Professional Documents
Culture Documents
This is a short book, and it exists to show you only one thing, as a pedestrian
or driver.
I had a dear friend, a very bright guy, tell me that ‘by law a driver must
always drive so (s)he can stop in time’.
If that were so, then two hundred non-speeding drivers a year would be in jail
in the UK for killing pedestrians.
If the bar was lowered to injuring pedestrians, 15,000 non-speeding drivers
would be in jail.
Instead, they get a blanket, so I can only assume he’s wrong. Nevertheless, I
assume that you do not wish to kill or injure a pedestrian, in which case his
comment confirms my fear that adult drivers are being misled into thinking
that they can ever be safe in the presence of a pedestrian.
Driving below the speed limit will not save you, nor will it save the
pedestrian. You may not go to jail, but if you want to avoid injuring or killing
a pedestrian, which may not be possible, you should at least know how
dangerous they are and why.
v150518d
ILLUSION OF SAFETY
You’re never safe in the presence of a pedestrian
A Live Within Reason Perspective
Andrew Mather
Most of the books in this series (Live within Reason) are 99c/99p, a side
order of fries or onion rings, or near enough.
If you’ve downloaded it, get halfway through, find yourself liking it, maybe
hating it but still finding something you didn’t know, something that
surprised you, then maybe you could post a one word or one line review, pick
another title for 99c/99p as a thank you, or tell a friend.
It’s not a have to: you know that, I know that.
It’s just a way you could say thank you, if you wanted to.
Or even drop me a line, love it, hate it, I’d still value your opinion:
Andrew@andrew-mather.com or via our Facebook page:
https://www.facebook.com/pages/Experience-Counts/457909031052692
Cheers
Enjoy!
Please Note
While certain principles may apply to your country and driving situation, the
statistics and conclusions in this book apply to:
UK
ONLY
Focus
I’d like you to look at a chart of pedestrian KSI (killed and seriously injured)
by age. These are UK figures, as are all the figures in the book, and typically
they will be from 2013. Sometimes, as in this particular chart, they may be
averages of 2010-2013, to iron out random variations.
You don’t need to be concerned about statistics in this book. I’m going to
keep them to a minimum. If you have the background and capacity to work
with statistics, then you may care to check out ‘Experience Counts’.
That book is a challenging book to read, for drivers and pedestrians brought
up in the lore of road safety as it is promulgated today.
We are not even going to touch on those issues, barring the minimum
required to focus on drivers driving below the speed limit, and injuring
pedestrians due to one critical pedestrian error.
Nor is this only a pedestrian injury error, and since we will be excluding the
contentious case of speeding drivers from the analysis, let us put that in
perspective.
Three times as many other road users will be injured by pedestrian error, than
speeding drivers will injure pedestrians.
We are not excluding speeding drivers to excuse them.
We are excluding them because to try to understand a more complex picture
will detract from the single critical issue that we’re highlighting in this book.
If the reader wishes to learn more, they have only to delve into that other
more challenging book ‘Experience Counts.’
For the maximum impact in saving pedestrian life, we must address the single
biggest issue in pedestrian safety, which is the combined factor ‘failed to look
or judge’, and we must address those drivers most involved, which in 98.4%
of injuries, 92% of fatalities, is the non-speeding driver.
When these two are combined with the illusion of safety, which we’ll cover
shortly, the result is that a single fundamental pedestrian error is the biggest
cause of pedestrian injury, and that drivers who might have imagined
themselves to be safe were the most involved by an overwhelming margin.
This book exists solely and precisely to shred that illusion.
If you already recognised that, then I am delighted.
Pedestrian KSI by Age
This chart is not strictly necessary to address the issue, but it may reinforce
that the particular issue we’re looking at is not a driver issue.
At this point, that may still seem absurd. Surely, if you drive slowly and
responsibly, you’re safe? It is the irresponsible drivers surely who are doing
the killing?
