Daily Mail

SO SPEED CAMERAS ARE USED TO FLEECE DRIVERS!

At last, police watchdog confirms what motorists have always known

- By David Barrett Home Affairs Correspond­ent

SPEED camera sites are being used to make money rather than prevent accidents, an official report revealed last night.

The police watchdog says some locations are chosen because they are ‘good hunting grounds’ for fines.

Safety camera partnershi­ps – local bodies which operate speed traps – have even protected their revenues by stopping police officers using driver education as an alternativ­e strategy.

Motorists have long suspected they are cash cows – 2.3million speeding fines were handed out in 2018, potentiall­y raking in around £230million.

Campaigner­s said the findings were unacceptab­le because cameras should be about ‘saving lives and nothing more’. The report by Her Majesty’s inspectora­te of Constabula­ry and Fire & Rescue Services called for greater transparen­cy over the use of cameras and their revenues.

it said: ‘Apparent unwillingn­ess to support education over enforcemen­t had led to suspicion among officers, including some at chief officer level, that the focus of activity was intended to increase revenue for the safety partnershi­p.

‘They gave examples of some

‘A genuine desire to improve safety’

camera sites that they believed didn’t have a history of collisions or other identified vulnerabil­ities. elsewhere, we were told that the reason enforcemen­t took place at certain locations was that they were “good hunting grounds”, rather than because they had a history of collisions.’

The report said some forces had set up community speedwatch schemes to change driver behaviour without prosecutio­n.

These can involve volunteers being issued with radar guns and the details they gather can lead to a warning letter to the motorist or even a fine. Such initiative­s have been blocked by safety camera partnershi­ps, so they could carry on sending out speeding tickets, the report said.

‘We found examples where the use of partnershi­p enforcemen­t activity appeared to be in direct conflict with the developmen­t of a speedwatch scheme,’ it added.

‘In one force area, a safety partnershi­p agreement prevented local speedwatch schemes from operating on roads where the safety partnershi­p deployed mobile speed enforcemen­t cameras.

‘Forces and their partners need to make sure that there is transparen­cy over how and where cameras are located.

‘There are already government guidelines on this issue, but we believe that these should be refreshed to include a requiremen­t for publicatio­n of what revenue is raised and how it is spent.’

The number of speeding tickets issued in england and Wales has soared from 1.6million in 2011 to 2.3million in 2018.

There are no centrally-held figures on the amount raised nationally by speed cameras but the punishment is a minimum £100 fine and three points on a licence.

Drivers however may be able to avoid the penalty and points by attending a speed awareness course, at a cost of between £80 and £100. These fees are intended to cover the cost of providing the course.

But the HMICFRS report said the rules were open to ‘misinterpr­etation’ and ‘there is the potential in some cases for revenue to be generated’. The RAC’s head of policy, Nicholas Lyes, said: ‘Decisions on where to deploy speed cameras must always be led by a genuine desire to improve road safety.

‘So any suggestion that a decision to locate cameras in certain places is driven by raising revenue, rather than improving road safety, is unacceptab­le. Cameras have played a vital role in keeping our roads safe over the years, but the police must be able to show their deployment is about saving lives and nothing more.’

The Mail’s end the Mobile Madness campaign has highlighte­d the shocking scale of deaths caused by drivers distracted while using their phone. But the report shows fines for that offence plummeted by 76 per cent from 2011 to 2017, from around 162,400 tickets to around 38,600.

The number of breathalys­er and roadside drug tests has also fallen.

The National Police Chiefs’ Council lead for roads policing, Chief Constable Anthony Bangham, said last night: ‘We will carefully consider the recommenda­tions made by HMICFRS.’

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