Police Perspectives on Road Safety and Transport Politics in Germany
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Transport Politics and Road Safety
1.2. Road Safety in Germany
2. Method
3. Results
3.1. Accidents
“The main reasons for accidents are speed [and] safety distances.”[R1]
“Frustrating is when I have to tell a wife with three children that her husband will never return home again. That is frustrating. [...] That’s when I know why I do my work.”[R4]
3.2. Speed and Speed Limits
“What I don’t understand is why we don’t have a general speed limit on highways [...] and 80 km/h on rural roads.”[R4]
“50 km/h are often too fast to break in time, for example when a child runs onto the road between two cars. You simply have to make time when you are driving. Which is why I am a proponent of 30 km/h zones [in cities].”[R1]
“[A speed limit of 130 km/h on highways] would be meaningful. Very meaningful. Because differences in speed represent a considerable risk. [...] We are also the only country in Europe without a general speed limit.”[R6]
“You can compare this with other countries with a general speed limit. You achieve a more homogenous traffic if you don’t have differences in speed. [...] and the lower the speed, the less severe accidents. This principle is true for every road.”[R5]
“They meet with a purpose on the Swiss or on the French side, and then they come over here to race. [...] Traffic is slowed down, and those in front drive their race. [...] I also found this on Facebook [...] They have the whole route there, sometimes including Frankfurt-Freiburg, [complete] with price money.”[R3]
“We recently caught one, a multimillionaire from Switzerland, who drove close to 300 km/h [in a 120 km/h zone on the highway].”[R5]
“[...] when we stop someone driving 140 km/h with a 15 m safety distance to another driver, and he tells me he has ABS, ‘It’s not a problem’, such people have no idea about physics.”[R1]
3.3. Traffic Density
“We are moving towards a constant traffic jam. [...] We have reached the limits.”[R9]
“Traffic is denser, there are jams where we did not have them before [...]. All of this leads to the frustration of drivers, truck drivers, cyclists—every traffic participant. Frustration leads to aggression.”[R8]
“[a problem] is the growth in traffic, which is why I am very positive about bicycles.”[R1]
“We need to support [cycling] as much as possible, if traffic can be removed from roads, from cars to bicycles, it helps everyone. This is why we should use all opportunities the city has, in terms of urban design, to support this, to build more [bicycle] infrastructure.”[R5]
3.4. Elderly Drivers
“There is a very, very large risk group that is currently developing, and that’s elderly drivers. There is no adequate policy.”[R10]
“With elderly drivers you increasingly often have medical issues, though these start with 40 or 50. Somebody saying after an accident, ‘I felt ill’, ‘I blacked out’, or ‘I had a circulatory failure I have never had before’ [...] And diabetes is a problem, once in a while. It’s really difficult to tell, with diabetes and hypoglycaemia.”[R6]
“An age limit need to be set, and then [elderly drivers] have to participate in a safety training, every 2, 4, 5 years, including information about what’s new in terms of car technology, legislation.”[R5]
3.5. Alcohol
“[In rural areas] alcohol is normal. Even high levels, up to 0.3 [BAC] alcohol level.”[R11]
“From the viewpoint of traffic safety, zero alcohol would be the only meaningful legislation.”[R5]
3.6. Taking Responsibility and Proof of Culpability
“It’s about a third, I’d say, who admit that they have made a mistake. They pay the fine. About a third.”[R2]
“There are often comments to first aid helpers: ‘Ah, I fell asleep for just a second, damn it!’. [...] And when [drivers] have had legal advice, [...] they will deny responsibility. [...] Specifically when there is a serious accident and a lawyer becomes involved. [...] There are some who would not admit for life that they have made a mistake.”[R2]
“This year, we have had 200 more hit-and-runs than last year. There is a growth trend—in all categories of traffic accidents.”[R3]
3.7. Driving Outside the Law
“We have colleagues in Waldshut [...] they have a massive problem with motorcyclists, with all the Swiss coming, and when [the officer] tells them that they have to pay 100 Euro [...], they laugh, they laugh. Downright, they laugh at you.”[R3]
“It is extremely cheap [to be caught speeding] in comparison to Switzerland. [Swiss] motorcyclists in the Black Forest, [...] they have two wallets, one is for food and beverages, and one is for the police. [...] It’s [planned] in their budget that they are caught by the police at least once during a tour.”[R14]
“We have recently had several incidents with a [Swiss] SAP manager, who earns perhaps a million or two per year. A 1000 Euro fine does not hurt him at all. [...] So he can drive 100 km/h too fast, and if there is no accident, he can do that as often as he wants.”[R4]
3.8. Control Frequency
“Personally, I am a disappointed that in traffic, we obviously cannot get people to respect rules out of common sense. If we did not control speed limits [...] you would observe that speeds slowly increased. [...] It takes control pressure, apparently.”[R5]
“We have 60,000 vehicles per day, and 30 of these are controlled, that’s… I mean, you can discuss whether that’s enough.”[R11]
“In some areas, there is no police presence any more. [...] There used to be time, two, three hours, and then we also did controls. But with all the tasks and the declining staff, controls are suffering. And traffic participants note this.”[R14]
“We should measure [speeds] where it makes sense in regard to accidents. [...] If you look where the city measures, at which times, then [it is clear] that these measurements serve the purpose to generate an income already included in the [city’s] budget.”[R9]
3.9. Fines and Sanctions
