No, the crossing featured in the Inside Out programme where the lady was killed in fog was at Attleborough in Suffolk and had nothing to do with the accident at Tackley discussed on this forum.
The programme was totally unbalanced, saying 32 seconds was inadequate time before a train arrived and that all level crossings should be closed and replaced with bridges or subways. As was found at Tackley a few years ago before the accident, local people living nearby didn't want either and the crossing remained.
The
BBC» also said more people are killed every year on level crossings that in derailments and crashes. As railways are one the safest means of travel in this country that is hardly surprising but one person every month is killed on a level crossing. That's 12 every year!! Wow, however tragic, it is hardly a massive problem that demands billions of pounds to replace every level crossing. It's a bit like using a sledgehammer to crack a nut.
It's all about weighting the risks against the cost of mitigating that risk. Level crossings are safe if people take care and observe warnings. The tragic accident at Elsenham happened as the two girls ignored the red warning lights (the same warning lights that other people want at their crossing), and locking gates means someone could get trapped on the wrong side of the fence and in a place of danger. Signs ande notices are there fore a reason and that's the jist of the Network Rail Don't Run he Risk campaign.
Whatever next...speed limiters in cars to stop thousands of people killed every year by excess speed!!! Let's get this in some perspective.