That is the illusion. I’ve already cited the statistics, and I assure you they are
accurate. You will not find those figures in RRCGB. You need to do the
underlying analysis, but if we’re not careful, we’ll be dragged away from the
issue.
Why does failing to look or judge (failed to look properly or failed to judge
vehicle path or speed) matter so much?
They step out, you’re driving slowly and safely, you brake, and while a
speeding driver would have injured or killed them perhaps, you were safe.
I’m afraid not.
If you believe that, if you picked that up from a road safety website, if that is
your impression from road safety enforcement, they you are mistaken.
It isn’t subject to opinion, it’s basic arithmetic.
First though, take a look at this chart.
What is the distinctive feature of this chart?
If it is blatantly obvious that the peak, the narrow spike at age twelve, is
absurd, then good.
If it is not, then let us try to clarify that.
I can do this with coloured bottles, or with people. If I do this with coloured
bottles, you may feel I am trivialising a critical issue. If I do it with people,
you may feel I am being cold and revelling in a heart-breaking issue.
Let’s do people.
It’s reality.
You are an observer on a bizarre road which happens to kill or seriously
injure (KSI) everyone who attempts to walk across it.
It is Noah’s road, and you watch pedestrians walking across it two by two,
two of each age from let us say 9 to 79.
All are KSI.
Now, draw a chart with KSI on the left axis, age on the horizontal axis, as we
have in the chart earlier.
What will be the shape of the curve?
It will be a straight line, left to right, with two for each age.
Did the earlier char look like a straight line?
Not really.
So the first-order issue is that age makes a difference.
We expected that. We don’t expect to find two year olds on the road, we
anticipate there may be some higher risk with younger pedestrians, and we
expect that as pedestrians get older, then risk will fall away.
It might in fact look like this.
That is essentially the same chart but ‘smoothed’, with age bands rather than
individual age years.
It still looks alarming, but it doesn’t look absurd.
Here is the earlier chart again.
Do you see, if you didn’t before, how pronounced that spike is?
Even with the alarming risk of 12-15 year olds in the comparison chart, the
curve was somewhat smooth. The chart with individual age years has an
absurd spike at age twelve.
If twelve year olds were forced to run across roads blindfolded as part of an
initiation, we could say ‘ah yes, that’ll be the initiation’, but they’re not.
We might put it down to genetic, hormonal changes, but it seems too sharply
defined. We’d need a medical expert to inform us.
That however would only tell us a possible cause as to why pedestrians might
be so utterly incapable of crossing a road at that age.
What it would not tell us was why the situation was being tolerated.
And these are overwhelmingly fatalities in front of non-speeding drivers,
recall.
And even if the police had not already identified the issue as the single
biggest issue in pedestrian injury and fatality, this chart would tell us anyway.
Drivers are not targeting twelve year olds. The idea is absurd. If this spike is
occurring, then it is because of a behavioural aberration, or a cultural
aberration, or a societal aberration.
In fact, I suggest it is all three.
It doesn’t matter whether you agree or not, or whether I’m right or not,
because the spike is there. However I will observe from my other research
that this is consistent with a disturbing overall picture.
That picture suggests that non-speeding drivers know who the dangerous
drivers are, that parents and pedestrians know who the dangerous drivers are,
and so with the dangerous drivers addressed by separate and rigorous
enforcement, the safe pedestrians and safe non-speeding drivers can go about
their day.
The only problem is that chart.
And the figures.
If that is accurate, then all the time that ‘concerned parents’ have been
targeting speeding drivers to ensure they get ticketed, then those same parents
have been ignoring their own responsibilities as to training children properly
for the road, encouraged by a government policy which suggests that
‘someone else’ is to blame.
If the parents attempt to switch the blame onto the non-speeding driver,
which at 92% involvement is only reasonable, then I wonder if you will want
to speak out.
Either the parent is to blame, or the non-speeding driver. I’m afraid that in
this instance, the speeding driver is not going to be able to help you.