“There needs to be punishment [...] Without sanctions, it just does not work. And these sanctions need to have an impact.”[R13]
“Whoever is fined deserves to be fined. [Only] 21 km/h and more [above speed limit] will be reported, but those driving 10, 15 km/h too fast, we don’t stop them, because then you could stop virtually everyone.”[R1]
“I generally think that fines are on a level where they will not seriously affect even a low-income taker.”[R1]
“We had a sheik, he drove 242 km/h in the 120 km/h zone. [...] That’s 1275 Euro. […] In Switzerland, he’d go to jail for a year. If a millionaire goes to jail for a year, that hurts. But a fine doesn’t hurt at all.”[R4]
“In many, many areas, fines are just too low. [...] There are people, of course, who earn less, and fines may hurt them, but those earning more, they are hardly bothered at all.”[R8]
“In Switzerland you have [fines] that depend on income. Flat up to an annual income.”[R3]
3.10. Justice
“There are also psychopaths [in traffic]. They have an issue with being overtaken by someone, or if somebody makes a mistake, then they believe they have to show people. These cases exist, yes. And I think, people who are repeatedly reported because of assault or endangering others, they should no longer be allowed to drive.”[R1]
“[This guy] is on probation for the second time, and then a third time [in spite of repeated severe traffic offences]. That’ when I wonder what ‘probation’ really means. […] It happens that you stay [in court], when you really want that someone will be convicted, then you rather stay. Because it could be that they’ll make some kind of deal, and they don’t dare if you stay.”[R11]
3.11. Lobbyism
“If they [drivers of heavily motorized cars] cause accidents, these accidents are spectacular. [...] As long as the car industry wants to sell such cars, they will always be against speed limits. That’s a strong lobby we have in Germany. They reach all the way into the Ministry of Transportation, because even there, they are against speed limits.”[R4]
“They [Allgemeiner Deutscher Automobilclub] do a lot of lobbyism that is not focused on safety, rather than directed at [a specific] clientele of drivers”[...] [R12]
“We have the hauliers and the truck traffic, we have speed limits, we have emission limits [...], then there is forensic medicine [...] who want blood sampling and drug tests. [...] There is a lot of lobbyism.”[R4]
“Lawyers would be against [reform], of course, because then a large income source disappears. Yes, I think that’s what they are, a big lobby.”[R3]
3.12. Politics
“People talk about a ‘traffic sign forest’, and we do have a forest of signs. [...] It is incredible how many signs there are in one spot sometimes, [...] it is impossible to absorb them simultaneously. [...] If people behaved more rationally, we would need fewer signs, but in Germany, everything has to be regulated. It is over-regulated.”[R13]
“There are new drugs every day. [...] These are not covered by the law. Why don’t we have a law that says all intoxicating substances are prohibited?”[R9]
“We have a road traffic act in Germany, with a paragraph 3 that says: within cities, 50 km/h. [...] In Freiburg, 85% of roads are no longer 50 km/h, they are 30 km/h or play streets, or they are 10 km/h or 20 km/h. When 85% of the roads no longer correspond to the road traffic act, then that traffic act is outdated. [...] It is easier to say: within cities, 30 km/h. [...] We lack clear politics.”[R9]
“It is unpopular [to introduce legislation for elderly drivers]. Members of parliament or other politicians, they only want to push popular issues.”[R1]
“If you controlled the entire highway with section control, you would not even need a single police officer for speed controls. Speed can be controlled with technology. It’s even self-financing. But it’s a political issue, because no politician likes to have speed cameras installed.”[R4]
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Year | 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | 2015 | 2016 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Accident number | 22,680 | 22,451 | 22,398 | 24,168 | 24,093 |
Lightly injured | 4014 | 3861 | 4024 | 4038 | 3980 |
Seriously injured | 931 | 905 | 1005 | 989 | 931 |
Fatal accidents | 48 | 51 | 51 | 57 | 44 |
Main reason for accident | |||||
Speed | 1896 | 1754 | 1497 | 1345 | 1379 |
Safety distance not kept | 1785 | 1945 | 1451 | 741 | 647 |
Issue | Suggested Policy Change |
---|---|
Speed limits | Speed limits of 130 km/h on highways, 80 km/h on rural roads, and 30 km/h in residential areas in cities |
Speed controls | More speed controls, specifically where accidents occur frequently |
Elderly drivers | Driving fitness tests, along with update on traffic laws |
Alcohol tests | Breathalyser results sufficient for assessment of BAC |
Drugs | Ban of any substance influencing driver capabilities |
Owner responsibility | Car owner is responsible for vehicle where driver is unknown |
Fines adjusted to income levels | Level of fines dependent on income |
Driving bans | Driving bans should be invoked earlier, with less leeway given to repeat offenders |
Parking | More frequent controls, higher fines |
Cooperation between countries | Identify opportunities for co-operation to sanction foreign offenders |
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Gössling, S. Police Perspectives on Road Safety and Transport Politics in Germany. Sustainability 2017, 9, 1771. https://doi.org/10.3390/su9101771
Gössling S. Police Perspectives on Road Safety and Transport Politics in Germany. Sustainability. 2017; 9(10):1771. https://doi.org/10.3390/su9101771
Chicago/Turabian StyleGössling, Stefan. 2017. "Police Perspectives on Road Safety and Transport Politics in Germany" Sustainability 9, no. 10: 1771. https://doi.org/10.3390/su9101771
APA StyleGössling, S. (2017). Police Perspectives on Road Safety and Transport Politics in Germany. Sustainability, 9(10), 1771. https://doi.org/10.3390/su9101771