#ProjectEDWARD social media campaign starts Sunday 1 September
Download everything you need right here
The
#ProjectEDWARD social media library and schedule has been launched to
increase support for this year’s European Day Without A Road Death. The
library includes a recommended timetable of social media activity, with
themes and images for each day in September leading up to Project EDWARD
Day on Thursday 26.
Any
supporting organisations and individuals are invited to access the
library and download the resources in good time for the launch of the
social media campaign on Sunday 1 September.
You
can download the social media schedule, images and other #ProjectEDWARD
artwork right now from the resources page of the Project Edward website.
Please share and send your #ProjectEDWARD photographs
We
are happy to share a few recent #ProjectEDWARD pictures as we approach
the intensive stage of the 2019 initiative and EDWARD day itself on
Thursday 26 September:
PC
Mark Keane and Sgt Lucy Bassett from Dyfed-Powys Neighbourhood Policing
Team in Brecon. They will be coordinating Community Speedwatch
activities throughout September.
The
team from UKROEd, the UK organisation responsible for the management
and administration of the NDORS Scheme on behalf of the Road Safety
Trust.
Police officers
in the far north of Norway with the EDWARD sign. The sign has now been
taken to the island of Svalbard in the Arctic Ocean, which is the
northernmost point of Europe - barely more than 1000km from the Arctic
Circle!
Send your EDWARD picture to us here and we will do our best to share as many as we can on social media and the website!
Global Light of Hope award to former TISPOL General Secretary for Project EDWARD
We're
very pleased to report that our former General Secretary Ruth Purdie
has received a Global Light of Hope award from the Irish Road Victims
Association. The award was made for her work as "a leading advocate for
road safety through her great work as General Secretary in TISPOL (2014 -
2018) and in particular with TISPOL’s Project EDWARD, the European Day
Without a Road Death."
This
is something which bereaved families, the Gardai, the Road Safety
Authority and the Health & Safety Authority very actively support in
September every year here in Ireland.
Donna Price of the
IRVA said: "Project EDWARD has made a significant contribution to
raising public awareness for road safety and road victims throughout
Europe, and in so doing has no doubt helped to save lives and prevent
serious injury.
"We
were therefore very pleased to present this very well-deserved award to
Ruth Purdie and her team in TISPOL for all of their efforts in
promoting Project EDWARD."
Updates from across Europe...
Latest road fatality data from Eurostat
Bulgaria
has the European Union’s highest rate of fatal road accidents, with 64
deaths per million inhabitants, almost six times the lowest rate, that
of Malta (11 deaths per million inhabitants).
However,
Bulgaria along with Estonia has the EU’s lowest rate of deaths amongst
motorcyclists. No motorcyclists were killed in either country in 2016
or 2017, the years covered by the Eurostat figures.
Romania
has the highest rate of deaths among pedestrians in road traffic
collisions (37 deaths per million
inhabitants) as well as the highest number of cyclists killed in road
collisions as a proportion of the population (10 deaths per million
inhabitants).
Greece is first for motorcycle fatalities in European Union
Official
European crash data released recently by Eurostat shows that Greece
sadly stands in first place when it comes to the rate of people killed
while riding motorcycles.
Among
all the 28 nations of the EU, Greece ranked first in 2017, with 20.1
fatalities for every million residents, to be followed only by the
island of Malta, which recorded 20 deaths per million residents.
The third place was occupied by Italy and the fourth by Slovenia.
The data show that EU’s southern
states face a much bigger problem when it comes to road safety for
motorcyclists. This, said a spokesperson, was most likely due to the
fact that motorcyclists were much greater in number compared to northern
nations, due to the good weather conditions which prevail in the south.
Slovenia: police record more than 3,000 violations during TISPOL speed week
Police
detected more than 3,000 speed limit violations last week as part of
the TISPOL Europe-wide speed enforcement operation. Most violations
occurred in villages and towns, according to the General Police
Administration. Between 12 and 18 August police officers recorded 3,048
speed limit violations and gave out 207 warnings as well. A majority of
those violations (almost 2,500) took place in urban areas, while some
330 occurred outside villages or towns and some 220 on highways and
expressways.
Denmark:cycle helmet campaign targets older riders
A road
safety campaign in Denmark is urging older cyclists to wear helmets and
ride bikes that are easier to climb on and dismount. Launched by road
safety agency Rådet for Sikker Trafik and TrygFonden, the campaign
points out that half of Denmark’s cyclist fatalities involve people aged
over 65.
Some
37 per cent of survey respondents aged 65 and above said that losing
balance while trying to get on or off a bike was the most common cause
of their sustaining a cycling-related injury.
Germany: slight reduction in road fatalities for first half of 2019
Fewer
people died on German roads in the first half of 2019, despite a slight
increase in the number of traffic collisions, according to provisional
figures from the Federal Statistical Office (Destatis) published last
week.
During
the first six months of the year, the number of people killed on German
roads fell by 40 to 1,465, a decrease of 2.7 percent compared to the
previous year, the statistical office stated.
Meanwhile,
the total number of accidents increased slightly by 0.4 percent to
almost 1.3 million in Germany in the first half of
2019, according to the figures.
UK: Welsh officers welcome Finnish colleagues for four-day study tour
Members
of the Dyfed-Powys Roads Policing Unit will be welcoming colleagues
from Finland this week. The Finns, who organised a winter driving skills
course for Sgt Owen Dillon and three colleagues from Dyfed-Powys
earlier this year, will be based at Dyfed-Powys headquarters in
Carmarthen and will spend time examining advanced pursuit driving and
management techniques. Their team will consist of Chief Instructor Jukka
Isotalo, deputy Harri Niinioja and two additional instructors, Ari
Korhonen and Mika Toukula.
The picture shows Harri Niinioja (centre front) with British officers (left to right) PC Mark Jones, Sgt Owen Dillon, PC
Julian Clegg and PC Rob Griffiths.
|
Δεν υπάρχουν σχόλια:
Δημοσίευση σχολίου