Kent & Medway Safety Camera Partnership

 

24 February 2025

Phone and seatbelt crackdown catches hundreds

Over 253 car drivers and passengers were detected not wearing seatbelts and nearly 50 drivers were caught using a mobile phone in last week's crackdown by Kent Police and the Kent & Medway Safety Camera Partnership.

The enforcement took place at safety camera sites and around towns across Kent and Medway between 16 and 22 nd February. Drivers spotted on camera using a phone were pulled over by Kent Police Officers who issued Fixed Penalty Notices of a £60 fine and 3 points on driving licences. Not wearing a seatbelt resulted in a £30 fine. Shockingly, 14 of the seatbelt fines were issued to drivers who had unrestrained children in their vehicles.

Besides the obvious consequences of being fined or facing a prison sentence, talking or texting on a phone has been shown to impair a driver's ability to the same extent as if they were above the legal alcohol limit.  

Similarly, despite continued advertising about the dangers of not wearing a seat belt, around 10% of people in vehicles recently surveyed in the county had failed to belt up.   Last year 95 people died in road traffic collisions in Kent and Medway - 18 of them had not been wearing their seatbelts and may have survived if they'd belted up.

District

Seatbelt offences

Mobile phone offences

Total

East Kent

36 - adult
1 - child

9

46

Medway

47 - adult
1 - child

7

30

Mid Kent

23 - adult
0 - child

2

25

North Kent

90 - adult
6 - child

13

109

South Kent

30 - adult
6 - child

12

48

West Kent

13 - adult
0 - child

5

18

Chief Inspector Roscoe Walford, Head of Roads Policing, said "This shows the extent of the problem. There are 4 main factors that contribute to collisions that end with serious consequences - speeding, being distracted while driving (for example talking on the telephone) not wearing a seat belt and drink driving. By enforcing these offences we aim to reduce the number of casualties on our county's roads. Enforcement levels by Kent Police will remain high and motorists are warned that they will be caught if they are using their phone or not wearing their seatbelt."