The Sunday Post (Dundee)

ONE YEAR: £8.5M IN FINES

- By Craig Mcdonald cmcdonald@sundaypost.com

A psychologi­st has claimed bus lanes are dangerous as their signage contains too much informatio­n for the brain to process safely while driving.

Bernardine King, who specialise­s in understand­ing thought processes, said Scotland should now follow the lead of England and Wales, who are set to issue warnings, rather than fines, to first offenders.

Cr itics claim bus lanes and gates are used by local authoritie­s to generate cash from motorists. Even with lockdown, fines worth about £ 9 million were issued in Scotland last year. Dr King, who successful­ly fought a fine on the grounds of inadequate signage, said: “Bus lane and bus gate signs do not give you instructio­ns, they give you informatio­n. A simple instructio­nal sign, such as no entry, would solve the problem.

Bernardine King

Drivers were hit with fines worth more than £8.5 million for travelling in bus lanes and gates in Scotland last year, we can reveal.

Top of the list of the three local authoritie­s that issued the penalties was Glasgow, which

Yet councils do not fit these and you have to ask, why?

“You simply cannot read and process the signs quickly enough while driving safely. It’s a subtle trick. They say there is plenty of signage and they are quite right. There’s actually too much.

“Driving and reading are two of the most complex skills most people will develop in their lives. Being asked to do them simultaneo­usly, while also making decisions about routes, is a heavy cognitive load.”

Dr King was fined in December 2018 and went to a tribunal the following February where she won her case, arguing the signage, in Chelmsford, Essex, was unclear. She spoke out after we revealed last month that bus lane first offenders in Scotland would continue to be fined while those in England and Wales were to be given a warning letter.

She said: “It suggests to me Scottish councils are more interested in profit than road safety. It’s dished out more than 90,000 of the £60 fines.

We can today reveal Edinburgh City Council issued more than 33,000 fines worth in excess of £2m. The city’s top three enforcemen­t camera locations were at Little France Drive, Liberton extraordin­ary that they should use this surreptiti­ous way to raise money.

“You feel a sense of mild panic when you see a bus lane sign and you have cognitive conflict going on, with all the signage providing various pieces of informatio­n. It’s distractin­g and unsafe. First offenders should be given a warning letter and they’ll likely stay clear in future.”

Scottish Conservati­ve Shadow Tr a n s p o r t S e c re t a r y Gr a h a m Simpson said: “It makes sense to give drivers an initial warning rather than a fine. Refusing to implement this in Scotland will fuel the suspicion bus lanes are little more than a stealth tax.”

We told how enforcemen­t of a new bus gate in Glasgow city centre 18 months ago was delayed as the council fitted new signage after the initial layout sparked chaos. We witnessed drivers slowing or stopping in confusion, trying to work out an alternativ­e route, before the traffic flow in the busy one- way system forced them through the bus gate. The camera, at Union Street, went on to issue more than 32,000 of the £60 fines last year.

The AA said: “Fo r drivers

Road northbound and Calder Road outbound.

In Aberdeen, the figures, obtained by The Sunday Post under Freedom of Informatio­n, showed there were more than 19,000 fines issued worth £1.1m. The top three locations were unfamiliar with such routes, the signage isn’t doing the job. In the absence of clear directions, or more discretion in issuing tickets, there should be a first-time warning letter in Scotland, as is likely to become standard elsewhere in the UK.”

The Department for Transport said: “Traffic signs in Scotland, as in England and Wales, must conform to the Traffic Si gns Regulation­s legislatio­n. Enforcemen­t is a devolved matter.”

Tr a n s p o r t Scotland added implementa­tion “rests with relevant local authoritie­s”.

Glasgow City Council said: “All of our signage for bus gates and lanes is fully compliant with roads legislatio­n and in many cases goes far beyond what is required by the law.”

Edinburgh City Council said: “The display of informatio­n on our bus lane and gate signs is in compliance with national guidance.”

Aberdeen City Council said: “The signage for our bus gates are designed in accordance with the law and are based on the speed of a specific road in relation to the sign, symbols and lettering.”

Bedford Road, Dubford and Union Street.

The overall level of fines was similar to that of previous years despite large periods of the year being spent in lockdown.

A huge number of fines issued by two new cameras in Glasgow, at Union Street and Oswald Street, totalling about 50,000, offset what would have been a reduction on previous years. As a result, the notorious bus gate at Nelson Mandela Place was relegated to third place in the city.

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