Lum wrote:
Well the guy does sound like he was being a bit of an arse to me, but unless the debris was covering all 3 lanes and the hard shoulder, was it really necessary to stop all 3 lanes?
We don't have the full facts sadly, so I can only go off my own personal observations of HATOs doing stupid things eg.
- Parking on the hard shoulder with the front wheels pointing towards the carriageway (ie when they get hit, they end up in L1)
- Deciding to divert the entirety of the M4 onto a dual carriageway. Fair enough, but why drop it to a single lane in the run-up to the junction when both the sliproad and the dual carriageway were both two lanes and the obstruction was further ahead than that. Oh, this was at 6PM on a friday.
- Closing two lanes of M42 while a lorry changed a wheel. One lane would have been fine. Bonus points for this being very close to the M5 junction where you needed to be in those two lanes to go south.
There are more, but it's 4AM so I can't think of them right now.
Yes. Eventually some poor HATO will end up shunted into the path of a lorry because he parks up on the side of the road in the dangerous way he was taught to.
And one sure fire way to get the HATO scheme brought into disrepute would be for:
1) "Quick! There's a small table that's fallen on to the hard shoulder! Let's close all three lanes of the motorway so we can move it!
2) "Well, I do not care if you are fully qualified as a recovery operator and have been doing the job successfully for 20 years! I'll have you know I saw a Powerpoint slide show about how to recover broken-down vehicles, so I am going to tell you how to recover this vehicle!"
The HATO scheme is like a lot of ideas from the Blair/Brown government.
It's like what Dilbert's Boss said to himself after another of his ideas was shot down by his cynical staff: "How come the ideas are always so good when they are in my head?"
HATOs, CSOs, PFIs, etc., Good on paper but they seem less-than-brilliant in the execution.
