OK so you have been out cycling and you feel the chilling effect and intimidation of wind displacement and vibrations caused by a close passing vehicle. You know the feeling from previous incidents but this time you are using an onboard or head camera and you’ve recorded the incident on your ride. You’re mad as hell and want to report it to the Gardaí.
Monthly Archives: October 2017
RSA launches website in support of new drink driving bill
Cyclist.ie is pleased to see the RSA taking Drink Driving seriously
The Road Safety Authority (RSA) has today Friday 6 October, launched a website, to provide factual information on drink driving in Ireland and to dispel the many myths and misinformation in relation to the problem of drink driving in Ireland.
The new site, www.drinkdriversdestroylives.ie, is being launched to support the proposed change to strengthen drink driving penalties contained in the Road Traffic (Amendment) Bill 2017. It features factual information outlining the road crash data, scientific research on the impairment effects of alcohol on driving.
The Road Traffic (Amendment) Bill 2017 proposes a change to the penalties for drivers who chose to drink drive at blood alcohol concentration (BAC) levels between 50-80mg. The Bill does not propose to change Ireland’s drink drive limits.
Under the proposed legislation, drink driving offences committed at BAC levels between 50mg and 80mg will incur an automatic disqualification of 3 months instead of the current penalty of a €200 fine and 3 penalty points.
Commenting on the new website, Ms, Moyagh Murdock, Chief Executive of the Road Safety, said: “The website drinkdriversdestroylives.ie has been developed to provide the public, elected representatives and the media access to facts in relation to drink driving. It has also been created to counter the myths, and distorted facts that have been put into the public arena by vested interest groups and individuals. Interest groups that have ignored the pleas of victims’ families to support the introduction of the new measures and turned the perpetrators of drink driving offences into victims. The proposed change in legislation increases the penalties so offenders will lose their licence at a lower alcohol level than currently. This is vital if we are to have an effective deterrent that changes the behaviour of the small group of people in this country who continue to drink and drive.”
“I urge the public to take a few moments out of their day to visit this useful and informative website and familiarise themselves with its content. I believe that the facts and data on the site will convince people of the merit in the proposed change to drink driving penalties. The site also provides downloadable social media banners for users to show their support for the bill, and I would urge people to show their support by downloading them and sharing.”
Mr Shane Ross, Minister for Transport, Tourism and Sport said; “I welcome the RSA’s new website in support of my Road Traffic (Amendment) Bill 2017. Astonishingly, many vested interest groups and their supporters continue to deny the factual evidence about drink driving, turn their faces away from the traumatic experiences of road traffic victims and more specifically, distort information which proves that this legislation needs to be introduced. I urge politicians, publicans and the general public to access this user friendly site, inform themselves of the facts, support this Bill and help to save lives on our roads.”
The information contained on the www.drinkdriversdestroylives.ie site includes:
- Drink Driving – Fast Facts
- Alcohol as a factor in road crashes
- Every victim has a story
- Attitudes towards drink driving in Ireland
- Drink Driving Enforcement
- The Morning After – what happens?
- Supporting Rural Ireland
- Drink driving best practice
The site also features national and international research into the impairment effects of alcohol, incidence and impact of drink-driving. Recent and historical drink driving campaigns, and provides downloadable social media banners for users to show their support for the bill.
Please visit https://www.drinkdriversdestroylives.ie/
Cycling Needs €145 Million Per Annum – Not Hype & Spin
Since Census 2016 published the report on commuting in June, there has been much hype and spin in the media about increases in cycling. However, the emphasis on a much lauded increase of 42% in cycling to work puts a false gloss on the results. Percentage changes are meaningless unless related to a time span and a starting point so the Department of Transport’s spin doctor should stop combining multi year results and instead report the results in terms of annual increases. In this case the time span is five years from the previous census and the 2016 level of cycling nationally is an overall low of 2.68%. As this was approximately the level of cycling in the year 2000, cycling nationally has essentially flat-lined since then.
