Sarah Champion MP Responds to Publication of Smart Motorway Progress Report By Highways England
Sarah Champion MP, Member of Parliament for Rotherham has welcomed progress on the installation of additional safety measures on smart motorways, while reiterating concerns that All Lane Running roads remain fundamentally unsafe.
The First Year Progress Report, published today by Highways England, contains commitments to retrofit stopped vehicle detection (SVD) technology to all existing smart motorways by September 2022 and to ensure that no new smart motorway will open without the technology in place from the outset.
Commenting, Sarah said:
“The installation of SVD across the smart motorway network is a welcome improvement. I am clear that this commitment has come about only as a result of pressure from MPs, campaigners, and, most importantly, from the families of those who have already lost loved ones’
‘This change is welcome, but it doesn’t address the fundamental problem. While it can improve safety, in the end, all Highways England and the Government are doing is mitigating to a small degree a risk they themselves have created.’
‘Highways England continue to disingenuously offset the safety improvement that a managed environment delivers against the risk of removing the hard shoulder. But these are not mutually exclusive. A managed environment can be delivered while keeping the hard shoulder.”
The report also finally commits to complete feasibility review into retrofitting additional emergency refuges on existing smart motorways where they are currently spaced more than one mile apart by 2022.
Responding, Sarah, who has repeatedly called for more refuges to be retrofitted as an immediate priority, heavily criticised the proposal, stating:
“The Government has accepted, in deciding that future schemes must place refuges no more than one mile apart, that bigger gaps are unsafe. Yet, despite some existing smart motorways having refuges spaced far in excess of this, Highways England will only commit to having completed a review by April 2022, some two years after the initial publication of the Evidence Stocktake.’
‘This is outrageous. If safety really was the number one priority, then delivering basic safety measures like properly spaced refuges would have been built into the design from the word go. Instead, we must wait two years from the publication of the initial report simply to learn the outcome of a review.’
‘I am gravely concerned that more lives will be lost whilst we wait. The Government should immediately commit to restore the hard shoulder pending work to install additional refuges. If it’s not be possible to deliver these safely, they should return to traditional operation, with a hard shoulder.”
ENDS
Notes to Editors:
The Smart Motorway Evidence Stocktake is available here: https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/936811/smart-motorway-safety-evidence-stocktake-and-action-plan.pdf
The First Year Progress Report is available here: https://highwaysengland.co.uk/media/bb4lpkcp/smart-motorways-stocktake-first-year-progress-report-2021.pdf