Dougman wrote:
Basically, because a road sign costs about £200 to put up and to even patch and surface dress 100m of carriageway can cost £5000. If the money was there local authorities would be out fixing every road we could but schools, hospitals, social work, and housing win more votes than roads, so they get the money!
Agreed, but the road in question here has been resurfaced just this year, so surely the slippery road signs ought to be no longer needed? They are adding to the visual clutter which distracts drivers from looking out for real hazards rather then the council's imaginary ones!
There have been accidents here and the local councillor has stated that drivers have been going to fast (without evidence to prove it) and are ignoring the slippery road signs! You couldn't make it up. Trouble is, if there is a real need for a slippery road sign somewhere its message will be lost when so many are placed as a matter of course. This is a main A road through the town's suburbs and nowhere near a farm crossing with the potential for mud on the road making it slippery. If road signs are overdone, don't their messages simply get lost?
Seem to be plenty of similar comments here:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/opinion/main ... dl2003.xmlQuote:
Too many road signs defeats the object, causing visual clutter whereby people simply ignore them. Any information in the road sign goes into short-term memory, but it will be fairly instantly over-written by the next road sign if no immediate action has been required, making the information in the first one worthless, and so it goes on.