Why Vision Zero strategy is set to make county's roads safer
A bike left in tribute to a cyclist killed at The Plain roundabout in Oxford

Why Vision Zero strategy is set to make county's roads safer

A package of initiatives aimed at eliminating deaths and serious injuries on Oxfordshire’s roads by 2050 has been agreed.

Our cabinet has approved the strategy and action plan entitled Oxfordshire – Safe Roads through Vision Zero to 2030.

The document builds on the council’s adoption of Vision Zero in 2022, a concept that originated in Sweden in the 1990s as a road safety approach.

The ambition is to reduce deaths and serious injuries on Oxfordshire’s roads to zero by 2050, with targets of a 25 per cent reduction by 2026 and 50 per cent by 2030.

It also follows a public consultation on the proposed strategy, which received more than 1,300 responses.

Each year, on Oxfordshire’s roads, there are:

  • an estimated 30,000 collisions of all types;
  • approximately 1,250 reported injury collisions; 
  • approximately 30 deaths, 245 serious injuries and nearly 1,250 slight injuries reported.

The Vision Zero programme aims to ensure the highway network is safely designed, implemented and maintained with Vision Zero at the heart of all decision making.

The programme has a £4 million capital budget for measures delivered by 2026, plus £250,000 of revenue funding.

Vision Zero focuses on a whole safe system approach, rooted in the belief that every death reflects a human failure in the system.

This ensures that the programme is not just a technical solution but also encourages a behaviour change and cultural shift towards a more human-based approach to road safety.

This safe system approach encompasses five aspects; safe roads and roadsides; safe vehicles; safe speeds, such as the council’s 20mph programme; safe road users; and the post collision response, from the initial onsite first aid through to the analysis and reviews of road safety incidents.

Better use of road safety collision data will be vital in achieving Vision Zero. The council will look at near miss data to understand the flow of traffic at junctions and review the causes of slight incidents before they become a serious or fatal collision, as well as analysing actual collisions.

The data will be used for identifying collision hot spots, prioritising maintenance at these sites and improving road safety infrastructure for pedestrians and cyclists.

It will also be used to identify road users’ behaviours and other road safety factors that contribute to collision hot spots. Enforcement, education or publicity activity can then be carried out to help reduce the risks.

Floral tributes at The Plain following the death of a cyclist

Since Vision Zero was adopted – prompted by the deaths of two female cyclists in Oxford in the space of a few weeks in early 2022 – work has been carried out at The Plain roundabout in the city aimed at making it safer for vulnerable road users, including cyclists.

Work is also planned at many other sites around the county to tackle problems such as improving road safety at dangerous junctions, cycle safety, turning conflicts and to create safer routes to school.

Peter Haken

Crafting Digital Media Masterpieces | Specialist in NHS Projects | Website Designer, Photographer & Filmmaker Bringing Stories to Life with Creativity and Precision.

8mo

Oxfordshire County Council do you think a cycle path will ever be installed from Eynsham to Botley linking to the cycle path network for those working this side of the city! That road is dangerous with the speeding cars, HGV’s and the massive potholes everywhere!

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Naomi Barnes BEng MCIHT

Principal Engineer - Milestone Infrastructure Oxfordshire

8mo

Excellent news. Proud to be part of this strategy

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Floyd Rowe

Now officially retired

8mo

Hello you Oxfordians. I started a contract in October 2022 with Trading Standards and all was going well. January 17 2023 to be exact after dropping my colleague home in Aston somewhere I hit a pothole. My engine management light came on I checked my car. Did not see any damage to my vehicle and proceeded home with the light on to Lichfield. Early hours couple of days later I woke up to go the bathroom and ended on my face outside my bedroom. I live on my own and so there was no one to assist me. After a few minutes I was able to get up with a struggle. Went back to bed. Woke up later to get ready and to return to work as I had an appointment. On my journey I could not find the indicator nor the foot hand break. Eventually got to my appointment and was having problem writing a statement completed my work abdcreturbed home eventually. After a couple of days I was realising that i was having mobility problems especially on my left side of my body. Anyway eventually I had a MRI scan and I was informed that I had a bleed on the brain. Two nerves were ripped from my brain after a whiplash when I hit the pothole. Two weeks later the bleed hadn't decreased so I had surgery. Woke up with 18 staples in my head.

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