sylus":5ia0cmcv said:
The problem with the accident blackspot suggestion is that the police were allowed to carry out camera both fixed and mobile upto I believe two miles away from the actual blackspot therefore leaving the intention of safety open to wildly exagerated abuse for the soul purpose of financial extraction with little or no consideration for actual safety improvements
Speed cameras like all rules only apply to those who play by the rules..this may seem contradictory but..the same people who may get caught of those only the rule players will pay up.
Since the introduction of speed cameras the coffers to police forces has gone up at various stages but traffic police has seen massive reductions.
A speed camera will not catch a uninsured driver, an unlicensed driver, a driver using a mobile whilst driving, a drunk driver, a stolen car etc of which all of these are a greater contributor to accidents than speeding or the lie of speeding
As I mentioned before..most people are NOT against speed cameras. Most people ARE AGAINST them being sited for revenue rather than safety
Truth be told, I'm ambivalent to it (speed enforcement), largely.
GATSOs are mostly very visible, and those caught should have easily spotted them. As to mobile or other "sneaky" traps - well as I mentioned earlier - think of them as an observation or "where would you hide?" test.
As to the revenue thing - I doubt anybody gets revenue taken away from them if they don't drive over the limit - so it's all choices.
Regarding the other causes of bad driving - I don't disagree, mostly - there's a lot that really does require real policing, at present - but I guess policing, now, is all about how it's good to be able to prove effectiveness on paper - all comes down to how the police are run and measured, to a large degree.
All the same, speed enforcement is no real deterrent, if all it ever is is bright yellow GATSOs or highly visible speed traps - after all, CCTV doesn't just prevent crime everywhere.
If I had one objection to current either automated or through-the-post speed enforcement, it'd more be about what's tantamount to the reversal of "innocent until proven guilty" principle. Because in practice, the opposite tends to apply - you're likely to be guilty unless you can prove / declare you're innocent, all the evidence
tends to prove is that a car with a number plate matching your registration details got snapped (not sure how many cameras or other traps actually identify the driver).