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MPs demand action on road deaths MPs demand action on road deaths
(about 6 hours later)
Lower speed limits and a tougher enforcement of drink-driving laws are needed to cut the number of road deaths, MPs have said. Lower speed limits and a tougher enforcement of drink-driving laws are needed to reduce road deaths, say MPs.
The Commons transport committee also criticised the government's system for recording deaths and serious injuries, adding it seemed to be "flawed". The Commons transport committee also queried whether road injury and death statistics were accurate, as police and hospital figures differ.
Chairman Louise Ellman said road fatalities were "the major public health problem of our age". Chairman Louise Ellman said road deaths were "the major public health problem of our age" and said 3,000 dead on the roads a year was "too high a price".
The government said it recognised "more can be done" to improve safety.The government said it recognised "more can be done" to improve safety.
The committee said that, although last year saw a 7% fall in deaths on the roads to 2,946, overall progress since 2000 had been "disappointing".
'Particularly concerned''Particularly concerned'
The committee said that, although last year saw a 7% fall in road user deaths, overall progress since 2000 had been "disappointing".
Motorcyclist deaths had risen by 26% between the mid-1990s and 2007.Motorcyclist deaths had risen by 26% between the mid-1990s and 2007.
The committee said it was "particularly concerned" about high accident rates among male drivers, younger drivers and those using country roads.The committee said it was "particularly concerned" about high accident rates among male drivers, younger drivers and those using country roads.
It also heard evidence that the poorest children were 21 times more likely to be killed as pedestrians hit by cars than those from the richest families.
Less well-off drivers and passengers were also at greater risk of death than the more affluent.
The deaths of 3,000 people and injuries to a quarter of a million are a staggering annual toll to pay for mobility Louise Ellman, MPThe deaths of 3,000 people and injuries to a quarter of a million are a staggering annual toll to pay for mobility Louise Ellman, MP
It heard evidence that child pedestrians from the poorest social groups were 21 times more likely to be killed in a traffic accident than those from the richest. Ms Ellman, Labour MP for Liverpool Riverside, said if 3,000 people a year were killed in train crashes there would be a national outcry.
Less well-off car users were also at greater risk of death than the more affluent. But because road deaths were seen as individual cases, they were seen as something separate.
Ms Ellman, Labour MP for Liverpool Riverside, said: "The number of deaths and injuries on our roads far outweighs the deaths and injuries in other transport modes or in other work-related accidents. She told the BBC: "We think this should be recognised for the problem it is, a national problem affecting people's lives and affecting people's families."
"We need to start seeing this not only as a collection of individual tragedies but also as the major public health problem of our age. Accuracy questioned
"The deaths of 3,000 people and injuries to a quarter of a million are a staggering annual toll to pay for mobility." She said 3,000 deaths, and 250,000 injuries were "a staggering annual toll to pay for mobility".
Targets The committee queried the accuracy of the government's data on serious injuries and deaths - while police figures suggest serious injuries are coming down, hospital statistics do not.
The committee queried the accuracy of the government's data on injuries and deaths and wondered whether it would meet its road safety targets. The committee said there was a "significant body of evidence to suggest that methods for recording road-traffic injuries are flawed" and urged an independent review of the way figures are collected.
There had to be a better linking of accident statistics gathered by police and hospitals to get a clearer idea of what is happening, it added. Criticism of our statistics is itself based on flawed comparisons with hospital admissions data, which are published with a warning about their reliability Department for Transport spokesman
The government says the number of injuries on roads is falling far more quickly than the number of deaths.The government says the number of injuries on roads is falling far more quickly than the number of deaths.
The MPs called for new road-death reduction targets, separate from those set for serious and slight injuries.The MPs called for new road-death reduction targets, separate from those set for serious and slight injuries.
In its report, the committee recommended the drink-drive limit should be lowered, roadside breath test devices should be approved and there should be tougher penalties for alcohol-related offences. They also recommended that the drink-drive limit be lowered, roadside breath test devices approved and there should be tougher penalties for alcohol-related offences.
More 20mph speed limit zones should be in place, it added.More 20mph speed limit zones should be in place, it added.
The committee said: "There is a significant body of evidence that the current methods for recording road traffic injuries are flawed."
MPs also said there should be a road safety commission and that a road accident investigation branch should be set up.
'Should be ashamed''Should be ashamed'
Liberal Democrat transport spokesman Mark Hunter said: "It is a travesty that drunk drivers still kill as many people now as they did a decade ago.Liberal Democrat transport spokesman Mark Hunter said: "It is a travesty that drunk drivers still kill as many people now as they did a decade ago.
"The government should be ashamed that it has failed to make a dent in this problem.""The government should be ashamed that it has failed to make a dent in this problem."
A Department for Transport spokesman said: "We've cut the number of people killed or seriously injured each year by more than a third since the mid-1990s. A Department for Transport spokesman said road deaths and serious injuries had been reduced by more than a third since the mid-1990s, equivalent to almost 17,000 fewer deaths and injuries.
"That means almost 17,000 fewer deaths or serious injuries on our roads last year.
"But we have always been clear that one death is one too many and so recognise that more can be done to make our roads safer."But we have always been clear that one death is one too many and so recognise that more can be done to make our roads safer.
"We work continually to improve the way road casualty data is recorded and are now linking police and hospital data."We work continually to improve the way road casualty data is recorded and are now linking police and hospital data.
"However, criticism of our statistics is itself based on flawed comparisons with hospital admissions data, which are published with a warning about their reliability for monitoring trends over time.""However, criticism of our statistics is itself based on flawed comparisons with hospital admissions data, which are published with a warning about their reliability for monitoring trends over time."


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