Is the law on traffic offences appropriate?
Countless enquiries, studies, polls and case histories have made
it evident that the law in respect of road death and injury
is not only inappropriate, but also breaches several Human Rights'
articles, and that a law change is imperative. A 40,000 signature
petition calling for an end to treating - in law - road death and
injury as a mere by-product of a piece of driving instead of the
killing or maiming of human beings, has been presented by the Chair
of the Parliamentary Group for Justice for Road Traffic Victims to
the House of Commons already three years ago. (petition
attached)
RoadPeace believes that the inappropriate current law and
additionally the failure to prosecute under existing law, represent
injustice, lack of deterrence and are incompatible and inconsistent
with the government's casualty reduction target and Integrated
Transport Policy.
Inappropriate law and charges
Background to the present road traffic law
Until the late 1950s, deaths caused as a result of bad driving
were treated like any other case of gross negligence manslaughter.
The 1956 Road Traffic Act created the statutory offence of causing
death by reckless or dangerous driving. In 1977, the offence became
one of causing death by reckless driving and by 1992 one of causing
death by dangerous driving. Behind the change in the law was the
view that in the 1950s jurors were reluctant to convict motorists
of manslaughter.
Attitudes have changed, as the change in attitude to drink driving
has shown. In 1984, Lord Chief Justice Lane stated that any driver
who fails to realise that what he is doing at the wheel is creating
an obvious risk, is deserving of severe punishment. In 1993, Lord
Chief Justice Taylor stated that the public has become more and
more concerned about the offences in relation to causing death by
driving, that the law needed to be reviewed and the maximum
sentence increased from 5 to 10 years. In the Court of Appeal he
stated that Parliament has indicated that it expects a court to
pass sentences that deter and punish, so as to offer protection to
road users against dangerous driving. This wish of Parliament needs
yet to be seen put into practice by the prosecuting
authorities.
Nicholas Atkinson, a criminal QC, said at a conference: "If in a
fight in the street a punch is thrown and the victim dies, the
court does not carry out an investigation into the quality of the
punches but it is concerned with the consequences, namely the death
of the person punched. Why should it be any different on the road?"
He went on: "The death of an individual must be the starting point,
which demands proper investigation, and proper punishment where
appropriate The death is the tragedy that has to be dealt with and
the courts should be seen to sentence appropriately."
Driving without due care and attention (S 3) and problems when
applied to road death & injury There are 3,500 road
deaths a year, but only some 250 cases are prosecuted for 'Causing
death by dangerous driving' in a Crown Court. The most common
charge in fatal crashes (and the few serious injury crashes that
get prosecuted) is 'Driving without Due Care and Attention', a
mere summary charge, dealt with entirely by lay magistrates -
the same charge that applies for backing into a parked car. This is
deeply offensive and hurtful to victims, but is clearly also an
abuse of their and their loved ones' human rights, since the facts
of death or injury are completely ignored - they are neither part
of the charge, proceedings nor sentence.
The relatives hear a string of driving offences, with the fact of
the death not even mentioned. Only since a Court of Appeal case
(Simmons, 1999) the death may be, but is not required to be,
mentioned. Further testimony to the shabby way in which road death
and injury are treated in law is the fact that Magistrate Courts do
not even record which summary cases involve a death or injury, and
which ones do not. So we have a situation where the government does
not know how many drivers were charged or convicted in a fatal or
injury road crash.
Summary charges are further unacceptable in such serious cases
because of the 6-month time limit within which they have to be
laid, when investigations and inquests, which bring up relevant
evidence, often take much longer. The result is often no
prosecution when there should be one, or no opportunity for
relatives to bring a private criminal prosecution.
Lack of criminal prosecutions in injury cases, even for Driving
without due care and attention, often means that the injured have
to accept partial liability and consequently reduced damages.
Slack charging standards The charging standard agreed
between ACPO and the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) lists many
driving offences that have led to deaths or injuries, which in
common-sense terms would be considered dangerous, as merely
careless ie justifying a 'Driving without Due Care and Attention'
charge, eg driving through red, using a mobile phone while driving,
reading a newspaper or map. These acts would have resulted in the
immediate failure of a driving test, since obviously
dangerous.
