Daily Mail

Crash widow blasts smart M-ways after shock report

- By Richard Marsden

THE widow of a man killed on a smart motorway has blasted the schemes after a report revealed that they dramatical­ly raised the risk of serious and fatal crashes in a live lane.

According to the Department for Transport report, data for the first nine ‘alllanes-running’ schemes – where a hard shoulder is turned into a fourth lane – showed deaths on the carriagewa­y rose from an average of zero to 2.8 per year.

Figures for overall collisions in live lanes rose more than six-fold from an average of three per motorway to 19.

Meanwhile, serious crashes rocketed more than 23 times from 0.3 per year to seven, and slight collisions almost quadrupled, from 2.3 to 9.1. The figures are believed to relate to sections including those on the M1, M6 and M25.

In the 2019 Stocktake and Action Plan report, which used Highways England data, the DfT claimed the ‘risk of a collision involving a vehicle stopped in a live lane remains relatively small’ and overall accident figures for the roads reduced because of the eliminatio­n of hardshould­er collisions.

The report recommende­d an 18-point

‘Switch them off and stop killing people’

action plan to improve safety. Last week, Coroner David Urpeth warned smart motorways present ‘an ongoing risk of future deaths’ as he gave verdicts of unlawful killing at an inquest. He ruled the lack of a hard shoulder had contribute­d to the deaths of Jason Mercer, 44, and Alexandru Murgeanu, 22.

The men were struck by a lorry after they had stopped to exchange details following a minor collision on the M1 near Sheffield in June 2019.

The HGV driver, Prezemysla­w Szuba, was jailed for ten months for causing death by careless driving last October.

Mr Mercer’s widow Claire said: ‘Smart motorways are a lot easier to turn off than they were to turn on. Just switch them off and stop killing people.’

Highways England said one in 12 motorway deaths happened on hard shoulders. There have been 44 deaths on smart motorways in total. A spokesman said: ‘We are determined to do all we can to make our roads as safe as possible...’

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