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“We must avoid encouraging risk taking or deliberate incitement for others to offend”: Heavily criticised road safety campaign stands by message to cyclists “proactively” seeking bad driving

“It is essential to consider your driving and conduct”, says Safer Essex Roads as it doubles down on its controversial message to cyclists

A road safety campaign in Essex has stood by its claim that some cyclists “proactively seek out examples of poor driving” and added that those sending submissions should consider their own conduct as well, after they rejected a submission because it was not “in passing” from commute.

Safer Essex Road Partnership, or SERP, says that its purpose is to reduce death and serious injury on Essex roads to zero. Its “Extra Eyes” initiative is a public footage submission forum which allows people to send evidence of poor and dangerous behaviour on the roads, which then gets passed on to Essex Police for further action.

Earlier this week, we had reported SERP’s Twitter account replying to a question asking why one example of a cyclist's footage of a mobile phone-using driver would not be accepted, saying: “We accept these if they are reported by cyclists who record it in passing while on their commute but not from those who proactively seek out examples of poor driving.”

The stance drew criticism, with one cyclist calling it “shocking” and another saying it is a “completely unacceptable response”. Others questioned how SERP would determine the difference between someone who recorded something “in passing” and other footage “proactively” sought out.

> Road safety campaign slammed for claiming some cyclists "proactively seek out examples of poor driving", says it only accepts footage captured "in passing" from commutes

road.cc had reached to SERP for a comment and they’ve got back to us, essentially doubling down on its message and standing by its claim: “Extra Eyes exists to allow members of the public to report suspected road traffic offences with supporting video evidence, enabling Essex Police to investigate and take action where appropriate.

“Most cases are dealt with either by warning letters or a Notice of Intended Prosecution (NIP). A NIP can lead to a fixed penalty, educational retraining course or a court hearing. All suspected offenders who receive a NIP have the right for their case to be heard in court, so footage that will be unlikely to secure a conviction in court for any reason will not result in a NIP.

“Before submitting footage, those making a report are informed that ‘Neither the Safer Essex Roads Partnership nor Essex Police will support or encourage anyone to proactively seek out examples of poor driving. It is essential to consider your own driving and conduct before making any submission.’”

They said that SERP “supports people who witness risky driving while using the public roads, but we must avoid encouraging risk taking or deliberate incitement for others to offend”, before adding that “over 70 motorists in Essex this year so far have received a NIP following a close pass on a cyclist submitted to Extra Eyes”.

“We are grateful for all the people who share our aim to make the roads of Essex safer by taking the time to report driving complaints. We appreciate there is frustration that we cannot process every complaint so the continued support we receive from the public is highly appreciated,” SERP said.

Under the original tweet by SaferEssexRoads, a Twitter user had shared an FOI request which showed the outcome of all Operation SNAP reports in Essex last year, showing just two phone-using motorists reported by cyclists were prosecuted. In total, 252 reports of mobile phone use resulted in 33 prosecutions.

Of the 252 reports, 15 came from cyclists, resulting in three prosecutions, four warning letters, one passed to another team and seven cases of no further action.

The backlash against the Essex group came just days after another similar group from Warwickshire advised cyclists to “stop and allow drivers to overtake”. The campaign group, called Warwickshire Road Safety Partnership, also asked cyclists to be “considerate of motorists who are trying to pass them”.

> Road safety group draws ire after advising cyclists to “stop and allow drivers to overtake”

The move had drawn ire, with people criticising Warwickshire Road Safety Partnership of spreading misleading information to cyclists and ignoring the hierarchy of road users as per the new Highway Code.

In response, an Inspector from Warwickshire Police’s Road Safety Unit, on behalf of the group told road.cc that “one tweet cannot always explain the complex rules of the Highway Code”, and that their “aim is to try to educate all road users to be considerate of everyone else to avoid collisions and make the roads safer for everyone to use”.

These aren’t the first instances of those charged with making the roads safe have been accused of “victim blaming” when it comes to cyclists this year.

> Police accused of "victim blaming" for advice to cyclists after two riders injured by drivers

In February, police in Bournemouth were criticised after responding to two separate incidents where cyclists were seriously injured after being hit by drivers with a “BIKE aware” social media campaign, which advises riders to “be aware”, “keep space”, and “expect to wait”.

The Facebook post received several comments questioning the response to the two incidents, but Bournemouth Police doubled down on its advice, replying to comments by insisting that being “BIKE aware is for both cyclists and motorists, with considerations made by both to help keep everyone on the road safe”.

The controversial advice accompanied a report of “two unrelated serious road traffic collisions in Christchurch”.

