Skip to main content

Road safety drive for the UK

A road safety drive for the UK could cut casualties
August 21, 2023 Read time: 3 mins
A new road safety drive could help cut UK road casualties

A new road safety drive in the UK, National Road Victim Month, is intended to cut casualties. This is being launched with harrowing films that share the accounts of six crash victims and bereaved family members, whose lives have been torn apart by speeding drivers.

Funded by the Department for Transport, the videos were produced by RoadPeace, the national charity for road crash victims, to challenge society’s acceptance of speeding and to strengthen crash victims’ voices.

Excessive and inappropriate speed is a major contributory factor in road collisions. Yet many road users do not think twice before exceeding the limit or driving too fast for the conditions.

The films feature: 
    Lucy Harrison, from Redditch – Her brother Peter Price, was killed by a speeding hit and run driver, travelling at 93mph: https://youtu.be/uEt5fus78LE  

    Harriet Barnsley, from Birmingham - She suffered life-changing injuries and her best friend, Rebecca McManus, was killed by a speeding driver, travelling over 100mph: https://youtu.be/QVXfwx6uBeA  

    Tesse Akpeki, from Wembley – Her brother Tony was killed by a speeding hit and run driver: https://youtu.be/YNPrRUDH5aE  

    Steve Booth, from Leicester - His wife Annette was killed by a speeding driver: https://youtu.be/oxMknJomHYo  

    Mandy Garner, from Essex – Her daughter Anisha was killed by a speeding hit and run driver, travelling at more than 60mph in a 30mph zone: https://youtu.be/fMEPlPZ-TWA 

    Mandy Gayle, from Wolverhampton – Her father, Hopton, was killed by a speeding hit and run driver: https://youtu.be/mfchKb8zlus  

Nick Simmons, CEO of RoadPeace, the national charity for road crash victims, said: “Speeding shatters lives, destroys families and communities live in fear of it – so why don’t we see speeding as the antisocial epidemic that it is? 

“We hope by sharing the stories of some of our members, whose lives have been torn apart by speeding drivers, who have courageously told their stories, that people will think twice before putting their foot down. Speeding is selfish, unfair and it puts so many lives at risk.”

Research shows that when an audience becomes engaged in a narrative story, they become both emotionally and cognitively involved, and they are less likely to generate counterarguments against the persuasive message.* 
RoadPeace has released ground-breaking new connected vehicle data, which revealed the police force areas where drivers exceed the speed limit more excessively than others: https://www.roadpeace.org/pioneering-data-reveals-best-and-worst-areas-in-uk-for-speeding/

*Green and Brock (2000) 
 

Related Content

  • Safer roads needed for the gig economy
    May 14, 2019
    Roads everywhere are becoming high-pressure workplaces for millions of gig economy workers, meaning traffic police need a new way to regulate how highways are used. Geoff Hadwick reports from Manchester, UK The way in which the world’s highways are designed, built and used needs to change fast as the gig economy becomes a global phenomenon. Millions of low-paid and badly-trained freelance drivers are now using road as their workplace, all of them working hard under huge amounts of pressure. The tren
  • EU cross-border traffic enforcement
    July 18, 2014
    Road safety campaigners and European traffic police are putting pressure on the EU to speed up the introduction of cross-border enforcement of traffic offences. The modified rules have been published by the European Commission and come in response to a European Court of Justice (ECJ) ruling earlier this year saying that the existing law, which came into force in November last year, had been adopted on an incorrect legal basis. The ECJ has said the current rules could remain in effect until May 2015 while ne
  • Road Safety Foundation: low-cost road safety improvements pay off
    December 3, 2014
    A major speed limit review in the county resulted in the speed limit be reduced from around 65kph (40mph) to 48kph (30mph) on two short sections through the town of Amersham.
  • Technology improving safety on Australian roads
    July 14, 2023
    New technology is improving safety on Australian roads.