Villages unite in call for average speed cameras
- Published
Fixed average speed cameras should be installed across North Yorkshire, according to a group of more than 20 town and parish councils.
Road collisions saw 40 deaths in the county during 2023 - the highest number since 2017, Department for Transport statistics have shown.
Councillors from villages including Ampleforth, Settle and Shipton by Beningbrough have written to the mayor of York and North Yorkshire to ask for cameras to be added to enforce speed limits.
The county currently has no fixed cameras and police use mobile units to catch drivers travelling over the speed limit.
Gillian Taylor, a road safety campaigner in Cowling, said trying to stop people speeding without the threat of fixed average speed monitoring, was "not working".
“There is a telegraph pole at the other side of the village that has had to be replaced four times in 18 months," Ms Taylor said.
"We’ve had cars going through walls, on their roofs, but by the luck of the universe there hasn’t been a [death], and it seems bizarre to be waiting for that.”
Gregory Butt, the chair of Gargrave Parish Council, said it was “frankly embarrassing" that there were no fixed cameras in the county.
“There’s a dogma in North Yorkshire which needs to be broken, and the only people who can do that are the mayor and the deputy mayor, and police need to actually be given the tools to tackle this," he said.
Lucy Straker, from road safety charity Brake, said lower speed limits should also be introduced.
“We want to encourage local authorities such as North Yorkshire to look at other areas like in London and Wales where they’ve put in 20mph speed limits around residential areas,” she said.
Jo Coles, York and North Yorkshire Deputy Mayor for Policing, Fire and Crime, said road safety was a “hugely important” issue for communities across the region.
She was scheduled to meet with the York and North Yorkshire Road Safety Partnership to "hear about the work being done to make our roads safer, so we can better understand what else we might need to look at in York and North Yorkshire going forward”.
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