Monday 14 Mar 2005
NO MESSIN’ ON OUR RAILWAYS SAYS NETWORK RAIL
- Region & Route:
To mark the start of its ‘No Messin’ national, railway safety campaign today (14 March) Network Rail has revealed the top 10 worst areas for railway vandalism and trespass in the East Midlands region. More than 517 incidents have been recorded in the last 12 months in the region. Leicestershire topped the list with Wigston where there have been 31 incidents and Hinckley had 16. Narborough shares tenth place with Trent South in Derbyshire where 13 incidents occurred. But Long Eaton and Peartree are the worst areas in Derbyshire, each having 18 incidents. In Nottinghamshire, Mansfield is the worst area with 21 incidents, followed by Radford with 16. And in Lincolnshire, Grimsby has the worst record with 17 incidents, followed by Lincoln with 16 and Cleethorpes 14. Dyan Crowther, Network Rail’s route director, said: “Last year in the UK, 34 people died on railway tracks – that’s 34 too many. Each one represents a tragic story of ignoring all the warnings that the railway is not a place to hang around, use as a short-cut or to play on. The school holidays, especially Easter and summer, are a time when such incidents are likely to rise and we need to hammer home the railway safety message in an effort to prevent further tragedies.” There are an estimated 27 million cases of trespass on Britain’s railways every year, including 640,000 objects placed on the tracks and four million objects thrown at trains. As young people commit many of these crimes, Network Rail has developed the ‘No Messin’ safety campaign, stylised to fit today’s popular culture and aimed at those aged between ten and 16 years-old. Dyan Crowther continued: “As the infrastructure owner, we have a responsibility to spread the message that the railway can be a dangerous place. You wouldn’t try to use a motorway as a short cut or a place to hang out – so why the railway? Our message is clear: No Messin’.” Based on the premise that many young people are tempted to play on tracks because they are bored and have nothing else to do with their time, the ‘No Messin’ campaign, which includes a number of events and a website (launched later today) aims to provide a diversion from unsafe activities, rather than trying to change behaviour through shock tactics. Over the coming months, the campaign will be rolled out, nationwide, at lots of different events and in particular focused in hotspot areas where railway crime is highest. A number of competitions will also be run on the website.
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We own, operate and develop Britain's railway infrastructure; that's 20,000 miles of track, 30,000 bridges, tunnels and viaducts and the thousands of signals, level crossings and stations. We run 20 of the UK's largest stations while all the others, over 2,500, are run by the country's train operating companies.
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