Greenshed wrote:
Well that is quite right but what you and many of your chums have failed to see is that the lower speed in the accident has in this brilliantly illustrative case prevented the seriousness of the INJURY whatever the cause of the accident.
God bless you mate, you've just gone with a 'common sense' approach and comment about safety that has bugger all to do with safety.
Primary concern with safety is to REMOVE the hazard,
Then CONTROL the hazard,
And then, only then after you have been unable to remove or control the hazard do you then MITIGATE the effects of the hazard if realised.
The half arsed policy we have now starts with mitigation as the primary concern - which when it fails leaves nowhere else to go.
One control measure is proper training - in fact MHSWR has a little acronym 'NIITS' - Necessary, Information, Instruction, Training and Supervision.
Lets apply that to driving and this case specifically shall we?
Roadcraft - a manual for drivers who have been trained to a much higher standard than many drivers on the road actually states within it's pages that a driver should be driving at a speed that enables them to stop in a controlled manner in the distance that they can see to be clear.
Now the writer of an article states that
Quote:
In an instant, a few yards in front of me was a small child. He was followed by an adult.
which given the later comment about
Quote:
The child had got out of a car in a side street and had run towards the main road; his aunt had screamed and run after him. Both had run into my path.
this does seem to indicate a lack of situational awareness and observation.
Had the driver been observing in a cycle rather than - just straight ahead as many drivers appear to he may well have caught the child running fom the street a time before the child reached the pavement and road in front of his car - I find it hard to believe that whilst kids move quickly it was moving so fast he couldn't pick it up before hitting it - Think about the angles - the side road couldn't have been behind him as the kid would have to be doing at least 21mph to catch him up and run in front to him. So that leaves roughly side on - as he approach the side road, did he not think to observe what was there / was there a hazard - If I had seen a car that close to a side road junction I'd treat as a potential hazard - as he should have! If the road was side road was ahead of him it indicates a spectacular lack of observation.
So rather than going with your initial response of mitigation - how about control by better training and, therefore, standards of driving?
Big Tone wrote:
The day I cut my finger with a kitchen knife and realised all knives must be banned.
That's another topic mate and another hobby horse of mine.....
_________________
Gordon Brown saying I got the country into it's current economic mess so I'll get us out of it is the same as Bomber Harris nipping over to Dresden and offering to repair a few windows.
Chaos, panic and disorder - my work here is done.
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