The Sunday Telegraph

Victim’s brother: ‘Smart motorways are mad’

Pick-up driver was first person to die solely due to other drivers swerving to avoid stationary vehicle

- By Steve Bird

THE brother of the first motorist to die in a smart motorway crash involving vehicles swerving to avoid a brokendown car has condemned scrapping hard shoulders as “utter madness”.

Martin Davies, 54, was killed when his flat-bed pick-up collided with a lorry veering away from a stationary car in a live lane on the M1. His death is believed to be the first where only those vehicles steering clear of a stranded car were involved in the collision. Criticism of smart motorways has often focused on how people are killed after their cars fail to reach an emergency refuge before being hit by traffic because Highways England fails to spot them and close the lane.

Mr Davies’s brother, Andrew, 56, is calling on Grant Shapps, the Transport Secretary, to halt the rollout of smart motorways to prevent more people dying.

Martin Davies, a delivery driver, had been returning home in his Volkswagen Crafter when he was in a collision with a Volvo near Milton Keynes on March 20.

His brother has spoken to police investigat­ing the crash and understand­s both vehicles were approachin­g a broken-down Vauxhall Astra that had been stranded on the inside lane for up to 15 minutes. That stretch of the M1 between junctions 15 and 16 was being converted into an all-lanes-running smart motorway, and so the hard shoulder had been removed. The driver managed to get out of his vehicle and flee to safety.

It is understood the Volvo driver took evasive action to avoid the car by moving right into the middle lane.

Mr Davies, known as “Gerb”, from Stoke-on-Trent, was in the third lane moving left into the same space but hit the lorry’s rear and was dragged under. The Vauxhall was unscathed. Mr Davies was confirmed dead at the scene.

His brother, from Stone in Staffs, says his brother was not speeding, but the exact reasons for the collision remain “a mystery”.

He said the prospect of encounteri­ng stationary vehicles in live lanes can trigger “a series of catastroph­ic and fatal split second decisions”.

“Those decisions would not be needed if there was a hard shoulder for vehicles to pull over on to,” he said.

“We don’t yet know what happened directly in front of my brother. Someone may have seen the lorry pulling out and applied their brakes. Martin may have had to swerve and so collided with the lorry. It’s devastatin­g for everyone who knew him and all those involved.”

He said he “blames the Government” for introducin­g smart motorways, adding: “I have stopped using smart motorways now. Everyone knows they are a bad idea.”

Mr Davies worked for Stoke-based Barkers Fencing for 30 years and he was making a delivery for them the day he died. John Gleave, the firm’s transport manager, said he was tremendous­ly popular among their 170 staff.

He added: “Like anyone who drives on motorways for a living, Martin had expressed concerns about smart motorways.”

A Thames Valley Police spokesman said an investigat­ion is ongoing and no arrests have been made.

A Highways England spokesman said: “Every single death on our roads is a tragedy and our thoughts are with the family and friends of Mr Davies.”

‘I blame the Government. I have stopped using smart motorways now. Everyone knows they are a bad idea’

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