Their involvement is 0.8% of pedestrian 11-15, failed to look or judge, KSI.
At 99.2%, this is a straight fight between the non-speeding driver and the
parent.
If the non-speeding driver wins, then the parent becomes responsible for their
children’s training, as well as their errors, and that is going to be a challenge I
suspect for many parents.
If the parent wins, then the non-speeding driver will face even lower speeds,
and the question becomes: how low?
Whence the illusion of safety.
There is no safe speed in the presence of a pedestrian or other road user.
In the context of this book, we are focused solely on the issue of pedestrian
safety, so there is no safe speed in the presence of a pedestrian.
The consequences of this will make for an interesting battle between
Speedwatch (drivers are the problem) and RoSPA (non-speeding drivers are
always safe).
In the meantime, we had better understand just what the government, and
RoSPA, have not been factoring into their road safety policy and simulator.
Blindfold
What happens if a pedestrian doesn’t look properly before crossing the road?
They might step in front of a vehicle, typically a car, but that is obvious.
The car, driving safely as a non-speeding driver, will simply apply its brakes
and come to a halt. The driver may be shocked, the pedestrian may be
shocked or oblivious, but accident avoided.
Does that seem reasonable?
What have you learned is the risk in pedestrian safety?
That if the car had been speeding, which as a non-speeding driver you won’t
be, it would have been travelling too fast to stop safely and the pedestrian
would have been injured?
Is that a reasonable description of what you’ve learned or understood to be
the risk of speeding drivers?
That the issue is the driver driving too fast, over the limit, or perhaps if
you’ve visited RoSPA, you’ve seen that they also include ‘too fast for
conditions’, a sort of ‘speeding for the non-speeding driver’ in their eyes.
So as a non-speeding driver that is always careful to drive at or below the
limit, certainly never too fast for the conditions, have you always felt yourself
to be safe?
It’s unfortunate, but as long as the dangerous drivers are being properly
targeted, pedestrian injury isn’t something that will affect you.
I hope you’re right, but it won’t be for that reason.
What are you relying upon to stop safely, in the unlikely but very real event
of a pedestrian stepping out into the road?
Your brakes, obviously, and that you’ll be paying attention, which of course
you will, and that you’ll be driving at or below the speed limit, and not too
fast for conditions.
Can you think of anything else?
I’ll give you a moment.
In fact I’ll give you a little more. You can read this while your mind mulls it
over. What are the dynamics of an accident, what actually happens?
The pedestrian steps out, you brake, it’s done.
Not much more to it than that really, is there?
So, did anything else come to mind, anything that might materially affect the
outcome of the accident?
Yes, maybe?
No?
Then what about this: where did the pedestrian step out in relation to the
vehicle?
Do I mean from the left, or the right, perhaps from behind a parked vehicle, a
van maybe?
That could be a factor, but no, that’s not what I’m asking.
Visualise if you like, take a moment to imagine the accident: a pedestrian
steps out… you brake … you come to a halt. All pretty scary, your heart is
beating, but you made it, everything’s ok.
Now try it again, but put the pedestrian closer, and closer, and closer until
they step out right into your bonnet, and there’s absolutely nothing you can
do about it.
What is it that a blindfolded pedestrian, a pedestrian not looking, will do?
They’ll step into the road (or run into the road), yes, but where?
Anywhere.
They’re not looking.
They’re not looking, and just getting it a bit wrong, which is unfortunate, and
sadly a few pedestrians might get injured that way?
That isn’t it at all.
They’re not looking, and that means they’re not even aware of traffic, they’re
not interested in ensuring that you as a driver have sufficient time to brake,
they have no conception as they do it that that is an issue.
They’re just stepping out into the road.
So let’s look at what really happens when a pedestrian steps out without
looking.
Roll the dice
What I’d like you to do is to drive normally and we’re going to approach a
built-up area, where the typical speed limit is 30mph in the UK at the present
time (2015).
As you approach the 30mph limit, I want you to slow and drive at that speed.
