Today was the first sunny day we have had in ages and I was out driving a fair bit and it got me thinking what bollocks this "blinded by the sun" plea is. A few times I anticipated the sun coming at me from the "wrong" angle and tried to see how hard it is not to "see" objects that had the sun directly behind them (pedestrians, trees, lamp posts etc) and unless you genuinely weren't looking you would definitely see them. Frankly it's a crock of shit.
The law should not view it as an excuse.
Surely if a driver is blinded by the sun to the extent that they can no longer see the road ahead with enough clarity to drive safely then they should pull over and stop at the first opportunity?
I'm not trying to be holier-than-though. Whatever I do day to day isn't the point - we all take risks and sometimes (often) those risks are unacceptable. That's a choice we make and have to live by. But if you cause/are involved in an accident whilst you're driving in shit visibility when you could have pulled over then you only have yourself to blame. Sure, on the one hand it's just "something unfortunate" but the reality is you should have stopped.
Though without time or inclination to go do a whole load of research, is it the case that we are linking to 3 or 4 cases where the driver gets a fine or what ever, and out there, there are another 96 cases where the driver when down properly, but you don't really hear about it, cause its not news worthy.
(more prosecutions for the "i didnt see you" possee and higher levels of compensation for RTAs).
Not just the drivers that need educating, but the police as well.