It is good to see the new Police and Crime Commissioner (PCC) publishing on line the details of her decision meetings including the background papers (http://tinyurl.com/PCC-meeting-28th-Nov-2012). The meetings, the first of which takes place in Knaresborough tomorrow, will apparently be open for residents to attend.
Whether residents will be able to make representations at the meetings remains to be seen, although hopefully the system will allow in future for emailed comments to be sent in advance of any decisions being taken.
The secretive City of York Council could take a leaf out of the Commissioners book.
One of the first decisions the PCC will take concerns the use of mobile speed (safety) cameras. http://tinyurl.com/Speed-cameras-North-Yorkshire. The cameras were introduced about 18 months ago following representation from the then LibDem controlled Council. The aim was to address issues at known accident black spots. The likely location of the cameras were announced on the Police web site 7 days in advance.
The trial has been a success with Police officers reporting “a reduction in collisions at identified sites where excess or inappropriate speed was considered to be a contributory factor”
Camera operators noted “a significant change in driver behaviour when revisiting sites, this is borne out by a reduction in high and medium speed offences at a number of locations”
Now the Chief Constable is recommending that the number of mobile speed cameras be increased to three with a significant increase in operational and backroom staffing.
Given the size of North Yorkshire, having two vans might have been understandable but the report quotes anticipated revenue from fines which will alarm some.
o Year 1 £225k
o Year 2 £515k
o Year 3 £447k
The income would be spent on road safety schemes but nevertheless the original objective of the project (to provide a deterrent to ultra speeders) is in danger of being lost.
It is unclear whether the Police will continue to publish in advance details of the sites that they will be monitoring.
It raises once again the prospect of the cameras being used in York to enforce Labour’s ridiculous City-wide 20 mph speed limit. After all, could a politically elected Police Commissioner – in the run up to a General Election – resist pressure to enforce all speed limits in the area?
Other items on the PCCs agenda include:
• Approval to commence ordering of vehicles for the 2013/14 Transport Capital Rolling Programme prior to budget setting
• Introduction of a computer triage system to monitor Registered Sex Offenders
• Employment Monitoring and Diversity Oversight Document
• Service Standards – Q2 2012/13
• Strategic Policing Requirement
• Performance report