We’re going to be approaching a pedestrian, so you’re already forewarned
that you’re likely to want to do an emergency stop, which means you’re now
more alert than most drivers. They’re driving safely, as you are, so let’s see
what happens as we enter the 30mph limit.
The ‘official’ model has two components, one for thinking time (0.7
seconds), which translates into distance according to speed, and braking
distance, which is likewise determined by speed and the factors noted above.
Of the factors, the speed of the vehicle (cruising speed) is the one which is
most readily altered. We take this for granted as we drive, making a constant
flow of minor adjustments, and occasionally significant adjustments.
Stopping distance is 23 metres at 30mph, using official figures, so let’s start
our drive as we head into a 30mph limit, and we slow down to 30mph just as
we pass the sign, so we’re perfectly legal and perfectly safe.
A pedestrian comes into view.
What is the stopping distance?
23 metres.
As long as you remain 23 metres away from the pedestrian, you are perfectly
safe.
Not absolutely safe. Your car could burst into flames, or someone could have
a heart attack at the wheel, but with regard to the pedestrian and for our
purposes we begin with the assumption that you are safe. Specifically we
assume that you can always stop inside 23 metres.
So, the pedestrian is fifty metres away, you’re covering 13.3 metres per
second, and you have about two seconds ((50-23)/13.3) before they come into
range, at which point you will be closer than 23 metres to the pedestrian.
What do you do?
Too late.
You’re now within 23 metres of the pedestrian, and cannot safely stop if they
should what…?
Walk into the road without looking.
We’re going to get into trigonometry if we’re not careful, as I trust you don’t
drive on the pavement.
For the moment, let’s leave that aside.
You come into the 20mph limit, your speed is perfectly set at 20mph, and
you’re perfectly safe.
10mph?
4.5 metres stopping distance, 4.4 metres per second.
At fifty metres you have 10 seconds to decide.
…9…8…7…6…5…4…3…2…1…0
Now you’re within 4.5 metres, unless you slowed further or stopped.
They are now within stopping distance.
If they now walk or run out without looking, an accident, another injury, is
inevitable and you’re still not safe.
At 10mph.
How slow should you go to avoid hitting a pedestrian who walks (or runs)
out in front of you?
Unless you manoeuvre or swerve, but there’s five things to consider there.
Firstly, even if you react perfectly, you’re not going to start the car moving in
a different direction until 0.7 seconds after you’re begun to register the issue,
the pedestrian walking out.
The car itself (we’ll work with car, which is the vehicle typically involved)
will take time to move away from its current path, so the neat tuck and dive
around the pedestrian won’t even begin until a second or so into the accident.
The second issue is that there’s no guarantee the tuck and dive doesn’t
coincide with the pedestrian either continuing straight across into precisely
the spot you’d hope would be safe.
The third is that tucking and diving isn’t safe in itself. The sudden reaction,
instinctive, is a good way to lose control, and have you been given time to be
sure that you have room to tuck and dive, to swerve, or might there be
another vehicle, maybe even another pedestrian?
The fourth is that this is happening so fast, and is so unusual to your day to
day driving, that it may be all you can do to react at all. Braking in a straight
line is about all that can be reasonably expected of a typical driver in those
circumstances.
The fifth is that you may not even get the chance to do or consider any of
that.
Part of the stopping distance is the thinking distance, at 0.7s, which is ten
metres at 13.3 metres per second, or 30mph.
If the pedestrian, who isn’t choosing the point they emerge into your
envelope (as we call it), happens to walk directly into your thinking distance,
directly in front of you, then you won’t even have had time to react before the
impact occurs.
So in treating the typical incident as a ‘straight brake’, we’re not being
unreasonable, and we’re describing an accident that’s much easier for you to
follow.
If you could always come to a halt, the impact would always be zero, so it
wouldn’t matter what speed you were doing.
If pedestrians are going to walk in front of cars without looking, it does
matter, and there are three key speeds of impact.
