2773459 said:
But why aim for something far below ideal?
Collaborating ideas and behaviour is far from aiming below the ideal. Its putting in layer on layer of protection. No one group is going to reach the ideal acting on its own.
Two points: the first is that by focussing on victim and not perpetrator behaviour you collude in it carrying on as it is and give the perpetrator a get-out. A cyclist is killed by a construction lorry. We know who was driving it and on whose behalf it operated. What can we do to stop that person and that firm killing again, with immediate effect? Clue - it isn't talking to some cyclists. The second point is that the situation in which there are inexperienced or inexpert cyclists on the roads isn't one to be lamented - there is, at the bottom of it, no fundamental problem to address. Of course we all want cyclists to develop and improve individually, and to gain in confidence, and the availability of information and training is a good thing. But there is no point in the future at which we want to achieve a 100% trained and expert cycling population - we want there always to be safe space on our roads for new, inexperienced, inexpert cyclists.
... Focusing on cyclists is not taking focus away from the haulage industry. Road safety should be approached from all angles bcoz even if lorries had no blind spots they are still frickin huge and require room to turn. The drivers are human, and therefore prone to error, which means even if they were perfectly designed the situation could still occur. Yes the driver could be held responsible but the cyclist would still be dead, which is why it should be approached from all angles. By refusing to do so, we are condemning someone to death on principle.
2nd.. Why don't we want to achieve a 100% trained cycle population? If we started a school level now in 20 years the attitudes towards cycling would be completely different if everyone was trained bcoz all these people that run haulage companies would be more aware of issues we faced if theyd been on a bike themselves.
3rd if every cyclist was trained and also behaved themselves (ie didn't RLJ or pull the stupid manoeuvre in the you tube clip above) the haulage industry wouldn't have a leg to stand on when they tried to argue it was our fault. And although i fully understand the reasons for RLJing the sad truth is that while we continue to do it, drivers will always hold the trump card.
i refer you back to the process safety model i posted in the thread that got closed, which i seem to remember that even those arguing against me could see the logic. The more layers of protection that go in, the more chance we have of surviving. Yes those layers should first and foremost be technology, better mirrors, better junctions, driver training and driver behaviour, but if (bcoz humans are fallible) we need to add cyclist training and behaviour in as another layer, then I'm all for it if it saves even just one life.
you say that talking to cyclists wont stop that firm from killing someone else with immediate effect. On the contrary... It might be the only thing that does bcoz i cant see anything else changing with immediate effect, can you??