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What Will it Take to Stop the Carnage?
Southern Ireland Struggles to Fight High Road Death Rates
28 January, 2005
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The
political will to enforce road safety is essential if fatalities are to
be reduced, writes Michael McAleer , Motoring Editor. If
the prime minister of each of the 25 EU member states were to lose a
child in a crash, would the issue of road safety finally get the
political attention it deserves? While this
recent comment by Finnish MEP and former world rally champion Ari
Vatanen to The Irish Times was clearly aimed to be provocative, his
point is not lost: road safety policy is at best reactionary. As the
number of deaths so far this year rose to 31 and road safety activists
aired their frustrations in the media, the Attorney General finally
announced this week - six years after it was first proposed - that the
Garda could indeed operate a random breath testing system to tackle
drink driving. Alongside
this, 31 new driving offences that will incur penalty points were added
to the four introduced in 2002. At that time the Government proposed to
have 69 offences incurring penalty points in place by 2003. So what do
we know about the terrible fatalities on our roads? Road traffic crash
statistics, compiled by the National Roads Authority (NRA), show 36 per
cent of fatalities happen at night or early in the morning, when only a
tiny percentage of maximum traffic volumes are on the road. The
statistics also confirm what we already suspected - that the worst time
of the week for road deaths is at weekends. The most
incredible statistic, however, is that in 2004 36 per cent of all
fatal crashes involved only one vehicle, an increase of three percentage
points on 2003. Single-vehicle crashes, involving no other road user,
are most strongly associated with drink-driving and/or speeding. As to the
official cause of most crashes, the contributory factor most commonly
listed by gardaI in their reports is driver error. This was deemed to be
the cause of 88 per cent of all crashes in 2004. According to a survey
of motorists' behaviour at the end of last year by FBD Insurance and
Advance Pitstop in association with Waterford Institute of Technology,
86.9 per cent of motorists described themselves as excellent, very good
or good drivers. The
statistics and the daily corteges to graveyards suggest Ireland's
drivers are not as competent as they think. So what
needs to be done? There are three basic areas on which Government road
safety policy should concentrate: enforcement, education and
engineering. All three must be addressed if we are to reduce road deaths
both in the short term and in the future. Enforcement
is the great short-term solution, the quick-fix that's useful for
politicians under pressure. Yet it requires much more than high-profile
announcements and weekend blitz campaigns to make any lasting impact. Take
random breath testing. Australia is often heralded as the great example
of the ability of random testing to reduce drink-driving and thus road
deaths. Yet, according to road safety reports from the Australian
Department of Transport, when it was first introduced in the state of
Victoria in 1976 "it enjoyed only limited success in deterring
drink-driving due to the style in which it was implemented. This was a
rather low level of enforcement interspersed with periods of high
intensity blitzes." Research
Carried out by the Federal Office of Road Safety in Australia concluded
that the long-term deterrent effect of random breath testing depends on
maintaining a high level of continual, visible police enforcement.
Indeed, it's been accepted that target rates for testing are the best
way to improve results. In 1989, the Australian prime minister announced
plans to ensure that at least one in four drivers was tested every year. If the
evidence from Australia is anything to go by, random testing may go the
way of the early days of penalty points here, whereby respect subsides
as motorists realise that their chances of being caught remain low.
Enforcement is as much about continuous policing efforts as it is about
new laws and penalties. The second
element of a concerted strategy is education. A total of 404,607
provisional licence-holders were on the road at the end of last
December, according to Department of Transport figures. Some of these
are drivers who have failed their driving test at least once, while
others may have passed only a theory test. In other
states, road safety is part of the school curriculum. Similarly, in
several European countries, there are requirements for evidence that the
driver has taken some approved driving lessons - compulsory basic
training - before they are allowed on public roads. There's a
vast body of evidence to show the majority of victims of road crashes
are in their mid-20s, yet there is no system of probation for newly
qualified drivers. Compare our situation to that of Denmark, where new
drivers are put on three years' probation, during which time they are
more likely to have their driving licences confiscated. Similarly, a
stricter penalty point regime operates for those newly qualified
drivers. There is
one further element in the road safety equation that should not be
ignored: engineering. Cars are much safer these days, with airbags,
anti-lock brakes and stability control systems that adjust the power
distribution to the wheels to prevent skidding and even apply the brakes
if the car seems to be going out of control. While they cannot rescue a
car from all eventualities, they do save lives. In Sweden,
where the number of traffic deaths last year dropped to the lowest level
recorded, the state agency attributed the fall to improved safety
features in cars and to their network of highways. In particular, it
highlighted the increasing number of cars equipped with anti-skid
systems. While
Ireland is no giant in the car industry, the Government can have an
influence on cars' safety features by removing them from the punitive
tax net it applies to cars in general. All these
elements, and more, can combine to save lives on our roads. What they
require, however, is political will. Even in this regard there are
examples of how a little political attention can save lives. In France,
President Jacques Chirac made a reduction in road deaths an election
pledge in 2002. Since then, traffic-related injuries and deaths in
France have fallen by one third. In the first year after he was elected,
road deaths were cut by 20 per cent. Even from a purely financial perspective, greater enforcement, better education and even tax breaks on safety equipment make sense. According to the NRA, the estimated cost of all road crashes recorded, including insurance, medical and other costs, was 1.22 billion in 2004. This
year is crucial for those responsible for road safety. The current
strategy runs out at the end of the year, while a general election is in
the offing. Is there the political will to make the necessary changes,
or is Ari Vatenan's grisly question closer to the truth than we care to
admit?
DSA Comments At DSA, we normally do not publish full media articles but this particular piece is of great importance for at least two reasons: 1. Southern Ireland may have been struggling against government apathy in the fight against road deaths for many years but it is by no means the only country in such a predicament. Indeed, it is to Ireland's credit that their news media are throwing down the necessary gauntlet, as the above article so clearly illustrates. 2. In our opinion, the most important aspect of this piece is that it focuses outwards, on the greater successes in other countries, rather than taking the more feeble approach of merely examining Ireland's own previous approaches and attempting to improve on them. In road safety, the highest goal is the only worthy goal, and global best practice has to be the key. To compare the 2004 fatality-rates for more than 50 countries, please visit: www.driveandstayalive.com/info%20section/statistics/stats-multicountry-percapita-2004.htm Eddie Wren, Executive Director, Drive and Stay Alive, Inc.
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