Skip to main content

Enforcement - still a dirty word?

A friend of mine's wife used to work on a ladies' magazine. A mid-shelf affair, it would contain the usual round of photo stories on this season's look, interviews with celebrities - some of whom I'd almost heard of - and those 'What does he really think of me?/Why do men act the way they do?' questionnaires.
February 2, 2012 Read time: 3 mins

A friend of mine's wife used to work on a ladies' magazine. A mid-shelf affair, it would contain the usual round of photo stories on this season's look, interviews with celebrities - some of whom I'd almost heard of - and those 'What does he really think of me?/Why do men act the way they do?' questionnaires.


It meant that once in a while I'd get an email asking my opinion on something or other and looking back I suppose that I missed a golden opportunity to at least try to mould the fairer sex's thinking. One question was, 'Why, when men buy women flowers, is it nearly always something pathetic like a raggy bunch of carnations?'

I went with the truth: that those flowers were probably covering for a half-kept or unfulfilled promise, a distress purchase that likely came from a bucket outside a filling station on the way home.

I'm not going to apologise to the male readers of this magazine for my response to her. In reality, I don't think I gave too much away. But the story came to mind when interviewing Peter van de Beek of TISPOL, the European Traffic Police Network. In his view, from the sharp end, enforcement is oftentimes like that bunch of carnations: an afterthought. So is it an afterthought because it's a sticking plaster intended to cover the shortcomings of current technologies and policies, or because enforcement is too uncomfortable for our politicians to wholeheartedly endorse?

We have cooperative infrastructure systems matured to the point of being deployment-ready. We laud the advances that they will confer in terms of safety and the environment. We praise ourselves for being inclusive and engaging. And yet van de Beek, representing perhaps one of the most important stakeholders, says that he hears little about enforcement.

We have the juxtaposition of an infrastructure management industry concerned with safety and a car industry still obsessed with the dash for horsepower. Increasingly, motor journalists seem to regard a car's dynamic capabilities as its sole marketing criterion.

Van de Beek is right. Things just don't mix. Not properly. Not yet. He argues that those responsible for enforcement should for evidential purposes be allowed much greater access to vehicles' onboard systems - present and future. Should that be an issue? I don't think so. Not if we're truly committed to improving safety. Too often, the 'right to choose' breaks down into the pursuit of dangerous selfinterest. Like many others, I'm a committed driver. I enjoy it and I wouldn't want to see that enjoyment curtailed. But I'd sooner a sensible, non-Draconian intervention by the state than waking up wired to a machine to be told that my life has been changed irrevocably. Besides, I hate carnations...

Enforcement is seen as too dirty a word by our politicians. To be fair, I don't think that some past deployments have done us any favours. But nor do I think that the majority of people are as averse to it, in

the face of reasoned arguments as to why it is necessary, as some of our leaders seem to think.

I appreciate that political courage and realism have an uncomfortable coexistence. But if we could make the policy and, crucially, the message about enforcement as robust as the technology we could reap safety benefits in an order of magnitude different to what we already achieve.

If nothing else, it might just put paid to the argument that enforcement is but a revenue-earner.

Related Content

  • Vendor's eye view of US economic stimulus programme
    March 12, 2012
    Pete Goldin explores the impact of the US economic stimulus programme on the ITS industry from the ITS vendor perspective
  • Delivering accurate vehicle identification
    August 1, 2012
    In the Netherlands, TNO, the independent research organisation, has been engaged in a project on behalf of the RDW, the Dutch vehicle registration and licensing authority, intended to look at the feasibility of using electronic means to make vehicle identification more accurate and less susceptible to fraud. Electronic Vehicle Identification (EVI) has been in existence in various forms for several years now but TNO was tasked with finding out whether OnBoard Unit (OBU)-based applications could be complement
  • Making the most of Michigan
    January 9, 2018
    Michigan DoT’s Kirk Steudle takes time out from the ITS World Congress in Montreal to talk to Colin Sowman. Thirty years ago, a professional engineer named Kirk Steudle joined Michigan Department of Transportation (MDoT). Today he’s the state transportation director, responsible for more than 16,000km (10,000 miles) of state highways (including 4,000 bridges), some 2,500 employees and a budget of more than $4 billion. We caught up with Steudle during the ITS World Congress in Montreal and asked how he
  • MaaS is at the ‘baby steps’ stage – but needs to get up and running soon
    April 16, 2018
    Data sharing between organisations remains a potential problem for Mobility as a Service projects, attendees at February's MaaS Market conference in London were told. Alan Dron listens in on the presentations.