Do Police and other enforcement agencies have the right
priorities? Whilst the culture is slowly changing, road
crashes involving traffic offences are still too often viewed as
'accidents' rather than avoidable incidents. The police and society
accept more risk on the road than they do off the road.
Compare police reaction to speeding with that to domestic violence
or racism. That the latter two are seen as endemic has led the
Government to take a stronger approach, not weaker as in the case
of speeding, evident in tolerance margins, restrictions on safety
cameras, etc. The Transport Select Committee had stated in the past
that if government got serious about speed management, then road
deaths could be reduced to 1,000, reducing road deaths by
approximately 67% - a target infinitely superior to the
government's present 40% road casualty reduction target in respect
of killed and seriously injured, which would spare many families
the experience of devastating bereavement. In a recent PACTS
Westminster lecture, Professor Allsop argued that if the risk on
the road was the same as off the road, road deaths would be as low
as 500.
Lack of priority and investment in traffic policing
The numbers of traffic police have been reduced quite dramatically
in many areas, including London. In general, police authorities
have not adopted traffic law enforcement as a core function, not
even as part of the community safety and safer streets programmes.
Road casualty statistics are rarely included on police websites. In
London, the Metropolitan Police Service (MPS) provides crime and
victim statistics to the Police Community Consultative Groups
(PCCGs) on a monthly basis, but they exclude road casualty
statistics. Another example that road deaths are not given due
priority is the video 'The Message', to train police officers to
deliver the death message - only one of the seven case studies was
a road death, when officers deliver far more messages for road
deaths than murder.
Under investment in collision investigation The task
of collision investigation, which is shared between traffic police
and general police, suffers from a lack of investment, most
especially in respect of injury crashes. In April 2003, the MPS
reported that their 46 collision investigators had investigated 348
fatal road crashes and 940 near fatal crashes in 2002 (MPS press
office email, 14 April 2003). This meant that the Borough police
investigated some 80% of serious injury crashes, along with all
slight injury crashes.
Compare the investment in road crash investigations with that of
murder investigations: -there are almost 1000 detectives to
investigate murders, and the MPS have requested another 135 quoting
a recent HMIC report which said murder squads and senior detectives
were seriously overstretched (Evg. Std, 12.6.2003). Since the
police investigate twice as many road deaths as murders in London,
based on the murder detective numbers there should be 2000
collision investigators - over 40 times the current number. This
does not even consider the many life threatening and serious injury
cases.
The low investment in collision investigation has been documented
by Government - according to the Dept. for Transport's most recent
Highway Economic Note (2000), the average value of police resources
allocated to a fatal crash is £1,330 (approx 0.1% of the total
value of prevention for a fatal crash), £180 for a serious
injury crash (the equivalent of no more than a few hours of police
time) and £40 for a slight injury crash (this would largely be
for time recording the crash) (DfT, 2003).
Lack of accountability Despite the fact that there are
over four times more road deaths than murders in the UK, neither
the police nor the CPS report on the legal outcome of reported road
crashes. The police do not record or monitor whether a charge has
been laid and the CPS are unable to identify the number of drivers
prosecuted for motoring offences involving deaths/injuries or
sentences. This would be inconceivable with other crimes, like rape
or burglary, where the judicial disposal rate is closely
monitored.
Under-reporting Under - reporting relates to both
casualties not reported to the police and those, which the police
fail to record. Unlike with all other crimes, for which the
reporting procedures changed recently, road traffic casualties are
still measured by the STATS 19 database and not by those reported
to the police. In London, the police reported that they
investigated 20% more fatal crashes in 2001 and 2002 than were
reported by STATS 19. 'Road Accidents Great Britain, The Casualty
Report' annually warns of the problem of under-reporting. According
to the 1999 publication, a fifth of casualties reported to the
police were unrecorded. The continued reliance on Stats19 data
leads to under-estimation of risks to road users and the burden on
police in terms of investigation resources.