“Both involved vehicles colliding with cyclists, leaving the two cyclists requiring hospital treatment for serious injuries. One of the cyclists had fractures to their knee, thumb and four vertebrae,” the force confirmed.

The week before Bournemouth Police’s contentious road safety campaign, Police Scotland received similar accusations of victim blaming after asking pedestrians to wear hi-vis clothing following a spate of road deaths. The advice was criticised by many, including national lead for fatal collision investigation reporting DCS Andy Cox, and came after six pedestrians died in collisions in the space of just 13 days.

And just last week, Derbyshire Constabulary announced a new road safety campaign which said that its officers will focus on protecting cyclists and motorbike riders by reducing dangerous riding behaviour and ensuring that they keep them within speed limits.

In the somewhat clumsily worded statement, the force said that it is going to spend “more time on our most rural roads, to ensure riders are keeping to speed limits and riding with care”.

Adwitiya joined road.cc in 2023 as a news writer after graduating with a masters in journalism from Cardiff University. His dissertation focused on active travel, which soon threw him into the deep end of covering everything related to the two-wheeled tool, and now cycling is as big a part of his life as guitars and football. He has previously covered local and national politics for Voice Wales, and also likes to writes about science, tech and the environment, if he can find the time. Living right next to the Taff trail in the Welsh capital, you can find him trying to tackle the brutal climbs in the valleys.

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26 comments

Avatar
wtjs | 11 months ago
1 like

Another example of the depths the police sink to! This Iveco Daily lorry carrying a load of bricks NW15 DEC was detected on 19th April with no MOT- expired 4 days before. The vehicle failed several times over the years for multiple defects, and failed again for multiple defects 6 days after this offence. Lancashire police officers condone vehicles driving around like this and haven't responded to the report. In Essex, I suppose I would have made the offenders do it by filming them.

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marmotte27 | 11 months ago
4 likes

"but we must avoid encouraging risk taking or deliberate incitement for others to offend”

Do I get this right, are they actually condoning or excusing road rage reactions to having been caught offending?

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eburtthebike | 12 months ago
10 likes

As I suspected, their justification stretches even double-speak beyond its elastic limit.

They said that SERP “supports people who witness risky driving while using the public roads, but we must avoid encouraging risk taking or deliberate incitement for others to offend”, before adding that “over 70 motorists in Essex this year so far have received a NIP following a close pass on a cyclist submitted to Extra Eyes”.

By "....avoid encouraging risk taking......" they mean "Don't report drivers, you effing cyclists."

And by "....deliberate incitement for others to offend."  they mean "Don't even bother thinking about reporting drivers you effing cyclists.

SERP claims to be an organisation dedicated to reducing deaths and injuries on the road, but when prima facie evidence is given to them on a plate of dangerous, illegal driving, they ignore it because it's provided by cyclists.  Their claims to be all about road safety are a lie, otherwise they would grab the  cyclists' evidence with both hands, shouting "hallelujah" and dancing with glee.  As an organisation, it is not fit for purpose and all the people running it should resign on the grounds of arrogance, incompetence, and stupidity.

SERP motto "Cyclists Eff Off.  Oh, and try not to get yourselves killed, and we will be really sorry if you are."

Avatar
Velo-drone | 12 months ago
9 likes

What in the heck do they think that "deliberate incitement for others to offend” would look like, exactly??

That's just bizarre!

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Morgoth985 replied to Velo-drone | 12 months ago
7 likes

Indeed.  If I am a shopkeeper and I install CCTV, is that "deliberately inciting" a burglar to offend?  

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Car Delenda Est replied to Velo-drone | 11 months ago
3 likes

Brazen victim blaming

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brooksby | 12 months ago
8 likes
Quote:

“We accept these if they are reported by cyclists who record it in passing while on their commute but not from those who proactively seek out examples of poor driving.”

Is this some sub-clause of Catch-22?

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Off the back | 12 months ago
4 likes

What do average speed cameras do then??! 

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eburtthebike replied to Off the back | 12 months ago
8 likes
Off the back wrote:

What do average speed cameras do then??! 

Blatant incitement.

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LookAhead | 11 months ago
16 likes

Cyclists wouldn't need to be "proactive" if the police would do their job to reduce the death, injury, and terror caused by unlawful driving. And part of that needs to include a zero tolerance policy that holds drivers responsible every single time they're caught breaking the law, rather than looking for every possible [non-]reason (The cyclist was proactive! The cyclist swore! Oh but the sun was in the poor dear's eyes!) to let them off the hook. Instead what we get is:

Police: We don't want to do our job, so you do it for us.

