Using specially adapted, unmarked HGV cabs, officers will patrol
the M25 and record drivers of all types of vehicles committing
mobile phone or other safety offences that are the leading cause
of many accidents.
The fortnight of action, called Operation Orbital, runs from
Monday 16 March to Friday 27 March. A similar safety week on the
M1 in 2019 led to the number of collisions falling by almost a
third.
Colin Evans, Regional road safety officer, for Highways England
in the South East, said:
The busiest sections of the M25 are used for nearly 200,000
journeys every day, ranging from commuters getting to work to
haulage firms delivering goods along the route or overseas.
We know that the vast majority of drivers obey the law but a
few are risking potentially devastating consequences by driving
dangerously.
Over these two weeks of action, enforcement agencies will be
carrying out a coordinated series of checks all around the M25
to help improve safety for everyone.
As well as driving offenses, officers will also check on vans and
lorries for road worthiness, secure loads, weight and drivers’
hours to reduce the risk of incidents along the route. In
December 2018 alone, there were over 400 collisions along the 117
mile route, often leading to congestion and delays for drivers,
and affecting companies travelling to ports, airports and making
deliveries to towns and cities by the motorway.
National Police Chiefs’ Council Lead for Roads Policing Chief
Constable Anthony Bangham said:
I welcome initiatives to reduce the number of people killed or
injured on our roads. We have seen similar successful
collaborations between the police and Highways England in the
past and I am pleased to see us working together again.
We want all of those using our roads to do so safely and we
will prosecute drivers who put themselves and others at risk by
breaking the law.
Operation Orbital is being co-ordinated by Highways England and
involves police forces from the Metropolitan Police,
Hertfordshire, Essex, Kent, Surrey and Thames Valley Police.
The HGV supercab, which is funded by Highways England, plus three
more HGV tractor units will be used on the M25 by police forces
across the South East during the two week initiative. The HGV
cabs allow police officers to film evidence of unsafe driving
behaviour by driving alongside vehicles, and drivers are then
pulled over by police cars following a short distance behind.
The cab has a derestricted speed limiter, which means it can
travel at speeds up to the national speed limit.
As well at the police enforcement activity, Highways England’s
traffic officers will be providing free tyre checks and safety
tips to drivers at motorway services around the M25. The activity
starts today and runs until Friday 27 March.