Road casualty numbers are not falling

Road Safety organisation GEM Motoring Assist is adding its
voice to the European warning that the decline in the level of policeenforcement of
traffic offences is a key reason why casualty numbers are not falling.
Tragic
More than 26,000 people died on EU roads in 2015, the first
increase since 2001 according to the European Transport Safety Council’s
annual road safety performance index
report. Exceeding speed limits, drink or distracted driving and a failure to
wear a seatbelt are still the leading causes of death and serious injury across
Europe, according to the researchers.
Enforcement
In a separate report on enforcement, ETSC found that, in
more than half the countries where data is available, the number of penalty
tickets issued over the last five years for use of a mobile phone while
driving has reduced, suggesting lower levels of enforcement across Europe.
Vital
GEM chief executive David Williams comments: “Police
enforcement is a vital component of an overall road safety strategy.
Reductions to road policing numbers in recent years send a message to drivers
that they are less likely to be caught speeding, drink-driving,
not wearing seatbelts, using mobile phones or generally not conforming with the
rules that have been put there for their safety.
“We echo ETSC’s clear warning that reductions in road death
and serious injury will not be forthcoming unless there is a new commitment to
policing the roads. Levels of compliance improve when police are there as an
effective deterrent to risk-taking behaviour. When compliance improves, there
will be fewer collisions.”
Priority
David Williams believes it must also be a police priority to
identify and sanction those drivers who pose unacceptably high risks.“Whether
they are disqualified, uninsured, or simply demonstrate a flagrant disregard
for the rules, there should be no place for them on our roads.
“The mechanism are in place to deal with these high-end offenders, but it is continually frustrating that dwindling numbers of roads policing officers often make this very difficult,” he adds.