
Road safety group outraged at lack of enforcement by police...
By Andy McCue
Published: 9 March 2005 12:45 GMT
Fewer than 200 people have been prosecuted in the last 12 months under the new law banning the use of mobile phones while driving.
The ban on driving and using mobile phones was introduced in December 2003 and the latest figures from the Office of the Attorney General include all 197 cases nationwide that have been handled by the Crown Prosecution Service since February last year.
That number is also not broken down into which cases resulted in successful prosecutions and those that ended in acquittal. However, the total also does not include the fixed penalty on-the-spot fines handed out by police as those statistics are not yet available.
The current fine is £30 and three penalty points but the government is set to double that to £60. Those who contest the fine and go to court face a £1,000 fine if found guilty.
But road safety groups have slammed the low figures and urged the government to do more to enforce the ban.
A spokeswoman for road safety charity Brake told silicon.com that people will continue to flout the ban if there is seen to be no deterrent.
"There is an issue of enforcement and we do need to treat it as a serious offence. It has been compared to drink-driving in terms of driver distraction and we would like to see a much higher fine when you consider people who smoke on buses can be fined £1,000," she said.
I agree that this should be inforced more but do n...
Anonymous
I think its disgusting that people are getting awa...
Reginald
I think its unworkable and should be scrapped.
...
Dongo Drongo
It is outrageous that you expect our hard worked p...
Anonymous
In terms of benefits, you will have access to our pension, private health care and share save schemes as well as a range of discounts including ...
Back up solutions - KPI and performance statistics - Hardware maintenance - Hardware auditing - Secure and unsecure Dial-in services - Unclassified ...
Preparing and managing periodic cash and monthly management figures and supporting analyses for the business group. Most of our people in Services ...
CIO Agenda 2008
The exclusive silicon.com CIO Agenda 2008 survey looks at the CIO's tech shopping list for the year, examines whether IT budgets are rising or falling and reveals what the pain points are for tech chiefs this year. Find out more in our latest special report.
Stories from the web...
Copyright ©1995-2008 CNET Networks, Inc. All rights reserved. Top of page
Howard Greenfield Tech Futures: The talkification of the web A software switch gives browsers a voice...
Natasha Lomas 'Green' technology can't save us from ourselves So much for the rhetoric...