Friday 14 September 2012

Not Dead Enough

Finally, a reply from the Highways Authority contractor who manages the A34, and the sliproad at Tufton:

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Dear Mr Stead,

Further to my email dated 06 September; we have completed our investigations.

There have been 2 reported personal injury collisions in the vicinity of this location in the last 5 years (2007-2011); both of these incidents were slight and both had the contributory factor of lost (sic) of control.

The Department for Transport (DfT) Circular 1/06 ‘Setting Local Speed Limits’ requires all Traffic Authorities to ensure the speed limits on their roads are kept under review with changing requirements. A National Target to review local speed limits by 2011 had been set; requiring the necessary changes to be implemented by the relevant Traffic Authorities.

For the Area 3 network, this was carried out in February 2010 and each link of each route was examined in accordance with the parameters of Circular 1/06 ‘Setting Local Speed Limits’.

It was found that with the exception of two sections on the A3, the rest of the Area 3 Network has collisions per 100 million vehicle kilometres, below the Investigatory Level and thus does not require any further actions to be undertaken in respect of speed management.

Therefore there are currently no plans to lower the speed limit at the Whitchurch Interchange. There are also no plans to undertake any improvements to the layout or signage at the junction based on the evidence explained above.

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So what this seems to say is yes, people have lost control in this location. Twice in the last five years, resulting in injury. But because there haven't been more collisions, or more severe injuries or death, it doesn't meet government criteria for intervention. We need more people to be injured, or maybe die, before action will be triggered. 

One can only assume that a collision between two vehicles severe enough to cause injuries inside a car would have been much worse, had it been between a car and, say, a child on a bike or a pedestrian, either in the roadway or on the verge. Remembering, these collisions occurred due to 'lost control'. We have an acknowledgement from the government agency that there is a problem here, and a statement that nothing needs doing until more people are injured or someone is killed.

My reply:


Dear HA representatives

Thank-you for your detailed reply.

Can you please advise what the appeal or escalation process is, to have this decision reviewed? 

Can you also please provide me with a copy of the work / assessment done on this intersection, the relevant collision reports (excluding personal information, of course), and the criteria against which the intersection was assessed?

I would also appreciate any technical information regarding the intersection - cambers, sight lines, assumed road surface friction co-efficient etc.


Regards

Mike

7 comments:

  1. Changing the road layout to be safer would increase, no doubt, the number of people - especially families with children - walking or riding a bicycle to travel between Whitchurch and communities like Tufton and further along.

    Doing nothing to improve the real and *perceived* safety issues means people will continue to opt to drive their car to visit friends there or when going on a day's outing in the lovely nearby Test Valley.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Changing the road layout to be safer would increase, no doubt, the number of people - especially families with children - walking or riding a bicycle to travel between Whitchurch and communities like Tufton and further along.

    Doing nothing to improve the real and *perceived* safety issues means people will continue to opt to drive their car to visit friends there or going on a day's outing.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Maybe when cyclists starting paying a tax to use the road, the road authorities will be more inclinded to do something about these "safety issues". Until such times the road should be for the benefit of the car user.
    You're fighting a loosing battle

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    Replies
    1. Hi Lucas, thanks for your comment.

      Can I recommend this site http://ipayroadtax.com/no-such-thing-as-road-tax/who-pays-road-tax/ as a good breakdown of your suggestion cyclists should pay 'a tax to use the road'. The fact is we already do, there's no such thing as 'road tax' (you are only about 75 years too late there). My neighbour has two cars - and pays *no tax at all*, apart from PAYE and Council tax which we all pay.

      You seem to be saying that when I ride my bike I don't have the same right to a safe journey as when I drive my £480-VED-a-year car. Really? I'm not aware I can 'un-pay' all my PAYE and Council Tax to become a second-class road user not deserving of safety or a response from people I pay the wages of.

      This is a very real 'safety issue' that affects people in their cars just as much as other tax payers - our friends at Tufton had a car written off last year at that intersection and it was pure luck no-one was seriously hurt or killed. The problem has been acknowledged by our MP, as well as several county councillors so far.

      This is NOT a 'cyclists vs. cars' campaign. It's about all road users and a dangerous intersection.


      Cheers

      Mike

      Delete
    2. Does Anyone pay "road tax"? No, it was abolished in 1936. As for making the roads safer, well the most effective way to do that would be to ban all private cars from the public roads. However, this would be highly impractical and no one is actually calling for it. Failing that the next best way to increase road safety is to re-engineer our roads provide a safe space for everyone and strictly enforce the speed limits.

      Delete
  4. Hi Mike,

    I came across your blog from twitter somewhere...

    Stats19 (traffic injury) data is publicly available and has been mapped by CycleStreets.

    Here are the reports from the area I think you're interested in. Just click ammend search if you need to change the bounding box on the map.

    http://www.cyclestreets.net/collisions/search/?lonLat=%5B%5B-1.3473251622559%2C51.218847178238%5D%2C%5B-1.3388279240967%2C51.219492291679%5D%2C%5B-1.3383129399659%2C51.214223600688%5D%2C%5B-1.346466855371%2C51.213793476845%5D%2C%5B-1.3473251622559%2C51.218847178238%5D%5D

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Awesome, thanks Matt - I've just done a post specifically referencing those stats.

      Cheers

      Mike

      Delete

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