Boy hurt in crash near Larkmead School (From The Oxford Times)
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Boy hurt in crash near Larkmead School
6:50pm Wednesday 25th April 2012 in Abingdon
A boy suffered a suspected broken leg after a collision with a car near Larkmead School in Abingdon this afternoon.
The boy, who police said was believed to be a pupil at the Faringdon Road school, was injured just before 3.20pm.
The driver of a Mercedes car was being interviewed by police, a spokesman said.
He added the boy suffered a serious injury, believed to be a broken leg.
Comments(18)
Feelingsmatter
says...
7:23pm Wed 25 Apr 12
Dilligaf2010
says...
8:16pm Wed 25 Apr 12
L0RD PETER MCVEY 0X2 6EG wrote:I think the Green Cross Code and the Tufty Club should be reintroduced, as should Lollipop Ladies, I'm sure some of the £4 million paid to the Top Council executives could be used to pay for them.
We either need to ban the killer car near our schools, or put in a 5 mph limit enforced by a man with a red flag, before all our kids are killed or maimed. But then again my kids were taught The Green Cross Code, and never had a problem crossing the road. But also if the Merc was driving on the path, the book should be thrown at him.
Ceasar
says...
9:25pm Wed 25 Apr 12
Or, was he RUN OVER ?
Thank god he only has a broken leg, as if that is'nt bad enough, Speedy recovery young man.
davyboy
says...
7:38am Thu 26 Apr 12
Abberdon
says...
9:13am Thu 26 Apr 12
The road speed there is faster than that. There is no excuse not to lower road speeds, right now, so vehicles and 'people' can better co-exist.
Gunslinger
says...
9:14am Thu 26 Apr 12
Ceasar wrote:Because this is a neutral way of describing the accident without prejudging fault on either side.
Not quite sure how he was in a 'collision' with a car. Was he running fast in the opposite direction and crashed? Running fast behind the car and failed to stop ?
Or, was he RUN OVER ?
Thank god he only has a broken leg, as if that is'nt bad enough, Speedy recovery young man.
Of course there are always those who automatically assume that the car driver must be at fault, and then go on to propose reducing speed limits to 10 mph everywhere...
Feelingsmatter
says...
11:48am Thu 26 Apr 12
Gunslinger
says...
7:08pm Thu 26 Apr 12
Feelingsmatter wrote:The logic of this approach is that everybody everywhere needs to travel at 10-20 mph just in case there is an accident - why not bring back red flags?
Gunslinger said; "Of course there are always those who automatically assume that the car driver must be at fault, and then go on to propose reducing speed limits to 10 mph everywhere..." It's nothing to do with assumptions and everything to do with facts. The slower the car the less serious the injury. It doesn't matter whose fault it is, the important thing is reducing the possibility of injury.
I'm sorry, but there needs to be some balance between the needs of people to get about and do business conveniently, and safety.
We do not know all the facts of this case, but part of that also involves the more vulnerable road users - pedestrians, cyclists etc - taking care and responsibility for their own safety, as well as just demanding more restrictions on others.
Abberdon
says...
11:17pm Thu 26 Apr 12
At 40 mph, 9 out of 10 pedestrains and cyclists will die when hit by a car. At 20 mph that reduces to 1 out of 10.
It's about managing risk old chap, and when drivers are unable to manage their vehicles, they represent a massive risk.
Now, 20 mph is not needed on motorways, but it is needed in towns and cities.
A plus in reducing road speeds is the lower damage and repair bills, lower hospital and ongoing health costs, reduced import of fuels, but the best of all is that reducing speeds on urban roads does not have much of an impact on travel times.
Why should peds and bikers be taking all the care, when drivers are expecting to blaze away like a mad dog with a six-gun?
Gunslinger
says...
12:44pm Fri 27 Apr 12
Abberdon wrote:'Why should peds and bikers be taking all the care, when drivers are expecting to blaze away like a mad dog with a six-gun?'
Gunslinger, vehicles crash all the time, every day, going too fast, not paying attention, killing and maiming people and barely a word said against the drivers, drunk or sober.
At 40 mph, 9 out of 10 pedestrains and cyclists will die when hit by a car. At 20 mph that reduces to 1 out of 10.
It's about managing risk old chap, and when drivers are unable to manage their vehicles, they represent a massive risk.
Now, 20 mph is not needed on motorways, but it is needed in towns and cities.
A plus in reducing road speeds is the lower damage and repair bills, lower hospital and ongoing health costs, reduced import of fuels, but the best of all is that reducing speeds on urban roads does not have much of an impact on travel times.
