Homer wrote:
You assert that police stops on the hard shoulder are dangerous, if it really was dangerous then there would be regular deaths, or at least serious injuries. It's not enough to say "it's obvious", often, when the statistics are examined, the obvious turns out to be far from reality.
You don't consider being stationary on a motorway right next to fast moving traffic, with no intermediate crash barrier, to be an obvious danger!?
Stats don't provide a measure of danger, they simply show how many times the danger has been escaped or realised.
Homer wrote:
There may be an element of danger, but there is danger in many everyday activities, what else would you like to ban? How about crossing the road?
Absolutely not, but like I said previously, such things are necessary and/or risks that we
choose to take. Stopping vehicles on the hard shoulder for minor offences is neither of those things. And since there is a perfectly good alternative such as escorting the vehicle to the next motorway exit, why impose such unnecessary risks on people
against their will?
Homer wrote:
What if one of the people not stopped goes on to kill one of your loved ones? I'm sure one of our resident plod can confirm that often a stop for a minor offence turns up something more sinister.
So by that logic you propose we should just kill every motorist (including their passengers, and the police officers themselves!?) that any police officer decides to pull over, just in case they're really a master criminal?
I'm sorry, but that's a bizarre opinion to say the very least!
Homer wrote:
I'm also sure our traffic police already take the greatest care in selecting the safest spots to make a stop.
Since they usually pick the hard shoulder rather than an exit a short distance away, I'm sure they don't.
Homer wrote:
You seem to have missed the point of this site, it is not about making kneejerk reactions it is about examining the evidence and making policy on sound judgement. Your kind of thinking is exactly the kind of thinking which got us speed cameras.
I fail to see how this could be considered a 'kneejerk' reaction or how it has anything to do with speed cameras. This suggestion makes sound sense (if you really think about it), and I would consider opposition to it, purely on the basis of 'stats', to be much more like a 'kneejerk' reaction.
(And for the record, I'm as much opposed to the use of speed cameras to promote road safety as anyone else.)
The facts are simple:
1) Standing next to a motorway, without the protection of a crash barrier, is not a safe place to be.Forget the stats, it's simple probability: Sure, you may be ok for 5 mins, 10 mins, maybe even several hours or even days, but eventually something's gonna hit you. While an individual police car may only pull someone over for a few mins each time, all those times add up. If you include all of the police officers patrolling every motorway, it probably adds up to many hours of people sitting in vehicles on the hard shoulder each and every day.
2) It is not a risk that they (the drivers and passengers who are pulled over) choose to take.The decision is made for them by the police officer(s).
3) There is a much safer alternative that will, on average, take no more than a few minutes longer.i.e Escort the vehicle to the next exit! Simple!
There really is no reason for police to pull people over on to the hard shoulder, except in emergency situations!