I'm just intrigued in to how many people have died from a bridge strike that 
showed just imperial measures.
If you think about it it's probably difficult to die in such circumstances. The 
driver is down in the cab and a pedestrian would have to be between the top of 
the vehicle and the bottom of the bridge at exactly the time of the strike.
I can dream up a TV/film style disaster - say a truck hits a bridge and a train 
goes along the top of it seconds after the strike causing the train to come off 
the tracks and tear down the embankment - although that's fairly dramatic - I 
just can't see simple fatalities in such circumstances. Just damage and 
insurance claims.


From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]; [email protected]
Subject: RE: [USMA:47820] RE: The Chunnel
Date: Wed, 16 Jun 2010 21:50:25 +0100
























Bridge strikes are a known problem and the
number of fatalities that they cause is documented on the Department for
Transport website.  In the cost benefit section of the consultation, it was
estimated that one life would be saved every second year if all height, width 
and
length restriction signs were both imperial and metric.

 









From:
[email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Stephen 
Humphreys

Sent: 16 June 2010 14:45

To: U.S. Metric Association

Subject: [USMA:47820] RE: The
Chunnel



 

Did someone die, Martin?

 







From: [email protected]

To: [email protected]

Subject: [USMA:47814] RE: The Chunnel

Date: Wed, 16 Jun 2010 06:30:13 +0100



There has been one pressure – the
proportion of foreign lorries on our roads has increased considerably and
shortly before the last election, the Government set out for discussion
proposed legislation that would have made it made it mandatory for height, width
and length warning and restriction signs to be in dual units.  We need to
see whether the current government will actually pass this piece of
legislation, or if we need the death of another motorist and a criticism from
the coroner before the minister wakes up.

 









From:
[email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Paul 
Trusten

Sent: 16 June 2010 05:58

To: U.S. Metric Association

Subject: [USMA:47813] The Chunnel



 



I posted the following comment on UKMA's Metric Views blog:





 





As I pondered the latest metric news from
the UK
and the government's statements about imperialization, I wondered: what about
the Chunnel?





 





In one sense, Great Britain is no longer an
island.  There is a ground connection between it and continental Europe.  Since 
the opening of that remarkable tunnel
across the channel,  hasn't there been increased pressure on the UK to
complete highway metrication, that pressure being in the form of a flow of
motorists and other transport from Spain, France, Germany, et al.? 





 







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