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Driver blind in one eye was fit to drive

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Stuk Flag Top half 01 Jun 15 5.26pm Send a Private Message to Stuk Add Stuk as a friend

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but she went through a red light and killed someone. Who the feck thought one eye was good enough to drive?

 


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CheeseRolls Flag Cheshire 01 Jun 15 5.55pm Send a Private Message to CheeseRolls Add CheeseRolls as a friend

The requirement to legally drive in the UK is 20/20 vision in one eye, with or without the aid of glasses/contact lenses. You are, however, restricted on vehicle class you can drive (buses, hgv's).

The 'one eye' is not the issue here, it is the careless driving.


 

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Stuk Flag Top half 01 Jun 15 7.11pm Send a Private Message to Stuk Add Stuk as a friend

Quote CheeseRolls at 01 Jun 2015 5.55pm

The requirement to legally drive in the UK is 20/20 vision in one eye, with or without the aid of glasses/contact lenses. You are, however, restricted on vehicle class you can drive (buses, hgv's).

The 'one eye' is not the issue here, it is the careless driving.



It's still a huge mitigating factor. Field of view is reduced, as is colour recognition and spacial awareness.

On top of that you're 7 times more likely to have an incident while driving.

 


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55 years a fan Flag 01 Jun 15 7.26pm Send a Private Message to 55 years a fan Add 55 years a fan as a friend

Quote Stuk at 01 Jun 2015 7.11pm

Quote CheeseRolls at 01 Jun 2015 5.55pm

The requirement to legally drive in the UK is 20/20 vision in one eye, with or without the aid of glasses/contact lenses. You are, however, restricted on vehicle class you can drive (buses, hgv's).

The 'one eye' is not the issue here, it is the careless driving.



It's still a huge mitigating factor. Field of view is reduced, as is colour recognition and spacial awareness.

On top of that you're 7 times more likely to have an incident while driving.

And you get that information from where?

My father was born blind in one eye. Never had a fault accident in over 50 years of driving.

Seems a bit unfair,stating anyone with impaired vison is a danger.

As a retired driving instructor have seen loads of so called able bodied drivers who desereved to be called dangerous

 

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jamiemartin721 Flag Reading 01 Jun 15 7.32pm

Quote Stuk at 01 Jun 2015 7.11pm

Quote CheeseRolls at 01 Jun 2015 5.55pm

The requirement to legally drive in the UK is 20/20 vision in one eye, with or without the aid of glasses/contact lenses. You are, however, restricted on vehicle class you can drive (buses, hgv's).

The 'one eye' is not the issue here, it is the careless driving.



It's still a huge mitigating factor. Field of view is reduced, as is colour recognition and spacial awareness.

On top of that you're 7 times more likely to have an incident while driving.

Yeah but no so much that you'd somehow stop noticing traffic signals surely and pedestrians. Even drunk people seem to generally be able to do that.


 


"One Nation Under God, has turned into One Nation Under the Influence of One Drug"
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derben Flag 01 Jun 15 7.34pm

According to my mate Aldous, they drive with no eyes in Gaza.

 

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TUX Flag redhill 01 Jun 15 7.40pm Send a Private Message to TUX Add TUX as a friend

Quote Stuk at 01 Jun 2015 5.26pm

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but she went through a red light and killed someone. Who the feck thought one eye was good enough to drive?

Maybe the issue is being 'colour blind'?


 

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Stuk Flag Top half 01 Jun 15 7.58pm Send a Private Message to Stuk Add Stuk as a friend

Quote 55 years a fan at 01 Jun 2015 7.26pm

Quote Stuk at 01 Jun 2015 7.11pm

Quote CheeseRolls at 01 Jun 2015 5.55pm

The requirement to legally drive in the UK is 20/20 vision in one eye, with or without the aid of glasses/contact lenses. You are, however, restricted on vehicle class you can drive (buses, hgv's).

The 'one eye' is not the issue here, it is the careless driving.



