At last - people are standing up and criticising one of (what I feel is) the most dangerous developments on Britain's road networks since the advent of the motor car.
They started off trialling the system on the M42 east side of Birmingham between the M6 interchange and the M40 interchange, basically past Birmingham Airport and Solihull, quite a few years back. The hard shoulder was converted as a running lane, but unlike the most recent schemes, the running lane was part-time and only used when conditions warranted it - and the refuge lay-bys were installed roughly every half mile. I drove it on many occasions and it wasn't easy, but that was mainly due to the variable speed limits also imposed, often quite randomly.
But once they started extending the scheme to the M6 through Birmingham where (because it's often on a viaduct) there was limited scope for lay-bys - and the ex-hard shoulder running lane was full-time - I really didn't like the thought of driving along it, and quite honestly got to prefer paying to use the M6 Toll road as an alternative.
There have been 38 deaths on smart motorways in 5 years, and there's some horrendous footage around of near misses with vehicles broken down on the inside lane. I find it hard to believe that in the overly H&S-conscious country we have become, eejits in the Highways Agency have happily sanctioned these schemes.
Anyone driven them, around the M25, for example? What's your view of them?