Currently deployed technology is being used to detect motorists ignoring the ‘red-X’ signs that indicate the lane is closed, as Colin Sowman hears.     
     
With an increasing network of ‘Smart Motorways’ - all-lane running or the opening of hard shoulders during times of congestion - 
     
However, Nick Pinnington, senior ITS engineer with 
     
As part of a wider compliance strategy HE is developing to deliver both safety and congestion benefits the organisation has commissioned Arup and 
     
Pinnington, and Aecom’s technical director David Cowell, described the three-phase framework: 
     
Engineering - such as signage changes to make compliance easier and more intuitive; 
 
Education - to inform drivers of what constitutes compliant behaviour; 
     
Enforcement - to tackle repeat offenders and those who wilfully disobey the law.
     
The   M6 trial used the existing equipment above and beside the carriageways   and processes already available in the existing back-office systems of   the Central Motorway Police Group (CMPG) and Staffordshire Safer Roads   Partnership (SSRP). Offenders were identified using ANPR cameras with   the time and direction cross-referenced with Highways England’s  database  to ensure the hard shoulder was not open as a running lane  when the  offence occurred.
      
CMPG and  SSRP processed the offenders’ information to allow access to the  vehicle registration database and comply with data protection  requirements.  Once verified, SSRP produced a warning letter,  accompanied by an explanatory leaflet, as quickly as possible in order  that the journey was still fresh in the driver’s memory.
     
More  than 30,000 letters were issued to drivers from across the UK during  the seven-month study - although the majority lived in the vicinity of  the study site. The letters contained a link to an online survey which  allowed motorists to post feedback and many of the respondents claimed  not to know the signage meant they could not use that lane. 
     
Cowell  said, “ Before the trial started around 5% of motorists ignored the  red-X signs. This reduced to 4.6% during the trial and has continued to  fall after the trial ended to the current level of 4.4%.”  
     
Following  driver feedback, HE has improved the signage of dynamic hard shoulder  sections, resulting in further improvements in compliance.
     
Most  repeat offences occurred in the two- or three-week period before the  warning letters arrived. No formal enforcement action has been taken  against a handful of serial repeat offenders.  
     
HE  plans to deploy the system in more locations using either mobile or  permanent sites to address both hard shoulder misuse and the growth in  red-X non-compliance. Currently compliance monitoring is being used to  identify which locations would most benefit from such deployments and  according to the presenters the same processes could also be used to  identify close following (tailgating) vehicles.   
     
A  new National Driver Offender Retraining Scheme course focussed on  motorway driving is under consideration. Errant drivers may be offered  the choice of attending this course as an alternative to an endorsement  or a court appearance.  Also under re-evaluation are sections of the  Highway Code and the driving test pertaining to Smart Motorways.
    
        
        
        