The first is your cruising speed. Obviously that affects the accident, but have
you considered that the cruising speed is also the speed of the impact, or
simply impact speed, within the thinking distance?
If you haven’t yet managed to react, then that is the speed at which the impact
will occur.
The second is a speed that declines linearly (at a constant rate, essentially)
after you’ve hit the brakes. In the dry with good tyres, the braking
deceleration is high. In the wet it can be far less so.
You know this.
And the third speed is of course stopped, hopefully before the pedestrian but
perhaps not.
You can brake, and that’s about it. If they’re lucky and you’re trained, and
they happen to walk out far enough away,
When they walk out without looking, it may be straight into your bonnet.
A Time To Learn
When would be a good time for the pedestrian to learn to look: after the
accident or before?
Do you think the parent purposely sent them out untrained?
Perhaps not on purpose, but what if the parent took for granted that they had
learned to cross the road, so their children would also?
Is there any test to see if the children had?
The children will be tested for Math, for French, for Geography, but is there a
test for road use?
If you could have insisted that the parent train the child properly, would you
have done so, had you known they were going to step out in front of you?
When might be a good time to ensure that the parent has trained the child:
before or after the accident?
How would you know which child to test, or should we perhaps test all of
them, make sure they’re safe?
Is that something you’d be more inclined to back, now that you have perhaps
appreciated more than before just how dangerous they can be, typically to
themselves, but by no means exclusively?
How about as a parent, has this changed your perspective? When your child
walks out the door, just going to the shops, just heading out, will you now
review your time with them, wonder if you instilled in them all the necessary
lessons?
I’m sure you have, but if you haven’t, or you’re not sure, perhaps it’s
something to consider; and not just for you, but for your friends.
Do they appreciate how risky ‘just’ driving safely below the limit, can turn
out to be not so safe after all?
You might not want to confront your friends, or some of the other parents,
but what about the teachers: do you think they might have done all they can
in their terms, and yet still not appreciate just how dangerous ‘safe’ driving
can be in the presence of a pedestrian?
The more people are aware of the risk, the more they will pay attention.
Bubble trouble
Ideally then, if your concern was road safety, would you be trying to make
pedestrians and driver more nervous, more aware, or less nervous, less
aware?
What is the subliminal message then of road safety organisations, when they
focus on the ‘dangerous’ driver, the ‘risky’ driver?
Do you feel proud, glad you’re not one of them, not a target of the police?
Does that make you feel more nervous, or less nervous?
If it’s the driver’s fault, and not just any driver, but the irresponsible speeding
driver, then as a responsible parent, a responsible non-speeding driver, does
that increase your nervousness, or decrease it?
Do you feel calm, assured, comfortable?
And just briefly consider: if here in the UK we have two organisations, one
telling pedestrians the problem is the driver, and the other telling drivers it’s
not them, it’s the speeding driver, will that make parents, pedestrians and
drivers more nervous, or less nervous.
Let’s take just a brief look at how that’s working out.
Do you think the average speeding driver wouldn’t take a ticket for your
child’s life? They’re parents too, a lot of them, just ordinary, or perhaps not
so ordinary, drivers who’ve spent in many cases decades on the road.
Do you think they wouldn’t be willing to pay £100 just to have your child be
safe?
So if speeding law was working, the average everyday speeding driver would
shrug, pay the fine, and get on with the life.
Take a look at that chart.
Who are the two groups of road user who are being reassured by the
government that the government is targeting the issue, the risk of the
speeding driver?
Look at the towering skyscraper of pedestrian error, at 90%, with failing to
look or judge far higher at nearly 80% (78%) than the headline two thirds.
It’s not your fault, except in about 14-17% of cases, as a sensible, safe, non-
speeding driver, but it will be you who’s involved.
Maybe not personally, but take a look at the speeding column on the right. Is
it even fair to call it a column, when it’s far wider than it is tall. It is a sliver.