Cyclists: Ok, happy to help. Here's what you asked for, guv'nor.

Police: Fuck off.

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wtjs replied to LookAhead | 11 months ago
4 likes

Police: We don't want to do our job, so you do it for us.

Cyclists: Ok, happy to help. Here's what you asked for, guv'nor.

Police: Fuck off

The police (dealing with traffic offences) are, in general, useless, bent, idle pillocks. RS51 RAP, shown here in Garstang 200 yards from the police station, has no MOT and a blatantly illegal plate. I can guarantee that the sniggering Lancashire coppers will do nothing other than immediately consign the report to the bin

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Steve K | 12 months ago
8 likes
Quote:

but we must avoid encouraging risk taking or deliberate incitement for others to offend”,

The above doesn't sound unreasonable, but their stance goes much further than that.

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IanMK | 12 months ago
7 likes

We cannot rely upon governments to take action to protect and support minority groups. All we can do is try to do that every day in our everyday lives and try to create safe spaces for fellow human beings . Submitting footage is one small way to do this. The trouble is police and groups like this are so institutionalised they don't get it.
The more they fail the regular cyclist the more they encourage the minority, that have the strength of will, to do more. If they don't want the Cycling Mikey's then they need to actually do their job and improve the standard of driving.

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chrisonabike replied to IanMK | 11 months ago
1 like
IanMK wrote:

We cannot rely upon governments to take action to protect and support minority groups. ...

In many cases the opposite is true and measures which further disadvantage minorities are chosen. In the case of our current government the only minorities protected seem to be Conservative party members and rich folks (or SNP grandees up my way).

No, I don't think swapping red for blue will *radically* change the nature of the beast - at least for road policy. (The SNP are *marginally* better here.)

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belugabob | 12 months ago
13 likes

In my experience, there are plenty of folks who need zero incitement/encouraging to drive dangerously.
Car adverts - now there's a source of incitement...

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Mungecrundle | 12 months ago
14 likes

No more community speed watch groups then.

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chrisonabike replied to Mungecrundle | 12 months ago
4 likes

Not if you're on a bike...

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billymansell | 12 months ago
9 likes

From the numbers of No Further Action (NFA) cases I'd love to know how they think cyclists are inciting motorists to use their phones.

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wycombewheeler | 12 months ago
5 likes

I see, so we only seek evidence form those that see but don't look, makes a change from the police looking but not seeing I suppose.

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Secret_squirrel | 12 months ago
8 likes

This goes to the root of policing by consent and why the cops are less and less trusted.   

A big chunk of them default into authoritarian mode when challenged and double down on their current shizzle.

(I get that SERT arent the cops but I'm betting they are riddled with the same shitty attitudes).

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Oldfatgit replied to Secret_squirrel | 12 months ago
7 likes

My concern is how long before organisations like these become the norm and prevent direct reporting to the Police.

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Secret_squirrel replied to Oldfatgit | 12 months ago
4 likes

I dont think the tide of history is going in that direction though - if anything its the opposite.  These morons probably think its "woke"

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the little onion | 12 months ago
13 likes

I can't think of a single NMOTD or similar clip where the cyclist has "deliberately incited" an offender to offend. 

 

Even someone like Cycling Mikey, who makes a bit of a show when he spots people at Gandalf Corner, waits (literally hidden) until the offence occurs before he confronts people.

 

The problem here is that it smacks of victim blaming, and the idea that cyclists aren't proper victims, and their evidence isn't proper evidence.

 

Institutionally anti-cyclist.

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Clem Fandango | 12 months ago
8 likes

"whilst on  their commute"?

So, if you're on the way to the shops or otherwise riding for physical/mental wellbeing benefits, your journey doesn't count - is that it? Or is that you really oughtn't be using a public resource in such a way (unless you are in a car?) & so you are clearly being provocative by doing so?

I'm a bit confused.  Though I'm sure one of the stable will be along shortly to make it all clear. 

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Hirsute | 12 months ago
7 likes

Not much added from last time though.

Did you ask them to clearly define

"deliberate incitement for others to offend" ?

"proactively seek out examples of poor driving" ?

How do they tell if someoen is being proactive ?

As I put elsewhere

Deliberate incitement

not using the cycle lane, taking primary, filtering, flitering to an ASL, using a busy road instead of a quieter parallel road.

And if any says they wouldn't interpret it that way -

Not My King.

 

 

Avatar
grumpus replied to Hirsute | 11 months ago
1 like

"deliberate incitement for others to offend": riding in primary position

"proactively seek out examples of poor driving": not using a cycle path

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