Removing White Lines From Roads Is A Dumb Idea That's Actually Happening In Britain

Research shows that removing the central white line from roads "introduces uncertainty" and reduces driver speeds, completely ignoring the fact that there's more to cars being dangerous than speed
Removing White Lines From Roads Is A Dumb Idea That's Actually Happening In Britain

Believe it or not, it turns out British highway chiefs have been removing white lines from busy roads in order to slow motorists down. According to research, removing the central white lines reduces driver speed and makes people drive more cautiously, and therefore councils across the country are considering implementing similar schemes.

I don’t even know where to begin with how stupid this idea is. First of all, it seems to work on the assumption that the only reason cars ever crash is because people are speeding. That might be the view of the anti-car brigade, but it’s simply not true. Yes, speeding can exacerbate damage in the event of a crash, or increase the risk of an accident occurring, but there’s a time and a place to go fast and simply targeting a blanket reduction in speed won’t fix anything without education.

By removing the central white line, research shows that drivers are more cautious because it introduces an element of uncertainty over their road positions. According to Transport for London, which experimented with removing the white lines on three major roads, speed was reduced by an average of 13 per cent. Great, but what about the risk of head-on collisions?

A section of unmarked road in London
A section of unmarked road in London

Coincidentally, I used to live in Haringey, so I know Seven Sisters Road - one of the trial roads - very well, and I can tell you that I can’t imagine how intimidating it must be not having any dividing markers. On larger sections of road, cars are kept separate, but on the two lane sections where the central lines were removed (see above) you have a lot of traffic, bus lanes either side, and people constantly walking back and forth across the road since it’s in a large residential area. That’s a lot of things to concentrate on without having to constantly worry about a head-on collision. Remember, the average driver isn’t like us, and isn’t necessarily the most confident or capable behind the wheel.

And anyway, introducing ‘uncertainty’ to a driver can’t be a solution to a problem. If you think about the number of things you have to concentrate on while driving and the number of things you have to be looking for in the distance, having a driver constantly scanning the centre of the road to check they’re not wandering too much is just adding an extra distraction.

It’s not often you’ll see me agree with something from the road safety charity Brake - it’s a noble cause but tends to be a little too black and white about what’s dangerous - but campaigns director Gary Rae sums up the problem pretty well. He said “While crashes at lower speeds can mean fewer deaths and serious injuries this data only seems to look at a possible reduction in average speed and not the number and nature of any collisions.”

Removing White Lines From Roads Is A Dumb Idea That's Actually Happening In Britain

Simply put, the research data only looks at marking removals’ effect on speed, and not its effect on crashes. I don’t see how this can do anything other than increase crash risk. White lines give us an easy-to-understand marker that helps us subconsciously place our car on the road while our conscious mind focuses on our surroundings.

One of my favourite quotes from this story comes from David Davies, the executive director of a parliamentary advisory group on road safety called PACTS, who said this process was most effective when lines were simply not repainted on newly resurfaced roads. He said: “A brand new surface can encourage drivers to go faster, but a lack of markings could counter that, reducing speed, say, from 35 to 28mph and that could make a significant difference.”

What exactly is this based on? Claiming people drive faster on newer roads is completely anecdotal, as he offers no research to back up the claim. He then plucks two random speeds from the air, and qualifies it all with a ‘could make a difference’. What he’s basically saying is ‘I have absolutely no idea if this will make a difference, but speeding is always bad so these measures are good.’ And this guy advises the government…

Some people like to make their own road markings
Some people like to make their own road markings

Aside from the fact that this surely makes roads inherently more dangerous, there is a technology argument against this, too. Many modern cars incorporate safety features that read the road and alert drivers to dangers, which would become ineffectual without reference points. Furthermore, as driverless cars become more prominent, removing the road markings that these vehicles rely on could cause serious problems.

It’ll be interesting to see how extensively this is taken up by local councils. For the moment, it appears to be happening in largely rural locations such as Norfolk, where speeds tend to be lower anyway. TfL has said there are no plans to actively remove lines in London, but seems pleased with how its previous tests went. I would be happy to hold my hands up and say I’m wrong if plenty of research shows that the risk of crashes decreases, but I feel like removing lines is a risky solution to fears over speeding. In my opinion you’re reducing one problem by creating another…

Sources: The Guardian and The Telegraph

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Comments

Anonymous

What next, remove traffic lights?

02/04/2016 - 01:04 |
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LBanks27

We have had no road markings for a few years here in new Zealand, its not that bad, you are all making it sound like the end of the world and there only on straight or old roads.

02/04/2016 - 01:07 |
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auSTIn

I grew up on the back roads of Kentucky. The only roads with lines wer the main ones it didn’t slow me down

02/04/2016 - 01:15 |
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Anonymous

In reply to by auSTIn

The back roads of Kentucky won’t see quite the volume of traffic as the congested towns, cities and villages of the UK. Most of which where built hundreds of years before cars, and therefor struggle to cope with the sheer number of cars we have these days.
The UK is a horrendous place to drive. Congestion, road works, traffic jams, and totally inept drivers everywhere. What I’d give to live in the US with miles of open road :D

02/04/2016 - 02:06 |
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Ricardo Mercio

We might as well replace cars’ airbags with dynamite and make all manufacturers use drum brakes with no ABS just to be sure that those drivers are more careful.

02/04/2016 - 02:02 |
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Anonymous

Hehehe..this will work for about a week. We have had unmarked roads in Kenya for a while, you adjust to it so fast.

02/04/2016 - 02:30 |
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Ethan H

Is this similar to back roads in America where there’s no markings? Or is that not even a fair comparison

02/04/2016 - 02:45 |
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James Leeder

I have an idea to reduce crashes, lets remove headlights from cars! Drivers will slow down at night because they can’t see, it’s proven that blind people drive more slowly than sighted people.

You know what, while we’re at it, let’s remove street lights too, they give drivers too much confidence.

02/04/2016 - 02:45 |
8 | 0

Brakes too

02/04/2016 - 10:55 |
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Anonymous

Busy road=a lot of traffic=traffic jam=slow
Removing white lines=make people go even slower=make traffic jam even worse=make people give up on driving=killing protenial petrol heads

02/04/2016 - 02:56 |
4 | 0
carburetor55

RIP Everyone in Britain

02/04/2016 - 05:07 |
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Anonymous

It’s not about speeding, it’s about people paying attention.

Here’s a link to a book that goes in depth on research and results. Of course, politicians will make the laws only half way, as the advocation is pretty much to remove speed limits as well.

Like I say though, it’s in depth and I’m not going to try and paraphrase:

http://www.amazon.com/Traffic-Drive-What-Says-About/dp/0307277194/ref=sr_1_19?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1454558445&sr=1-19&keywords=road+safety

02/04/2016 - 05:47 |
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