Under-estimation of economic costs Whereas the Home
Office adjusts for under-reporting in its calculation of the costs
of crime and of fire, the DfT does not include any adjustment for
the many unreported injury crashes. Thus the cost to the country
and the need for road danger reduction investment continues to be
under-estimated.
The average cost of a crash is also under-estimated, as it does not
consider long-term health impacts on primary and secondary victims,
the burden on the health sector (i.e. opportunity costs), and most
significantly it uses a low value for the human costs (which
account for 66% cost of a fatal crash). The current human cost
estimate is based on research from the mid 1990s, which found a
range of £750,000 to £1,250,000 (at 1997 prices) to be
acceptable. Even though it is well known that the prevention of a
death on the railways is valued much more highly than on the road,
the DfT chose a conservative approach and adopted the mid-point of
this range rather than the highest value (DfT, HEN 2000). Moreover,
the human cost estimate is based on the value of a single
statistical life. Previous studies have suggested that the human
costs estimate might be increased by about £0.5 million (1983
prices), if altruism was included (Ball, New Developments in Cost
of Injury, 2000).
Safety camera restrictions
There are greater restrictions on safety cameras than there are
on CCTV, i.e. greater priority is given to protecting property than
to preventing death and injury. It is permissible for plain-clothed
detectives to be used to deter thieves, but safety cameras must be
highly visible and signed in advance (no other country is known to
restrict safety cameras in this way). It should be noted that these
restrictions are imposed by the DfT and not by the law. Safety
cameras are also evaluated by much higher standards than manual
enforcement measures. Automatic enforcement should be seen as a
complement and not competition or substitute to manual
enforcement.
Imbalance between public prosecutors and defence/insurance
lawyers Defendants in death and injury cases, including
commercial vehicle drivers, will have the weight and expert legal
representation of an insurance company behind them. The CPS uses
agency staff and case workers, who need no legal qualifications,
for serious injury cases and their staff who handle fatal cases
often appear to be no match in preparation to the insurance company
lawyers.
Is sufficient priority given to the needs of pedestrians and
cyclists?
No, it is not A civilised society protects its vulnerable -
be they young, elderly or vulnerable road users. Pedestrians and
cyclists are much more vulnerable to harm, also horse riders, and
the Highway Code rightly imposes a duty of care on motorists.
20 mph speed limit A 20 mph well enforced speed limit
in urban areas would do more to protect pedestrians and cyclists
than any other measure. Regardless of fault, vulnerable road users
would stand a chance of ending up in a cast instead of a coffin if
impact speeds were reduced to a 'survivable speed'.
Turning vehicles/right of way Unlike in the
Netherlands and Germany, turning traffic does not have to give way
to through traffic. Too many cycle deaths and injuries involve
turning vehicles. Vehicles turning from or into minor streets
should also have to give way to pedestrians walking on a main
road.
Strict Liability There should be an economic incentive
for drivers to drive defensively and be more pro-active in avoiding
collisions with cyclists and pedestrians. A civil compensation
policy based on strict liability, and which was widely publicised,
would help reduce collisions, and those not avoided would at least
have pedestrians and cyclists receiving compensation, which would
help finance rehabilitation.
Misguided priorities
a) cycle helmets Until the body is safe from vehicle
speed, protecting the head is less important. Priority should be on
preventing murder first, and suicide second.
b) cycling on pavements RoadPeace does not condone cycling
on the pavement, but in the big scheme, this is a nuisance rather
than a threat. To make cyclists choose the road over the pavement,
the roads have to be made a safer place to ride. The 30 community
support officers in Kensington and Chelsea who were reportedly
targeting cycling on the pavement could have been much better
employed enforcing pedestrian crossings - When was the last time a
driver was fined for not stopping for a pedestrian at a zebra
crossing, when was the last publicity campaign on this?
c) focus on training children instead of adults Instead of
asking for volunteers to help with kerb craft training programmes,
the government should be advertising that drivers will be held
responsible for civil compensation in all crashes involving
children unless they can prove it was absolutely unavoidable.
Cycling lessons should be included in driver training
programmes.
d) driver retraining programmes A recent Cochrane review
on post licence driver education programmes found no impact from
either advanced or remedial driver training programmes.
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