九一星空无限

ZB ZB
Opinion
Live now
Start time
Playing for
End time
Listen live
Up next
ZB

John MacDonald: Our speeding fines are a joke

Publish Date
Mon, 18 Nov 2024, 12:34pm
Photo / File
Photo / File

John MacDonald: Our speeding fines are a joke

Publish Date
Mon, 18 Nov 2024, 12:34pm

If I asked you how many demerit points you have right now, reckon you鈥檇 be able to tell me? 

If you could, then you鈥檙e better than most people. Because, unless you get enough demerits to have your licence suspended, then I think most people don鈥檛 care. 

And a study out today is telling us that we do need to care if we want to make the roads safer. 

The people behind the study are telling us that most of us won鈥檛 care until we have tougher penalties for speeding. And I鈥檓 with them. Because, if we keep on doing things the way we do, not much is going to change. 

Here鈥檚 the gist of what this study connected with the University of Canterbury is telling us. It's found that drivers ticketed for speeding are nearly three times more likely to be involved in a crash. 

And you know why that is, don鈥檛 you? It鈥檚 because the fines for speeding are so piddly that people just take their chances. 

The speed cameras don鈥檛 help, either. Because, if you get ticketed by a speed camera,  you don't even get the demerit points. Because it can be difficult to prove who was driving. 

So, while the speed cameras are useful, they're not going to do much in terms of slowing people down if, the only impact, is paying a piddly fine and still keeping your licence. 

Which is why I like the idea that these researchers are floating today. That if you get a speeding ticket and keep on speeding, you get a higher fine each time. 

I鈥檇 go a step further than that, though, and say that the fines themselves need to be way higher than what they are now. 

As one of the people involved in this study is pointing out today, it鈥檚 crazy that you can actually pay more for a parking fine than for a speeding fine. 

So rank up the fines each time someone is caught speeding - but sting people for a lot more than we do at the moment. 

The other idea that these experts are putting out there today is, essentially, means testing people when they get fined for speeding. 

Which might sound like a good idea. But it鈥檚 not.  

Because someone who speeds is just as much of a menace on the road whether they鈥檙e driving some sort of Flash Harry 4-wheel-drive or whether they鈥檙e driving a Demio or a clapped-out old Toyota. 

Besides which, when you drive too fast on the road you are breaking the law. So I think giving speeding fines to people on how rich they are, or otherwise, makes no sense. 

Not to mention the fact that it would be an absolute nightmare to run. 

Can you imagine getting pulled over by a cop? Getting some sort of ticket. Then having to go home and submit your income details and whatever else they鈥檇 need to determine what means you have to pay the fine. 

It might sound like a great idea when you鈥檙e writing your research paper at university and trying to 鈥減ush the envelope鈥 a bit. But it would be a disaster. 

Although, to be fair to Dr Darren Walton at the University of Canterbury, he hasn鈥檛 just plucked this idea out of thin air. He says, in Switzerland, speeding fines are scaled to wealth. 

But I don't see how that would encourage someone with plenty of money to slow down. They鈥檇 just go 鈥減fft鈥 and pay the fine. 

And I don鈥檛 buy this argument that speeding fines need to be 鈥渆quitable鈥. That鈥檚 what the university guy is saying. You speed, you get caught, and you should pay exactly the same fine - whatever your financial situation. That鈥檚 what I think. 

But, if this research is telling us that drivers ticketed for speeding are nearly three times more likely than other drivers to be involved in a crash, then something does need to change. 

And I do like the idea of scaling-up the speeding fine system. So that, each time you get a ticket, you have to pay a higher fine. 

What do you think? 

LISTEN ABOVE

Take your Radio, Podcasts and Music with you