Police boss demands smart motorway on M1 is scrapped after ANOTHER serious crash
Grant Shapps ‘admits smart motorways are NOT as safe as original roads in every way’ in letter to police commissioner who is calling for upgraded M1 to be axed after ANOTHER serious crash
- Smart motorway on M1 in South Yorkshire saw another serious crash on Friday
- The occupant of a stationary car in a live lane had to be airlifted to hospital
- Police boss Dr Alan Billings said stretch of the M1 remained a ‘constant danger’
A police boss has revealed transport secretary Grant Shapps admitted to him smart motorways were not as safe in ‘every way’ as the older carriageways they replaced.
Dr Alan Billings, South Yorkshire Police and Crime Commissioner (PCC), said the stretch of the M1 in South Yorkshire was a ‘constant danger to anyone unfortunate enough either to break down in it or to be travelling along’ and called for its removal.
It comes after one occupant of a stationary car in a live lane between Barlborough and Aston had to be airlifted to hospital after a lorry collided with it last Friday.
This morning Dr Billings revealed a letter he wrote to Transport Secretary Grant Shapps warning about their dangers had now received a response.
He added: ‘His reply had one interesting sentence in it for me. He said “overall evidence shows that in most ways these smart motorways are as safe as or safer than conventional motorways, but not in every way”.
‘Now it’s that “Not in every way” bit that we need to focus on because it’s absolutely right that not in every bit is when somebody stops and they are not detected.’
Dr Alan Billings, South Yorkshire Police and Crime Commissioner (PCC), said the stretch of the M1 was a ‘constant danger’. Pictured: Smart motorway along the M1
Pictured: The M1 closed in both directions between junctions 30 and 31 after the crash last Friday
The details on the note were disclosed on Radio 4 this morning and came after Dr Billings had called for the M1 smart system to be axed.
He said: ‘I said that as long as it remained in place it was a constant danger to anyone unfortunate enough either to break down in it or to be travelling along it when another vehicle had broken down.
‘Since then we have had two coroners raise serious concerns about the smart motorway in South Yorkshire and I have written to the Secretary of State for Transport expressing my grave concerns.
‘Last Friday we had a further incident of a heavy goods vehicle colliding with a stationary car in a live running lane.
‘One of the occupants of the car was airlifted to hospital with very serious injuries.’
The PCC added: ‘I am forced to reiterate my concerns and to strongly urge Highways England and the Department of Transport to think again about this type of motorway.
‘I do not believe there is anyone who uses this stretch of the motorway, as I do, who does not feel anxious when driving along it.’
He said: ‘I call upon the minister and Highways England to abandon this type of smart motorway before we have more serious injuries or fatalities.’
Nargis Begum (pictured with her husband), from Sheffield, died on a stretch of the M1 in South Yorkshire, near Woodhall Services, in September 2018
Jason Mercer (left), 44, and Alexandru Murgeanu (right), 22, died when a lorry ploughed into their stationary vehicles on the M1 near Sheffield on June 7 last year
Last week a coroner investigating the death of 62-year-old grandmother Nargis Begum on the smart motorway referred Highways England to the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) to consider if corporate manslaughter charges were appropriate.
Mrs Begum, a mother-of-five and grandmother-of-nine, had exited the car and was waiting for help when another vehicle collided with the Nissan, causing it plough into her.
The stranded Nissan had its hazard lights on when the other vehicle collided with it but the lane, with no hard shoulder, had not been closed to traffic.
At a pre-inquest review in Doncaster on Monday, coroner Nicola Mundy heard how 16 minutes and 21 seconds elapsed between the Nissan breaking down and the collision.
Mrs Begum died on a stretch of the M1 without a hard shoulder in South Yorkshire, near Woodall Services, in September 2018.
And last month a different coroner concluded that smart motorways ‘present an ongoing risk of future deaths’.
Sheffield coroner David Urpeth said the primary cause of death of Jason Mercer, 44, and Alexandru Murgeanu, 22, on the M1 in South Yorkshire in June 2019 was the careless driving of lorry driver Prezemyslaw Szuba, who ploughed into their vehicles as they stood stationary in lane one following a minor shunt.
Recording a conclusion of unlawful killing, Mr Urpeth said: ‘I find, as a finding of fact, it is clear a lack of hard shoulder contributed to this tragedy.’
In November nine more smart motorways without hard shoulders were granted permission to go ahead despite warnings.
The new stretches of motorway, which cover a total distance of 138 miles, will see a 32-mile section on the M3, 17 miles on the M6, 23 miles of the M1 and another ten-mile segment on the M3.
The smart motorway network covers around 500 miles in England, with an additional 300 miles planned by 2025.
There are currently more than 20 sections of ‘smart motorways’ on seven different motorways
Highways England initially set up smart motorways, which allows drivers to use the hard shoulder at least some of the time, to cut congestion and improve the flow of traffic.
However in January, John Apter, chairman of the Police Federation, said the roads were dangerous, putting both drivers and police at risk.
Mr Apter, who represents rank-and-file officers, insisted: ‘They are a death trap. The country, police and we have been completely misled about the technology.
‘A poorer system has been introduced and continues to be rolled out despite the clear dangers that they present. Smart motorways are inherently dangerous.’