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30-05-2012, 08:34 PM | #31 | |||
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Regardless: monitoring the speed of cars anywhere on a 40km/h limit is is not putting the lives of children at any more risk . No the police are not putting up go faster signs to lure the public into speeding and endangering the children, your baiting the crocs comparison is ludicrous. The idea is that we want motorists to go through crossing zones at <40km/h all the time, not just when they see a police car ahead, hopefully you appreciate the numerical logistical impossibility of putting police cars in the front of all crossings in this country Long term behaviour modification is the key, we simply havent got enough police to be visible to make everyone do the right thing all the time, punters that speed through enough crossing will eventually get enough speeding tickets that either they will lose their licence or modify their behaviour if there is a chance of being done anywhere anytime. Last edited by sudszy; 30-05-2012 at 08:41 PM. |
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30-05-2012, 08:37 PM | #32 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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30-05-2012, 10:16 PM | #33 | ||||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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I think speed cameras must be working well and are an important key to balancing the Gov.'s books but I am not sure if they help save accidents though. I was unfortunately involved in my first accident in over 30 years driving the Monday before Easter this year. The poor lad (P plater) who ran up my rear while I was stationary in a queue at some traffic lights hit me at about 40kph without even braking. I think he was staring at his speedo but he definitely was not speeding thank god. Plenty of damage but no speed. I can't see how making you lose your licence sooner for fewer fines incurred for smaller indiscretions will be good for the Gov.'s financers either. I would have thought that not losing any demerit points but doubling the fines would have been far more beneficial for the Gov.'s fund raising efforts because if you incur a smaller fine but suffer a more rapid loss of licence then how will they make any money from you? After all, if it costs you less money than the current system to lose your licence and then once you are banned, you are off the road for an extended period of time where you can’t get caught speeding, they can't issue further fines for minor indiscretions that you make can they! Remember, we are talking minor indiscretions (the S.A. Gov.'s words not mine) like 45 in a 40 for example. Consider this for a traffic infringement of 45kph in a 40kph Current system- 1 demerit point + $250 fine (per offence) x 12 = 12 demerit points (loss of licence) and a whopping $3,000 in fines New system- (same offence) 2 demerit points +$150 fine (per offence) X 6 = 12 demerit points (loss of licence) and only $900 in fines This is a lose lose situation for all parties concerned imho. Bud Bud |
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31-05-2012, 01:10 AM | #34 | |||
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Thanks bout time i got some applause |
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31-05-2012, 07:44 AM | #35 | ||||
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isnt it a winner that we'll get people off the road that simply disobey or dont have the necessary skills to comply with basic road rules even faster? |
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31-05-2012, 08:21 AM | #36 | |||
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31-05-2012, 09:33 AM | #37 | |||||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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The Gov takes less revenue for each disqualified licence but increases other charges such as water etc. to compensate, you the driver has less shots to maintain you licence especially at the lower end of the speeding scale. Lose lose all the way. Bud Bud |
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31-05-2012, 03:23 PM | #38 | |||
Rob
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Woodcroft S.A.
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31-05-2012, 05:06 PM | #39 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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Does that seem fair? |
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31-05-2012, 07:47 PM | #40 | ||||
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Did he admit as much?......perhaps another explanation was he was txting at the time, playing with the radio which I doubt you'll get a confession to either. Quote:
But consistently 5km/h over, that's flaunting the law and hardly respectable given it will basically double the chance of that person being involved in an incident and harming others than at 60km/h Last edited by sudszy; 31-05-2012 at 07:55 PM. |
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31-05-2012, 08:08 PM | #41 | |||
Rob
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Woodcroft S.A.
Posts: 21,777
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for arguments sake, lets say its true that the chances of an accident is double, instead of speaking in percentages to make it sound good (50% is a nice big number), what is the actual chance of an incident at 60 and what does that figure become by increasing your speed by 5km/h?? you and i both know the actual number is very small. what would be the number if i drive at 100?? so if i drive in a 70 zone, i'm about 8 times more likely to have a crash than when i drive in a 60 zone? what if the same road was zoned a 60 one week and then the next week its changed to a 70? do the signs on the side of the road really have special powers?? wow. there is zero proof that nudging over the limit has any bearing on the likelihood of a crash. it is also impossible to tell the speed of a car prior to an impact. |
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31-05-2012, 08:35 PM | #42 | |||
Rob
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Woodcroft S.A.
Posts: 21,777
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seriously its about time govco and people like you starting treating people with respect and not twisting statistics to suit agenda's. speed gets listed as a contributing factor on nearly every accident. don't confuse speed with excess speed or speeding. you live in some bubble where you honestly believe that if there was total obedience to every speed zone, there would be less fatalities. THIS is scary! THIS is also a contributing factor to the appalling behaviour on the roads as the govt is now a one trick pony. the only law policed is speed compliance. it is also grossly negligent because it trains and convinces people to think that if they drive to the limit they are safe drivers. |
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01-06-2012, 12:36 PM | #43 | |||
Bring back Ambrose!
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03-06-2012, 11:09 PM | #44 | ||
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Location: Perth
Posts: 391
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I think the police should start fining people for crashing instead of fine tuning fines relating to speeding. I'm convinced that crashing is more dangerous than speeding, and people who crash more than once every decade are probably going to keep doing it. So perhaps $500 and six demerit points if you drive into the back of another person's car, or run off the road and damage a lamp pole or a fence or a tree or whatever. Easy to prosecute as well - a bad driver might be able to argue that the radar was wrong or not calibrated or whatever, but they can hardly deny driving into someone else's car when it's all busted up :-)
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