Restricted Plates of Limited Benefit – Safety Expert
Restricted Plates of Limited Benefit – Safety
Expert
A government proposal to require
‘R’ plates for drivers on restricted licences is
unlikely to seriously affect the road toll, says a leading
road safety campaigner.
Clive Matthew-Wilson,
editor of the car review website dogandlemon.com,
says:
“Half of the highest risk group don’t
have licences anyway. How can R plates possibly curb their
behaviour?”
Matthew-Wilson adds that measures
such as doubling prison sentences for dangerous drivers who
cause death, and introducing alcohol-detecting car-ignition
locks were also unlikely to work with the high risk
groups.
“These guys don’t think about the
consequences of their actions: that’s the problem. They
don’t sit down and consider what they do before they act.
Giving them longer prison sentences will simply increase the
chances of them being pressured into joining gangs while
they’re in prison. It would make far more sense to simply
lock them up in a rehab centre and not let them out until
they’re cured.”
“I also seriously doubt the
effectiveness of alcohol interlocks among this group. Many
of the cars they drive can be easily started with a
screwdriver, and if their own car isn’t available,
they’ll simply drive someone
else’s.”
Matthew-Wilson gave the example of
Bevan Shane Marino, a South Auckland gang associate who
caused a multiple fatality while drunk and on cannabis.
Marino’s own 3-year old son, who was not wearing a
seatbelt, was thrown through the windscreen of the car.
Marino was driving erratically and at high speed. His bald
left rear tyre punctured and he lost control, killing two
German tourists and two of his passengers. He had no memory
of the crash afterwards.
Matthew-Wilson adds: "The
one thing that would have prevented this crash is a centre
road barrier to stop Marino’s car colliding with two
innocent tourists.”
Matthew-Wilson also disputes
claims that road safety adverts such as the ‘ghost
chips’ ad have been responsible for a lower rate of
teenage drink driving.
“Advertising is a great
way of getting people to do what they wanted to do anyway,
like eat hamburgers. However, it’s not very effective at
telling people not to do something. On some level,
the person eating the hamburger knows that eating lots of
burgers will make them fat, unhealthy and eventually kill
them, but they do it anyway.”
The internationally
respected American Insurance Institute for Highway Safety
did a major study of the effectiveness of road safety
advertising and concluded:
“Research indicates
that education has no effect, or only a very limited effect,
on habits like staying within speed limits, heeding stop
signs, and using safety belts.”
“[Until you check out the facts,] 'who can argue against the benefits of education or training?' asks Institute chief scientist Allan Williams. “But when good scientific evaluations are undertaken, most of the driver improvement programs based on education or persuasion alone are found not to work.”
Clive Matthew-Wilson adds:
“Teenagers are ruled by their hormones. How they drive is largely governed by whatever hormones happen to be flowing at the time. Also, the frontal lobes of the brain, which are used to assess risk, are not fully developed during the teenage years. That’s one of the reasons teenagers tend to believe they’re ten foot tall and bulletproof.”
“Road
safety dollars are limited, and dollars that are wasted on
strategies that don’t work, mean there are less dollars
spent on the strategies that have been scientifically proven
to work.”
For further information please
contact dogandlemon.com
ENDS