Monthly Archives: September 2009

September 7, 2009
Motorist Want Tightening of Pre Driving Test Rules

According to the research by motor insurer Direct Line, nine out of ten drivers are in favour of statutory on road experience, six out 10 (59 per cent) also wanted learner drivers to have compulsory driving lessons with an instructor.

AS well as tightening up pre-test rules, British drivers are also keen to put restrictions on novice drivers for a period after they have passed their driving test.

Although older respondents were more likely to be in favour of restrictions on young drivers, a large proportion of young drivers themselves are also in favour of restrictions.

The Government is planning to roll out a road safety pre – driver qualification that can be taught in schools. From October 2009 this qualification will count as a partial credit towards the theory test for car drivers. This measure has overwhelming support from drivers.

 Simon Bush of Britannia Driving School said: “Once the driving test has been passed additional post – test training should be encouraged by parents and the Government to form lifelong learning for young drivers”

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September 3, 2009
Police road-safety film becomes an internet hit

A hard-hitting film designed to warn youngsters in south Wales about the danger of texting while driving has become an internet hit, attracting more than 6 million viewers around the world.

Clips of Gwent police’s film Cow have been watched by people from South America to India and has helped fuel a national debate in the US. The force said it was surprised the film had reached so many people and that at one point it was the most viewed clip on YouTube.

The film tells the story of a fictional 17-year-old girl, Cassie Cowan (nickname Cow), who is distracted for a few seconds while driving with two friends.

She causes a devastating crash which kills her friends and another couple. The crash is portrayed in vivid and bloody detail.

A full 30-minute version, which stars local drama students, is due to be shown on BBC Wales in the autumn but the writer and director, Peter Watkins-Hughes, put a four-minute clip of it on the internet to show it to a friend. Within weeks the clip had been spotted by internet users, copied on to other sites and began attracting attention around the world.

Gwent police said today it believed the clip had been viewed at least 6 million times and had appeared on at least 17 sites.

The chief constable, Mick Giannasi, said he was surprised but encouraged by the way news of the film had spread via internet users.

“The messages contained in the film are as relevant to the people of Tennessee as they are to the residents of Tredegar,” he said. “Texting and driving can have tragic consequences and the more this film is viewed, the better. Young people think they can text on auto-pilot because they do it so instinctively. For that reason we need to use strong imagery to get them to sit up and take notice.

He added: “We’ve had callers from Canada ringing our force control room to tell us how moved they’ve been by viewing the clip. Another young driver emailed me personally to say he was deeply moved by the film and that it should be shown as part of the theory test for young drivers.”

Fox TV News in the US discussed the value of the shock tactics used in the film and the New York Times has written about it.

Watkins-Hughes said: “Texting while driving is a fairly new behaviour and this film aims to encourage people to modify their behaviour, making it socially unacceptable in the way that drink-driving is a social taboo.

“The film is hitting home because it has a hard edge and it taps into something that lots of people do but know they shouldn’t. If we can get one person to change their behaviour then it will have been worthwhile.”

Gwent police is now working on a learning pack to give to schools so every teenager over 14 can view the film.

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September 1, 2009
Motorists hit by 2p fuel duty rise

Motorists will face extra pain at the pump from today as the 2p rise in fuel duty comes into force — the third increase in the tax on petrol in nine months.

Motoring groups attacked the move, saying that motorists were being treated as a “soft target” for tax rises. They fear that rising global oil prices could push the price of a litre up by 5p, which would see the typical family spending £120 a year more on petrol.

The Freight Transport Association, which represents haulage companies, said that the increase could force some hauliers out of business.

The inclusion of VAT takes the rise to 2.3p, while the price of a litre of unleaded remains high at about 105p, up from about 85p at the start of 2009.

Despite the price of oil falling by almost half over the past year, from a high of $147 a barrel to about $70 a barrel, the cost has not been passed on to motorists at the pump, while tax accounts for about 65p in the price of each litre.

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