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Filed under: News — Paul @ 7:43 pm

Did you know it’s road safety week next week? If not why not?

“Rock on Planet Rock“, that’s what I say.

Of all the media, TV and radio Ads, the only station I’ve heard promoting road safety week is Planet Rock (on DAB).

The theme of this year’s event is the safety of children on foot and bicycles. Local activities in the Week can focus on this or any other road safety issue. During the Week Brake will: raise awareness about the extent of child road deaths and injuries; encourage drivers to slow down around schools and homes; help families use roads safely; and call for Government action to protect children.

“As professionals concerned with driver education, Bedford And District Driving Instructors Association members welcome any initiative which highlights the importance to parents and peer groups in setting good examples to young road users and pedestrians” said Paul Burchell of BADDIA. “There has been some pretty powerful advertising on Planet rock for this initiative which is spelling out the really basic stuff like Stopping and looking bewfore crossing the road and warning cyclists not to ignor road signs and signals, which only leaves mw to wonder why the message isnt being spread even mopre widley by the media. Perhaps it just isnt sexy enough”

Anybody who would like more information about road safety week is welcome to contact BADDIA via the web site and a member will be only too pleased to help.


Filed under: News — John @ 2:17 pm

Speed cameras are to be installed on large sections of the motorway network under a government plan to reduce congestion and vehicle emissions by cutting and strictly enforcing the speed limit at peak times.

The plan was announced as the Department for Transport published forecasts that congestion will rise by at least 28 per cent by 2025. It believes that “active traffic management” — in which the speed limit varies according to the conditions — will be a cheaper way of accommodating rising traffic levels than widening motorways.

Proposals to widen the M6 between Birmingham and Manchester and sections of the M1 may now be dropped. The department will instead build gantries at intervals across congested sections of the motorway network. The gantries will carry cameras and digital signs displaying the limit, which will be reduced to between 40mph and 60mph depending on the volume of traffic.

A trial of the variable-speed-limit system on the M42, southeast of Birmingham, has shown that more than 95 per cent of drivers comply. The limit on the 11-mile stretch of motorway is enforced by eight cameras rotated among 96 locations.

Police have tended to carry out very little speed-limit enforcement on motorways and a government survey found that more than half of cars on the motorway network exceeded the 70mph limit last year.

The M42 trial, and a similar scheme on the southwest section of the M25, found that reducing the limit resulted in faster average journeys because vehicles were less likely to brake sharply, which causes tailbacks. Overall fuel consumption fell by 4 per cent and vehicle emissions by 10 per cent.

The trial included use of the hard shoulder as a running lane in peak times and found that this reduced average journey times on the northbound carriageway by more than a quarter.

Ruth Kelly, the Transport Secretary, confirmed yesterday that the hard shoulder would be used as an extra lane on two short sections of the M6. She also said that variable speed limits would be introduced on other parts of the motorway around Birmingham and that a feasibility study would take place into introducing them across much of the motorway network.

In an interview with The Times, she said: “The trial shows there is a real culture change. People are focusing on the way they are driving and there is almost complete compliance with the limit. It’s about trying to encourage a regular flow of traffic rather than stop-start conditions. It reduces emissions and many people would prefer it to taking land to widen a road.”

She said that the study would consider introducing different speed limits for different lanes. On a four-lane motorway, the limit on the two outside lanes could be 60mph while on the two inside lanes, where traffic joins and exits, the limit could be reduced to 40mph or 50mph.

The Transport Department forecasts show that, even assuming improvements to traffic flow on motorways, journeys on roads in England will take 4 per cent, or three seconds, longer per kilometre by 2025.

Theresa Villiers, the Shadow Transport Secretary, said that Mrs Kelly was seeking to distract attention from cuts in the roadbuilding programme. “Conservatives welcome more hard-shoulder driving and we have repeatedly called for more active traffic management and efficient use of existing road space,” Ms Villiers said. “However, such schemes should not be used as an excuse to put the brakes on the much-needed improvement to the worst road bottlenecks.”

Source: The Times Online website 26/10/07

Any comments from members of BADDIA (Bedford & District Driving Instructors Association)?


Filed under: News — John @ 12:39 pm

A road deaths investigation unit should be created to restore Britain’s recently lost reputation for having the safest roads in Europe, according to a study published today.

Road travel is the only mode of transport for which there is no specialist national team of crash investigators. The Department for Transport has air, rail and marine accidents investigation branches which report on every fatal incident and make recommendations. But road accidents are left to police to investigate and they are primarily concerned with identifying the culprit rather than drawing lessons for improving road safety.

The study by the Parliamentary Advisory Council for Transport Safety (Pacts) recommended that the unit should be established by the Health & Safety Executive and should initially investigate the 1,000 deaths a year among people who are driving or riding in the course of their work. The unit could recommend prosecution of companies that failed to ensure the safety of employees, such as by encouraging them to drive when tired.

The unit could also make broader recommendations about vehicle safety and traffic law enforcement.

The study found that road deaths had fallen only slightly in recent years.

