Story in every suv'ners (& meedlanda's) favourite free commuter paper today - following on from the one about the crappy laser guns, in spirit.
Makes your blood f***ing boil does it not? What about the stuff such as "the golden hour" of A&E transport/treatment we often get drummed into our heads? Will fire engines and police vehicles themselves soon be subject to the same scrutiny, having to carefully check their speed to the posted limit, regardless of the time of day, traffic conditions, or even if they end up holding up all the other traffic which overtakes and speeds past at the earliest opportunity?(paraphrased from memory)
An ambulance driver is taking his case to court after refusing to pay a speeding fine - that he got whilst on the job. Snapped doing 52mph through a 40mph set of roadworks on the M25 at 2.20am on (insert recent date here), whilst taking a seriously ill patient to hospital, he doesn't see why he should be taking the rap for protecting the health of a member of the public, by getting him more quickly and safely to hospital than he otherwise might, i.e. doing the job he has been recruited and is being paid for. The patient in question was paralysed with a broken neck after a car accident (discharged, but needing to be urgently brought in for other reasons) and was at very high risk of cardiac arrest during the journey, so it was in his best interest to reach comprehensive medical care as soon as possible.
A spokesman on behalf of the uptight nonses in the police's "safety" scamera partnership defended their position, saying in their judgement there was no good reason for the driver to have been exceeding the limit.
The guy would only have been in greater need of fast transit had he just been involved in an actual accident or already been arresting when the crew arrived on the scene. Way to go chaps. Great increase of public safety you're promoting there.
Dya think if they get enough outraged letters of protest at this obvious mockery of justice and morals that they'll drop the case? If a judge goes in the camfilth's favour I think it would be fair to launch a small investigation to make sure he's not in anyone's pocket...
Seems like they've forced the "speed kills" lie on us so many times, that they're even starting to believe it themselves. Speed doesn't kill. Inappropriate use of speed does. Appropriate use of speed, such as in this case may well have prevented death.
(and it could be argued the driver was acting quite conservatively, after all yer average ambulance is not exactly the slowest transit that ford ever made, 70 should not be a problem to one - 52 was probably, in his judgement, the best balance of swift progress vs general safety... and comfort for the passenger in the back over the bumps!)