I am sure that the theory of 'smart motorways' sounded wonderful - some MOT wonk will have produced acres of stats showing how the congestion would be alleviated overnight.
Next there would be a computer simulation showing virtual cars gliding into breakdown areas as simultaneously cameras alerted the emergency services and a patrol was en route within fifteen seconds of the breakdown occurring.
Then of course the small but vital factor that all the suits signing up to this wonderful idea wouldn't have to experience driving on the new 'smart'motorways, just the plebs up north - well north of the M25, and that's out of sight out of mind.
So they build them, and hey presto, real life is a million miles away from the simulation, the safety bays are too far apart, the cameras don't work, and people start dying, and will continue to die until someone admits that they got it wrong, and puts things back to where they were.
Is less congestion really a price worth paying in terms of lives?
My junction is 15 on the M6 - 'smart' motorways in both directions, and my heart is in my mouth every time I have to drive on the ludicrous things.
Hopefully common sense will prevail eventually. The fact that the boss of the AA will not allow his patrols to attend to breakdowns on smart motorways, he insists they are towed to a safe area before his people will look at them - does that not send a serious message to the suits in transport?
I appreciate that suits don't think things through, they are seduced by the abstract notions they are fed, but when abstract notions become reality and the reality is death traps, someone needs to stand up and start admitting mistakes, and correcting them.
Now.
Today.