In 2000 Britain had 60 road deaths per million people compared with 68 in the Netherlands and 67 in Sweden. Britain showed no improvement over the next four years, and by 2006 road deaths were only slightly lower at 56 per million. By contrast, the Netherlands and Sweden last year achieved 43 and 49 respectively.

Both countries have redesigned a high proportion of roads to make them safer for pedestrians and cyclists.

The Department for Transport has resisted setting a road death target, arguing that a combined target for deaths and serious injuries is as effective. However, a study last year found that changes in the way serious injuries were recorded may have given the false impression that the Government was making progress on road safety.

But Rob Gifford, director of Pacts, said: “A road death is much less equivocal than an injury. A specific target for deaths would concentrate minds.”

The Pacts study proposes a target of 1,000 deaths a year by 2030, a fall of more than two thirds from last year’s total of 3,172. The proposal is based on the idea that using the road network should be no more than twice as dangerous as everyday activities such as DIY. At present road travel is 8.5 times as dangerous.Pacts recommends a default 20mph speed limit in built-up areas and greater use of cameras.

Source: The Times Online website 17/10/07

What do members of BADDIA (Bedford & District Driving Instructors Association) think?


Filed under: News — John @ 4:01 pm

‘Whatever you do, your children will copy you’ is the latest message for parents from the UK Department for Transport’s THINK! campaign. The campaign, aimed at parents of 4-11 year-olds, launches on 12 October with adverts in national press and on commercial radio. DfT hopes its campaign will hammer home the importance of parents setting a good example for their children on using the roads. The adverts will focus on:

  • Not wearing a seatbelt;
  • Crossing on the ‘red man’;
  • Not wearing a cycle helmet;
  • Talking on a mobile phone while crossing the road.

Accompanying posters will also be available to order from the THINK online catalogue.
THINK! E: DfTPublicity@dft.gsi.gov.uk W: www.thinkroadsafety.gov.uk

Source: BRAKE International Roadsafety News 12/10/07

What do members of BADDIA (Bedford & District Driving Instructors Association) think?


Filed under: News — Paul @ 6:43 am

Some of the key changes to the Highway code are listed here.

  • smoking behind the wheel is a breach of the rules of the road and could be seen as a ‘distraction’
  • new safety code for novice drivers, which includes ‘don’t show off or compete with other drivers’
  • updates on vehicle emissions information
  • new traffic calming initiatives explained: quiet lanes, high-occupancy vehicle lanes and home zones
  • advice on the stopping powers of Highway Agency Traffic Officers
  • an explanation of the law on smoking in company cars

Just to clarify one of these points. It IS NOT illegal to smoke whilst driving. However, if smoking can be shown to have caused a lack of proper control of the car, then that is the offence. This is nothing new. In the past there have be cases where motorists have been prosecuted for eating an apple or a packet of crisps at the wheel, for exactly the same reason.

Notwithstanding the above, it should be understood that it is now illegal to smoke in a driving school car whilst on lessons. In addition to this, if a learner driver arrives for a driving test in a car smelling of tabacco smoke, the test will be cancelled and the candidate will lose their test fee. All members of Bedford And District Driving Instructors Association will display a no smoking sign in their car and it is your right as a learner to recieve instruction in a smoke free environment. It is also the right of the instructor and examiner to work under the same conditions.


SMOKE GETS IN YOUR EYES

October 3, 2007
Filed under: News, Other — Paul @ 6:04 am

A new rule in the latest edition of the Highway Code means that drivers
who smoke
while behind the wheel risk being prosecuted. They could be
charged if it is thought they were driving without due care and attention.

I’ve always thought smoking in the car much more dangerous than talking
on a mobile phone. You have to take out a cigarette and lighter, put the
latter away after use, get rid of ash and stub the thing out at the end,
all of which involves some time and a lot of one/no-handed driving. A
mobile call doesn’t usually last as long as a cigarette, and if you drop
your mobile it doesn’t burn you or the upholstery, nor does its
use obscure your vision by producing smoke.

Mr Angry.


Filed under: Driving Lessons, News, learner drivers — John @ 9:08 am

By Colin Brown, Deputy Political Editor, The Independent

 

Safer motoring is likely to be put on the curriculum for schoolchildren as part of the Government’s attempts to cut road deaths among teenage drivers.

The proposal to teach safer driving in schools will be included in a wide-ranging consultation document on life enhancement and preparing for work to be issued by the Government in the next few months.

It follows research in Australia and America showing newly qualified drivers are most likely to have accidents. Driving theory could be taught in secondary schools but Jim Fitzpatrick, the Transport minister, has not ruled out the chance that pupils below licence age could get their first experience behind a wheel in the private grounds of some schools.

Road accidents are the biggest cause of death among 15- to 24-year-olds and research in the UK has shown that 27 per cent of male drivers are involved in a crash in their first year on the road.

Source: The Independent website 01/10/07

Any comments from members of the Bedford & District Driving Instructors Association (BADDIA)?


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