Well here's some statistics for you not from the Sun
I used to be quite behind speed cameras until I started looking into it in a bit more detail and found out some surprising stuff
The Government's "It's 30 for a reason" campaign was based on data from 1979 - over 30 years old!
http://www.roadsafetygb.org.uk/news/1191.html
In fact if you go and look at the most recent data the probability of killing someone in an accident at 40 is now roughly what it was at 30 in 1979
Interesting point 2
In 2009 Swindon shut off all their speed cameras and put big hoods over them saying "Not in use"
The 2010 statistics are now available
http://www.wiltshire....alty-joint-report.pdf
Guess what accident figures have continued to decline at the same rate as they had before.
But the thing that's particularly interesting in the above report is the breakdown on what such an accident costs the council
Here we're peeking behind the curtain - the motivation to reduce accidents is driven by that to reduce costs.
The idea is that by using speed cameras you'll achieve that
That logic doesn't seem to hold water in the Sun's report - or in the Swindon experience.
I will need to find the actual report the Sun's story - you need to find the actual numbers but accident rates have been declining so if 20mph areas were working you'd at least expect to see them stay static.
These sort of things can be very counter intuitive for example it may well be that the 20mph areas are giving people a false sense of security on the roads which is leading to more accidents.
I think someone needs to take a long hard look at road safety policy based on the actual up to date numbers (rather than on what people think is "obvious") and make some changes.
It's also worth bearing in mind that the UK has just about the best road safety record on the whole planet