Resolution of the European Parliament
Priorities in EU Road Safety 2002 - 2010
Summary
Introduction
"When
building the Europe of the future, we need every individual's
unique talents, and we cannot accept a situation where the
lives and health of our youngsters are permanently at risk
owing to everyday traffic. Improving traffic safety for
children and young people is in keeping with the UN
Convention on the Rights of the Child."
"Inadequate road safety must be viewed as a major public
health problem throughout the EU, since life expectancy is
reduced…and there is an adverse effect on public health as a
whole, as so many people lose their lives or are injured for
life."
"We must
stop viewing road safety primarily as a matter of telling
road users to pull themselves together. Instead, we must, as
we do in aviation for example, develop systems to prevent the
damage which human error can cause. Then we can create a
refined, quality-assured man-machine system for our roads…the
number of fatalities and injuries on Europe's roads is not
something which is predetermined. We must, however, make this
issue a political priority."
(From Motion
for a Resolution, 2000)
The European Parliament has acknowledged the huge problem
of road death and injury as "totally unacceptable" and has
adopted a resolution on 18.1.2001, which considers a range of
measures to address this "major public health problem":
95% of all traffic 'accidents' occur on the road
In the EU countries, there are more than 45,000 road
deaths and over 2 million injuries each year. Many of those
deaths and injuries are of children and young people. This
has a devastating effect not only on families, but also on
society as a whole. Most people too are killed or injured as
vulnerable road users - pedestrians, cyclists and moped
riders.
According to the European Commission, the socio-economic
cost of this carnage is a minimum of 60 billion Euros - a
cost far above the cost of the prevention of crashes.
The decrease in road casualties appears to have come to a
halt. With an expected substantial increase in traffic, it is
imperative to step up action now. The measures taken to date
have been mainly ad hoc and not in keeping with the scale and
importance of the road safety problem.
Since the Treaty of Amsterdam, road safety has become the
responsibility of the European Parliament, European
Commission and European Council of Transport Ministers, who
have the duty to make transport safety the explicit objective
of a common transport policy, together with national,
regional and local authorities.
The European Parliament states that: "an efficient road
safety policy requires strong political leadership at all
levels, from local authorities to the EU"...It also
states that: "excessive and inappropriate speed are
universally acknowledged as
having the most detrimental
effect on road safety".
In this Resolution, the European Parliament
Affirms, that to improve road safety, the main
priority of transport policy is to provide the necessary
financial resources
Considers the following measures as priorities:
- fitting of speed limiters on goods vehicles weighing
more than 3,5 tonnes
- support of a seat-belt campaign
- a European standard for police crash reports, to enable
a proper comparison between countries
Calls on Member States to enforce compliance of
blood alcohol limits more strictly
Believes that no single death on European roads can
be justified and that therefore the long-term objective must
be that no European citizen should be killed or seriously
injured in the road transport system, similar to that for
other transport modes and that an action programme for
2002-2010, with clearly defined goals, must start
immediately and include
crash prevention, injury
prevention and post impact care.
The European Parliament believes that it is the Commission
who should coordinate, report and publish achievements of the
Member States, at regular intervals.
The Parliament wants to see the main road safety issues
addressed, especially excess and inappropriate speed, excess
alcohol and use of other substances, high crash involvement
of young novice drivers, and insufficient crash protection
provided by vehicles and infrastructure.
Regarding speed, the Parliament asks the Commission to
"examine what kind of controls and substantial sanctions
would lead to significantly better compliance with speed
limits" and states that "the safety conscious behaviour of
road users, particularly driving behaviour, must be
improved".
For the first time, the European Parliament addresses post
crash care, when asking that road safety policy must
include "rescue, care and rehabilitation measures and
guidelines to improve medical assistance to victims", and
provide "better assistance in legal and social issues to
victims and their families".
The Member countries which have signed the Schengen
Convention on free movement between their countries (GB is
one of four which have not) are invited to harmonise their
road traffic offences, as well as the "enforcement of
penalties imposed in respect thereof".
In conclusion, the European Parliament instructs its
President to forward this Resolution to the Council of
Ministers, the Commission and the Governments of the Member
States.
The European Federation of Road Traffic Victims and
RoadPeace believe that Members of both Houses of the UK
Parliament, as well as UK MEP s, should be fully aware of the
details of this resolution, in order to be able to take
appropriate action and save many thousands of lives.
Full text of the European Parliament's Resolution is
available on: http://europa.eu.int