Why should peds and bikers be taking all the care, when drivers are expecting to blaze away like a mad dog with a six-gun?
EVERYONE needs to be taking care - there are laws and penalties for motorists who do not, particularly if an accident is caused. These laws do not apply to the 'vulnerable' road users, better education and training is needed to remind them that their carelessness risks injury and perhaps death.
A 'risk management' approach should be just that - proportionate to the risk in particular cases. A 20mph limit is perfectly justifiable in the right cases, eg outside schools or other high risk areas, but applied on an indiscriminate blanket basis, is largely unenforceable.
One problem is that vehicles are designed to operate efficiently and comfortably at particular speeds, enforced travel at lower speeds is likely to increase rather than fuel consumption. It is not easy to maintain a steady 20 mph along a clear open road with few obvious hazards or obstructions, and it is quite clear that many drivers - including buses, council vehicles and police - do not observe blanket 20 mph limits.
Abberdon
says...
2:54pm Fri 27 Apr 12
Because buses, council vehicles and the Peelers are exempt from intelligent driving requirements, it is OK to have every motor vehicle drive 'like the wind', eh?
Not good enough. Many people still fail to 'clunk click every trip' but still we do not allow open slather with refusing to wear safety belts, do we?
MUrder is illegal yet still people insist on doing it. The Furphy of 'unenforceable' is just that, a Furphy.
What about the 'war on drugs'? How well that has gone eh, just because it is a 'law'.
Let those who speed, get done for speeding. Let speeding become an odious crime, a heinous anti-social activity punished by hefty penalties, confiscation of vehicles for periods of time, public shame, humiliation and exclusion, driving bans and time spent on a bicycle as penance and to learn how dangerous it is to have speedsters and nitwits flying past within an inch of your handlebars.
And who said lower roads speeds were to be applied 'indiscriminatorily'
?
I'd not suggest that at all and I don't think that has ever been the argument.
Take Abingdon centre. should it be 60 mph, 50 mph, 40 mph, 30mph, 20mph or lower even?
I'd suggest 20 mph is fine, and a reflection of the actual speed too.
The road to Culham past the bridge? No need for that to be 20 mph at all.
Oxford Road? Nothing wrong with 20 mph along its length, till the end of the speed limit near Lodge Hill.
Abingdon bypass? Not 20 mph at all.
Through Marcham? 20 mph is fine.
See, nothing 'indiscriminate' at all.
As for having the correct gearing, sure, not hard at all.
But then we'd also get by with cars that had no need to do 120 mph, with six gears too, wouldn't we. After all, you hit the nail on the head when you used the word 'design'. We just need to redesign cars, to be less anti-social.
Particularly when most journeys are very local, and more of those could even be done on a bike, by many people but not all, of course.
But yes, let us get better training and education too, I do think that is a sound idea.
Jimjamiejonboy
says...
3:40pm Fri 27 Apr 12
All of the stupid comments above are from fully grown adults that may drive but after what they have said I should think you lot shouldnt be trusted walking anywhere let alone on a bike or car .
Not one of you has wished the boy Well, Idiots
Feelingsmatter
says...
4:35pm Fri 27 Apr 12
3:40pm Fri 27 Apr 12
"First of all my opinion has nothing to with tthe accident mentioned above and I wish the boy a speedy recovery .
All of the stupid comments above are from fully grown adults that may drive but after what they have said I should think you lot shouldnt be trusted walking anywhere let alone on a bike or car .
Not one of you has wished the boy Well, Idiots"
Nice mature comment JimJamieJonboy. Kind of undermines your point, wouldn't you say? Plus, if you'd bothered to read the comments properly one person DID wish him well. You can't tell people what to write on a public forum.
shipscat
says...
7:13pm Fri 27 Apr 12
shipscat
says...
7:16pm Fri 27 Apr 12
Jimjamiejonboy wrote:Your post started well then deteriorated with the insults.
First of all my opinion has nothing to with tthe accident mentioned above and I wish the boy a speedy recovery . All of the stupid comments above are from fully grown adults that may drive but after what they have said I should think you lot shouldnt be trusted walking anywhere let alone on a bike or car . Not one of you has wished the boy Well, Idiots
lucifa42
says...
3:19am Sun 29 Apr 12
Jimjamiejonboy
says...
7:22pm Wed 2 May 12
L0RD PETER MCVEY 0X2 6EG says...
7:04pm Wed 25 Apr 12