Year |
1986 |
1991 |
1996 |
2002 |
2006 |
2011 |
2016 |
On foot |
505,530 |
454,126 |
436,941 |
423,483 |
433,110 |
414,938 |
426,221 |
Bicycle |
146,962 |
130,194 |
99,008 |
57,842 |
53,960 |
61,177 |
82,123 |
Bus, minibus or coach |
323,914 |
337,788 |
369,586 |
341,299 |
326,949 |
288,562 |
313,097 |
Train, DART or LUAS |
22,690 |
30,214 |
34,101 |
45,976 |
71,658 |
70,976 |
82,627 |
Motor cycle or scooter |
16,680 |
13,756 |
13,164 |
20,250 |
14,338 |
9,312 |
8,565 |
Motor car: Driver |
405,180 |
446,228 |
606,417 |
909,822 |
1,118,312 |
1,127,396 |
1,202,441 |
Motor car: Passenger |
264,125 |
292,503 |
360,953 |
427,962 |
459,497 |
508,338 |
570,254 |
Other means (incl. Lorry or van) |
36,239 |
50,188 |
59,291 |
118,800 |
149,928 |
134,115 |
140,227 |
Work mainly at or from home |
196,982 |
234,101 |
172,893 |
110,821 |
119,918 |
89,729 |
96,057 |
Not stated |
108,579 |
94,287 |
83,981 |
45,380 |
46,555 |
89,590 |
136,995 |
Total Students/Workers
(Rows 1-10)* |
2,026,881 |
2,083,385 |
2,236,335 |
2,501,635 |
2,794,225 |
2,794,133 |
3,058,607 |
Total Commuters (Rows 1-8) |
1,721,320 |
1,754,997 |
1,979,461 |
2,345,434 |
2,627,752 |
2,614,814 |
2,825,555 |
%Commuting by Car (Rows 6-8) |
40.99% |
44.95% |
51.87% |
62.10% |
65.75% |
67.69% |
67.70% |
%Cyclists wrt Total Commuters |
7.25% |
6.25% |
4.43% |
2.31% |
1.93% |
2.19% |
2.68% |
Source: Census 2016
Table 1: Means of Travel to Work, School and College (Nationally) 1986-2016
The increase in cycling from 2.19% in 2011 to 2.68% in 2016 is an increase of 22.6% for all people working and in education rather than the headline figure of 42% which only refers to people working. This increase equates to a more modest increase of 4.15% per annum. This would be good for a country with a high level of cycling but bad for a country like Ireland which is starting from a very low base. The increase in cycling by working people offsets a more modest increase in cycling by students to secondary school who are arguably a more important sector of the population as they are an indicator of future levels of cycling rather than ‘middle aged’ men in lycra who rediscover cycling. In this context, the greater number of female students driving to secondary school rather than cycling is a continuing cause of concern. By way of contrast, Vancouver reports annual increases of more than 30% per annum and Transport for London (TFL) report that bicycle use increased by 70% in six months on part of the high quality London Superhighways.
While the level of cycling in Dublin and other Irish cities is higher than the national level of 2.68%, Vancouver achieved 10% cycling to work from a low base in 1997 and Seville has increased its modal share for cycling from less than 0.5% in 2006 to around 7%. The National Cycling Policy Framework includes a target of 10% commuting by bike by 2020. At the rate of progress of the last five years in Ireland, the 2020 target will not be achieved nationally until 2047. This is the key statistic which comes out of the Census results and with the hype and spin stripped away, the lack of commitment and lack of progress is obvious. The implications for urban areas – more congestion, more air and noise pollution, decreased levels of activity by the general population and increased demands on the health services – are all too obvious. The failure to meet European targets on climate change will almost certainly result in a greater financial burden on the country.
Irish politicians have been “supporting” pro-bicycle policies for some twenty years but their continuing ineffectiveness is clear. When politicians in the Netherlands decided to design for bicycles rather than cars in the 1970s, the change was apparent within a year with the BBC sending a camera team overseas to record the radical developments. For similar change to happen in this country, the government must
- Significantly increase funding for cycling from its current levels of €12 Million per annum to €145 Million per annum, and
- Appoint a National Cycling Co-coordinator to the Department of Transport, Tourism and Sport in accordance with the 2009 National Cycling Policy Framework.
A budget of €145 Million for cycling would amount to 10% of the 2017 transport budget and would be in line with WHO recommendations. This funding is already available under the normal budgetary process and is entirely separate from the Mid-Term Review of the Capital Budget but to date there has been no commitment at a political level to prioritise the funding of walking and cycling. The emphasis on rural greenways may seem attractive to politicians but unless hard political decisions are taken to curb private cars and to prioritise cycling in urban areas, mass cycling will remain like the draining of the Shannon – a political aspiration. In the short term, the lack of political reaction to increasing cyclist fatalities and the postponement of decisions on safe cycling infrastructure in Dublin City do not augur well.