Skip to playerSkip to main contentSkip to footer
  • today
Staffordshire Police officers joined community speed watch volunteers as part of a rural county road focus,
Transcript
00:00We're going out today to do some work with our partners in the community Speedwatch,
00:07which are volunteers across various villages in the rural areas of the county. These volunteers
00:15come together on a regular basis, normally weekly, where they will use speed detection devices to
00:23record speeding offences through the areas that they live. We've invested quite heavily in road
00:29safety over the last 12 months, where we've increased the side of the road crime team and the road harm team.
00:36We need to be working harder to reduce these speeds, you know there's children in these villages
00:41and towns in the local area, we've got to make sure that they're safe walking along the pavements,
00:46along with cyclists, horse riders and everybody else using the road network. Working with young
00:52children from a young age through the school years into high school to the point of when they're
00:57starting to learn to drive, to share the impacts of speed and the devastation that it can cause if
01:03they don't stick to the speed limits. I mean I've been to 22 fatal collisions where multiple people
01:08have lost their lives on Staffordshire's roads. The impact's massive, the impact to the officers having
01:14to investigate it, to deal with what's happened and more importantly the families, you know. To lose a
01:21loved one on the road is tragic, you know. Everybody that goes out to work or socially on a daily basis
01:27should come home safely and the fact that they're not and that's still happening on Staffordshire's
01:33roads is not acceptable and we've got to work really hard to try and reduce those numbers.

Recommended