Skip to main content

Asecap supports #(S)heWorks #ICare highway safety initiative

European Awareness Day on 20 June is designed to make road users focus on road workers
By Adam Hill June 16, 2023 Read time: 2 mins
Workers: let's help keep them safe (© Vladans | Dreamstime.com)

Asecap is supporting an initiative designed to bring road workers and road users closer together, helping the latter to understand their key role in keeping the former safe.

The European toll operators trade association says the #(S)heWorks #ICare campaign, which has been run in several countries, will help to improve safety.

At the Salzburg 2023 Asecap Road Safety Days, it was agreed that, "among other things, getting to know one another better is essential to enhancing mutual respect".

There will be a European Awareness Day on 20 June, 2023 to emphasise the issue.

"There is a significant increase in accidents involving motorway maintenance workers who are vulnerable people," Asecap says.

"These accidents mainly concern motorway patrollers - but also all other persons working on motorways for the safety of all (police, firemen, emergency services, towing companies)."

Often they occur in the middle of the day, on sections with good visibility, while signalling equipment is active and clearly visible - such as rotating lights, luminous arrows on the roof of the vans, cones and so on, Asecap says.

Drowsiness or distracted driving - perhaps through use of smartphones, navigation apps or in-vehicle entertainment systems - is at the root of many injuries and fatalities.

There needs to be a "mobilisation of all actors for a change in behavior and awareness of the danger caused using screens".

"Ensuring the safety of patrollers through prevention and enhancing the bond between them and drivers – among whom professional drivers play a key role - is the red wire of the awareness campaign," Asecap concludes. 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Bogotá’s affordable path to safer roads
    April 28, 2022
    Enforcing speed limits on key corridors is a cost-effective way of reducing collisions in the Colombian capital, say the authors of a new study. Andrew Stone talks to them
  • Changing driving conditions need ongoing driver training
    January 23, 2012
    Trevor Ellis, chairman of the ITS UK Enforcement Interest Group, considers the role of ongoing driver training in increasing compliance. It is over 30 years since I passed my driving test. The world was quite a different place then, in that there were only half the vehicles there are now on the UK's roads, mobile phones did not really exist and (in the UK at least) the vast majority of us drove cars which by today's standards exhibited dreadful dynamic stability and were woefully underpowered.
  • UK ‘pauses’ smart motorway roll-out
    January 12, 2022
    All-lane running motorway schemes to be halted until five years' safety data is available
  • Europe’s road safety record suffers as austerity bites hard, traffic police chiefs are told at TISPOL 2017
    March 7, 2018
    Europe’s leading traffic police chiefs are struggling with the challenge of how best to manage the region’s road network in an era of austerity. Things are changing fast, and not for the better, reports Geoff Hadwick. Europe’s road safety record is under threat. Police budgets are being slashed, staff numbers are falling and a long-term trend towards ever-fewer road deaths has ground to a halt. The line on the graph has flat-lined. Does Europe’s road network face a far more dangerous future? Lower and