Zamzara wrote:
A thought occured to me the other day. It's specualtive but I reckon it's worth thinking about.
Is it possible so many drivers (particularly the newly qualified ones) are becoming selfish and arrogant, and acting as though they were invincible because as child pedestrians they are not taught proper road safety? There is this constant message through TV adverts and anti-car propoganda that someone else is always to blame: car drivers are labelled 'speeders' and you are morally superior to them as a pedestrian even if you walk into the road at a red man without looking. Is this same attitude continuing in the minds of youngsters after they start driving?
When I drop my son off at school, I am frankly appalled by the manner in which the pupils use the road - failing to cross at appropriate places, walking across at an oblique angle, walking in the gutter, and stepping off the pavement straight into the paths of vehicles.
Along with this are some who feel it's OK to balance along the top of a drystone wall (=ROUGH) right alongside the A591!
The only ones who seem to have any sense at all (I have yet to fault one in two years) are the ones who cycle.
At a guess, I would say that an unmarked traffic car could pick out the worst of the pedestrians AND parent car drivers and get at least 10 - 15 into court within 30 - 45 minutes at start / finish times! However it's unlikely - the council are trying to get a 30 mph limit along the A591 which will have drivers who already drive at 30 - 34 at busy times, watching their speedos as they approach the inevitable speed cameras which will appear to enforce the limit.
My prediction is that those that chose to drive well below the new limit will be bunched up closer, presenting fewer opportunities for cars to exit the school driveway. The dicey get out will become worse as drivers decide to lunge at the slightest opportunity.
So it's not just motorists who are inept - road planners too must shoulder some of the blame for their blinkered approach to road safety.