That’s under 16 KSI, the most emotive topic in road safety, the one that
justifies more than any other speeding enforcement.
I’d take a ticket for you, no question, but is it going to keep your child safe?
Something you might want to think about.
Pursuit
If we look at pursuit, not the police kind, which is not devoid of risk in itself,
but the pursuit of skill, of proficiency, of real and effective experience, then
perhaps we might offer a glimpse of a very different world.
I don’t want you to become a speeding driver, but I would like to give you a
glimpse of something you might not have considered.
Maybe you’re already a highly experienced track and off-road driver, and
race at the weekends. I’ll try not to say anything offensive to either the highly
skilled or those to whom this is just beyond their comfort zone.
But what sets a pro golfer apart, an above average or highly skilled, perhaps
professional tennis player, or a pilot, the kind you’ll most likely see, a
professional airline pilot?
Passion, skill, dedication, and practice.
When you see a driver speeding past you, do you see any of those?
How many skid training courses have you attended, track days, race days, not
as an observer, but as a participant.
I don’t want to see cars drifting on the road any more than you do. Indeed one
of the greatest surprises to me was simply how much loss of control was a
low-speed, non-speeding driver issue.
I’ve lost control, and got a plate on my collar bone, courtesy of diesel on a
roundabout. But I’ve also driven at race speed, on ice, sideways, corner after
corner, time after time.
Forget the handling. I’m the first to say, as I have done above, that in most
incidents, it will be all anyone can do to get their foot on the brake.
But in terms of attention, of reaction time, of anticipation, can you appreciate
that perhaps other drivers with decades of experience at higher speeds, on the
road and off it, might just have learned something?
I don’t need you to write to the government and ask them to ease up on
speeding. That’s my issue.
But you might reflect on whether you’ve really done all you can to push your
skills and experience to the limit, so that if they’re ever needed, you’ll have
that extra 1/10th of a second, that fraction that might just mean the different
between a fatality and a serious injury.
You might also consider whether parents have really done all they can to
push their children so that they are finely-honed road-crossing machines, or
whether when they walk out the door, parents of course hope that they’re
safe, that they don’t come across an irresponsible speeding driver.
You might want to reflect on that chart again, and consider: if you do want
children to be safe, what should you be asking the government to do, and
who would it require targeting?
Further reading
I have provided only a simplistic model of the stopping distance, one that is
officially recognised, but which doesn’t accurately model what happens in an
accident.
It’s not inaccurate, but it only tells part of the story, the part that any reader
should be able to quickly assimilate.
For a more comprehensive treatment, see the books in the Experience Counts
series, in particular Experience Counts: Pedestrian Risk and Road Safety
Policy.
For parents living near a friend’s sister, any such hope is too late. Their child
walked out from behind a school bus, only looking one way. They were 13.
You can have an opinion about me, or about the issue, or both. What you do
about the issue, I leave to you.
If nothing else, I hope I’ve made you a little more nervous both as a ‘safe’
non-speeding driver, and perhaps as a parent.
And that, ultimately, is about all I can do to enhance your safety.
Statistics are generally taken from the Reported Road Casualties Great
Britain (RRCGB) publications by the Department for Transport (DfT), 2010-
2013
Additional material is taken from other series in particular the SPE series of
the DfT showing speeds and speeding propensities and line-by-line analysis
of Stats19 reports including contributory factors, supplied under FOI request
by the DfT.
Certain web-sites have contributed based on their prominence in search
results for relevant topics.
Copyright is recognised and sources are cited for non-Dft material where
appropriate.
The author believes that the matters under discussion are in the public interest
and where the material examined were published on a website and achieved a
high search ranking, it is indicative that they were intended to be read and
considered by a wide audience, and as such are legitimate subjects for study
and analysis.
Copyright © Andrew Mather 2015
The right of Andrew Mather to be identified as the Author of this Work has
been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Design and Patents
Act, 1988.
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a
retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic,
mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior
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This book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or
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