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PROFESSIONAL SERVICES


A Road safety spending guidance


issued to local authorities


head of the Treasury’s Comprehensive Spending Review,


leading road safety organisations have issued a joint briefing document to local authority chief executives to help them set spending priorities that will protect their communities.


The Making it Count guidance addresses the difficult spending choices that will have to be made over the coming months. It outlines the role local authorities can play in protecting their residents’ quality and length of life and offers guidance about where to look for additional financial and informative support.


Given the significance of the public spending decisions that lie ahead, the document has been produced by a variety of organisations working together – the Parliamentary Advisory Council for Transport Safety (PACTS), the Royal Society for the Prevention of Accidents (RoSPA), Road Safety Great Britain, the Institute of Road


Safety Officers (IRSO), the Association of Directors of Environment, Economy, Planning and Transport (ADEPT), the GreenSafe Foundation, TRL (Transport Research Laboratory) and Chris Lines Consulting.


The guidance sets out a variety of issues that local authorities should consider when making decisions about scaling-back road safety funding.


Local authorities have legal responsibilities for road safety and they are, in fact, the lead delivery agent of road safety activity. This arrangement has been very successful and is one of the main reasons why Britain has seen such significant reductions in road death and injury. Deaths on the road have fallen from around 5,000 a year at the start of the 1990s to 2,222 in 2009.


However, road death and injury continue to plague communities, and there is the very real danger that spending cuts could result


in the long-term and consistent trend of falling road deaths and injury being reversed, with more rather than fewer people dying on our roads.


Moreover, the argument to improve road safety is not simply ethically, socially and emotionally driven, but is an economically-sound policy that will deliver real cost savings. The total value of prevention of reported road accidents in 2009 has been estimated to be £15.8bn, with a broad illustrative figure taking the value to around £30bn when accidents not reported to the police are included.


The briefing document


concludes that, with every public service calling for protection from budget cuts, it is clear that long-term and sustainable interventions that make a difference need to be prioritised.


Robert Gifford, executive director of the Parliamentary Advisory Council for Transport Safety, said: “The joint


publication of this document shows how important cutting death and injury on our roads is to the quality of life in communities in Great Britain. Reductions such as we have seen do not come by accident. They are the result of planned interventions across a number of years. We need to continue to invest in road safety in times of economic restraint.”


Kevin Clinton, RoSPA’s head of road safety, said: “We know that spending is being cut and that road safety cannot be completely protected from that; every area is fighting its corner. This guidance will help local authority decision-makers understand why road safety funding shouldn’t just be slashed across the board. It recognises that chief executives are having to make some very difficult decisions and balance competing priorities with significantly less money. But it also sets out the reasons why wholesale cuts to road safety do not make economic, human, practical or environmental sense.”


NTA issues ‘free mapping’ tool to prison drug workers T


he National Treatment Agency for Substance Misuse (NTA) has


issued all prisons in England with a tool-kit to help health specialists provide vital talking therapies for inmates seeking to quit drugs.


Node-link mapping was first designed to help students take better notes during lengthy college lectures. Now the NTA has adapted the technique to help drug workers when counselling prisoners and has funded 1,000 kits for issue to prisons in England.


Copies of the kit for use by drug Sep/Oct 10


workers in the community can be downloaded for free at the NTA’s website.


NTA chief executive Paul Hayes said: “The NTA works with partners in drug treatment, health, councils, police, prisons, probation and social services to move people as quickly and safely as possible through treatment to recovery and re-integration in their local community.


“Psychological and social interventions are central to recovery and tools like this are proven and effective in supporting better practice and


improved interventions in drug treatment.”


The prison toolkit is an adaptation of the tried and tested Routes to Recovery mapping tool which is used by clinicians and drug workers in the community. Based on the premise ‘a picture is worth a thousand words’ , the tool offers the prisoner an opportunity to explore issues in their lives in an open, non-confrontational way enabling drug worker and patient to work towards more structured therapy focussing on family, health, offending and to measure change and progress.


There is strong international evidence that when used as part of counselling, the technique increases the effectiveness of drug treatment. Studies on offenders out on probation in the US found patients stayed off opiates and cocaine for longer, missed fewer therapy sessions and felt more positive about their treatment and their relationship with their key worker.


Rebalancing treatment to support drug free outcomes is a key strand of the new government’s revised drug strategy, to be published in December.


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