RoSPA's Lighter Evenings Campaign
Proposals to amend the system of timekeeping have a long history in Britain, with RoSPA spearheading the campaign for a change that would bring lighter evenings all year round.
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Press Release : RoSPA CONDUCTS CLOCK CHANGE POLL AS EVENINGS DARKEN
Visit RoSPA's blog on Lighter Evenings and at Safety Gone Sane.
In the UK at present, clocks follow Greenwich Mean Time (GMT) from October to March and British Summer Time (BST) which is GMT plus one hour from March to October.
RoSPA has been calling for many years for a move to a system called "Single/Double Summer Time" (SDST), which would put the clocks one hour ahead of GMT in winter and two hours ahead of GMT in summer. Complementing RoSPA's campaign, a move to SDST has been the subject of a number of bills laid before Parliament.
Reducing the number of people killed and injured on the roads is the key aim behind RoSPA's campaign. The most recent research found that a move to SDST could reduce road deaths by around 80 per year and serious injuries by around 212 per year.
...a move to SDST could reduce road deaths by around 80 per year and serious injuries by around 212 per year.
The Department for Transport's consultation paper, "A Safer Way: Making Britain's Roads the Safest in the World", cited these figures in 2009. It also stated that while moving to SDST would involve a one-off cost of £5million to publicise the change, it would then result in benefits of £138.36million a year due to the reduction in road casualties. It said the cost-benefit case in road safety terms was "clear", but that the issue went beyond the scope of the strategy consultation.
Also in 2009, the National Audit Office published a report called "Improving Road Safety for Pedestrians and Cyclists in Great Britain". In a section looking at seasonal road casualty patterns from 2000-2007, the report stated that there were 10 per cent more collisions killing or injuring a pedestrian in the four weeks following the clocks going back than in the four weeks before the clocks changed.
And a report published by the Public Accounts Committee in 2009 stated that there was "substantial evidence" that fewer people would be killed and seriously injured on the roads if the clocks were put forward by one hour throughout the year.
...extra evening daylight protects vulnerable road users like children, the elderly, cyclists and motorcyclists.
The latest findings confirm earlier research which showed that during an experiment which ran from 1968-71, when British Standard Time (GMT + 1) was employed all year round, around 2,500 deaths and serious injuries were prevented each year of the trial period.
The road safety benefits of SDST would be achieved because there are far more road casualties in the evening. Any increase in casualties in the morning during the winter would be outweighed by the reduction in casualties due to an hour of extra daylight in the evenings.
Extra evening daylight protects vulnerable road users like children, the elderly, cyclists and motorcyclists, making them more visible to motorists. Motorists are more tired after a day’s work and concentration levels are lower. Children tend to go straight to school in the morning but often do other things on their way home, increasing their exposure to road dangers. Social trips are generally made in the afternoon and evening.
In 2010, pedestrian deaths in Britain rose from 55 in October to 62 in November – the month in which the most pedestrian deaths and injuries were recorded.
Tourism, leisure and sporting organisations generally support a move to SDST, welcoming the increased opportunities for activity presented by more daylight on weekday evenings – an increasingly important point given concerns about obesity and public health.
The environmental benefits of switching to SDST have also been cited in recent years. According to a Cambridge University study published in 2009, moving to SDST would cut carbon emissions by 450,000 tonnes each year. The energy saved would be equivalent to 85 per cent of all the power generated by wind, wave and solar renewable energy in England.
... it is time for the issue to come off the shelf and for the full implications to be considered.
Tom Mullarkey, RoSPA chief executive, said: "We need to keep the momentum behind this long-running campaign. In view of the reports published in 2009, plus casualty data, we will continue to call for a change which, we believe, would save lives and reduce injuries.
"More pedestrians are killed and injured in the afternoon and early evening than in the morning. Therefore, by moving to SDST, vulnerable road users like children walking home from school would have an extra hour of daylight in which to make their journeys.
"It is time for the issue to come off the shelf and for the full implications to be considered."
RoSPA recommends a trial is run for 2-3 years to provide objective, up-to-date evidence about the effects of SDST. It would also enable the public and the industry and business sectors which would be affected to experience the change for themselves.
RoSPA continues to encourage pedestrians and cyclists to ensure they can be seen and motorists to watch their speed and keep an extra look out for vulnerable road users.
Campaign updates
January 2012
Despite widespread popular support in the UK, the backing of the Government, and more than 120 MPs, Rebecca Harris's Daylight Saving Bill was effectively killed by just a few politicians on Friday, January 20, 2012.
Click here to read the press release RoSPA issued in response to the development.
December 2011
In December 2011, RoSPA submitted a response to the Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee’s call for evidence on the topic of: "Changes to Daylight Saving: Implications for Agriculture and Rural Communities". To read what we said, download the EFRA Committee Evidence (PDF 49kb).
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