Steve Dyson's Blog
follow journalism_news at http://twitter.com



Alphason TV Stands from Go Electrical

Classic Car Insurance from Footman James

Pub Insurance from Supercover Ltd

Home Lighting from Light My Home

Wireless Headsets from Headsets4Business

Liebherr Wine Coolers from Go Electrical



rss feed
As featured on News Now
HTFP Facebook page
Email
Journalism books
 

Major conference staged by newspaper aims to reduce death toll

A major conference investigating how to cut the toll of death and injury involving young drivers has been staged by the Lancashire Telegraph.

Some 150 people including MPs, business leaders, young people, emergency workers, road safety experts and bereaved families attended the event.

It was organised by the newspaper as part of its Wasted Lives campaign along with the Lancashire Partnership for Road Safety.

The campaign came about after figures revealed that every day across the UK four people are seriously injured or killed in accidents involving drivers aged under 25.

It calls for wide-ranging learner driver reforms for the under-25s as well as sweeping educational initiatives and the event hosted a discussion on these objectives.

The campaign also wants to raise the driving age to 18, include a specified number of hours under a graduated licence scheme, impose heavy restrictions on the under 25s for the carrying of young passengers and also on engine size for learners.

Blackburn MP and Justice Minister Jack Straw pledged to return to the issue with Transport Secretary Ruth Kelly and the Prime Minister.

He pledged there would be "changes to the law".

He added: "I assure you we are going to take action."

The event also saw the premiere of the Missing Matthew DVD, which tells the story of the Hannon family, who lost their 22-year-old son in a crash after he raced a friend along a Blackburn road.

More information, including a full set of campaign aims, can be read at
www.lancashiretelegraph.co.uk.





E-mail this story to a friend. Your name:

Your friend's e-mail:


tradeclips Jobsmake the next move in your journalism career Email bulletinsget latest news and jobs directly to your desktop Freelance indexsee our searchable list for freelance help CVadd your details to our journalism talent pool Dailywho owns it? who's the editor? Weeklysearch our vast database of local titles Your Paperwhat we've written about your newspaper Your Companywhat we've written about your company Blogsbest of the UK journalism blogs Resourcescontacts, web reviews, and terms unravelled Useful Linksour guide to the major industry organisations