyone else so far I don’t know what process apart from this publication needs to be followed to make 20mph enforceable.
I understand that some roads are actually too short to allow enforcement to take place. Presumably that would apply whatever the speed limit is.
The second traffic order refers to ‘to enable the Police to better enforce the 20 mph speed limit restrictions in Lewisham, by specifically identifying each length of street involved in the Order.’, so specifically to help the police in their enforcement.
https://www.thegazette.co.uk/notice/24429855
https://www.thegazette.co.uk/notice/27568402
I’d speculate that the second order is something to do with this, from a well known pro 20mph web source.
‘In order for the police to enforce a limit then they require a clear distance for them to observe drivers and for drivers to see them. This may make certain sites less suitable for speed detection. Different measurement equipment are available. Whilst in the past some “radar” based speed detectors were not approved for use below 30mph, most forces have “laser” type devices that are fully approved for use at 20mph.’
That's strange. The study which led to the widespread adoption of 20mph limits indicated on the study of existing enforced areas in London of a reduction of 40% in KSI. More for the most vulnerable road users. The should be single most effective way of reducing them. The sting in the tail is 'enforced' What evidence has come to light to refute this?John H wrote:The evidence suggests 20mph limits are a cause of accidents and do not contribute to road safety. Meanwhile they are responsible for a considerable increase in pollution and road humps contribute to increased noise and damage to vehicles resulting in accidents elsewhere.
I'm guessing you missed out on GCSE Maths Chris. But you are absolutely right about it being misleading when the average speed in inner London is 13.3 mph.se23.life wrote:Let’s also remember that driving the same journey at 20mph rather than 30mph will keep your car on the road for 33% longer. So comparisons of emissions at different speeds can be misleading if it’s the emissions rate that’s being quoted