It's still a huge mitigating factor. Field of view is reduced, as is colour recognition and spacial awareness.

On top of that you're 7 times more likely to have an incident while driving.

And you get that information from where?

My father was born blind in one eye. Never had a fault accident in over 50 years of driving.

Seems a bit unfair,stating anyone with impaired vison is a danger.

As a retired driving instructor have seen loads of so called able bodied drivers who desereved to be called dangerous

It's everywhere. Try closing one eye and see if it feels the same to you. It would be less of a factor if you never had that vision in the first place admittedly.

I'm not saying there aren't plenty of idiots driving with good vision, but poor vision is a significant disadvantage to start with.

 


Optimistic as ever

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Stuk Flag Top half 01 Jun 15 8.01pm Send a Private Message to Stuk Add Stuk as a friend

Quote jamiemartin721 at 01 Jun 2015 7.32pm

Quote Stuk at 01 Jun 2015 7.11pm

Quote CheeseRolls at 01 Jun 2015 5.55pm

The requirement to legally drive in the UK is 20/20 vision in one eye, with or without the aid of glasses/contact lenses. You are, however, restricted on vehicle class you can drive (buses, hgv's).

The 'one eye' is not the issue here, it is the careless driving.



It's still a huge mitigating factor. Field of view is reduced, as is colour recognition and spacial awareness.

On top of that you're 7 times more likely to have an incident while driving.

Yeah but no so much that you'd somehow stop noticing traffic signals surely and pedestrians. Even drunk people seem to generally be able to do that.



She said she noticed the light, but thought it was green. Nothing about whether she even noticed the bloke she hit.

Red/Green colour blind would surely be an instant ban on driving? Funny that those are the lights when it is a fairly common colour blindness.

 


Optimistic as ever

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jamiemartin721 Flag Reading 02 Jun 15 9.21am

Quote Stuk at 01 Jun 2015 8.01pm

Quote jamiemartin721 at 01 Jun 2015 7.32pm

Quote Stuk at 01 Jun 2015 7.11pm

Quote CheeseRolls at 01 Jun 2015 5.55pm

The requirement to legally drive in the UK is 20/20 vision in one eye, with or without the aid of glasses/contact lenses. You are, however, restricted on vehicle class you can drive (buses, hgv's).

The 'one eye' is not the issue here, it is the careless driving.



It's still a huge mitigating factor. Field of view is reduced, as is colour recognition and spacial awareness.

On top of that you're 7 times more likely to have an incident while driving.

Yeah but no so much that you'd somehow stop noticing traffic signals surely and pedestrians. Even drunk people seem to generally be able to do that.



She said she noticed the light, but thought it was green. Nothing about whether she even noticed the bloke she hit.

Red/Green colour blind would surely be an instant ban on driving? Funny that those are the lights when it is a fairly common colour blindness.

I'd imagine that most people would look at the position of the light, rather than the colour if they were colour blind.

Most accidents occur due to cognitive dysfunction where in the person 'misreads' or otherwise confused by factors outside of their immediate perception.

Everyone's made mistakes like that, not noticing a light was red until they've gone through it, or had to slam on the breaks; not noticed a car slowing down.

Whilst having one eye is a disadvantage, if it was the primary cause of the accident, then the driver wouldn't have been guilty of the crime (it would be a defense of mitigation). of course there is an argument that people who suffer a visual imparement should take a specialized driving course and test.


 


"One Nation Under God, has turned into One Nation Under the Influence of One Drug"
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npn Flag Crowborough 02 Jun 15 10.18am Send a Private Message to npn Add npn as a friend

I have limited vision in one eye - I honestly don't think it affects my driving

 

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Hoof Hearted 02 Jun 15 10.45am

Quote Stuk at 01 Jun 2015 5.26pm

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but she went through a red light and killed someone. Who the feck thought one eye was good enough to drive?


Probably the same people who voted for Gordon Brown?

"In the Kingdom of the blind, the one eyed man is King!"

 

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