Molly Mills

PFD Report All Responded Ref: 2018-0051
Date of Report 21 February 2018
Coroner Heidi Connor
Coroner Area Nottinghamshire
Response Deadline ✓ from report 18 April 2018
All 1 response received · Deadline: 18 Apr 2018
Sent To
  • Nottingham County Council
Response Status
Responses 1 of 1
56-Day Deadline 18 Apr 2018
All responses received
About PFD responses

Organisations named in PFD reports must respond within 56 days explaining what actions they are taking.

Source: Courts and Tribunals Judiciary

Coroner’s Concerns
The key areas of concern are :

1. There is a significant incline on this road (in the direction the lorry was travelling). This makes the visibility issues referred to below much more significant.
2. If there are vehicles in the central carriageway waiting to turn right into both the DNRC and Home Farm, as here, there is a risk of them having an inadequate view of oncoming traffic on the A6006, before making their turning manouevres.
3. This is the case in both directions, but particularly for vehicles travelling in the direction towards Rempstone, because of the incline of the road.
4. The evidence of the lorry driver was that he did not see Jean’s car until she turned in front of his vehicle.
5. The evidence of the Forensic Collision Investigation Unit officer was that Jean’s view would have been largely or completely blocked by vehicles waiting to turn right into DNRC until 2.93 seconds before impact.
6. Witness evidence suggested that the right turn into DNRC is often backed up, resulting in queues in this central lane, making visibility worse. It was suggested this may be partly because of a security barrier in the DNRC grounds, which causes traffic to back up. This is likely to remain a busy junction when the DNRC opens.
7. If the oncoming vehicle (coming up the incline towards Rempstone) was a standard vehicle, rather than a lorry, visibility would be even worse, given that the cab of a lorry is higher up.
8. Similarly, if the vehicles waiting to turn right (into Home Farm and DNRC) were lorries or other large vehicles, such as ambulances, then visibility concerns would be heightened further.
9. There is an element of uncertainty at the junction – where both vehicles are turning right – there is no clear indication of who has right of way or how the vehicles should make their manoeuvres.
10. There is a solid double white line on the road just before the turning into Home Farm. This requires a driver turning right to make a sharp-angled turn.
11. The signs on either side of the junction warn oncoming traffic of the DNRC junction, but not the Home Farm junction. The fact that the Home Farm road is a private road should not reduce the need for adequate safety warnings to drivers.
12. I have been provided with a Nottinghamshire County Council Road Safety Audit regarding this junction, which is dated 21.9.15. This contains the following extract : During the site visit we were approached by a member of the public (apparently the owner) from Home Farm, opposite the Stanford Hall Access. He brought to our attention an issue which he felt had safety implications. Drivers intending to turn right into the Home Farm access have to wait on their side of the A6006 centre line to give way to oncoming traffic, as previously. They then have to turn across both the right turn lane and the Eastbound A6006 traffic lane. If a number of vehicles were occupying the right turn lane, he felt there would be potential to mask oncoming A6006 vehicles from view. Although the existing situation requires a right turner to to wait in the westbound lane of the A6006, he also felt that he would be at greater risk of shunt type accidents than previously.
13. Sadly, this appears to have been the very risk that played a part in this collision.
Responses
Nottingham County Council
17 Apr 2018
Response received
View full response
Dear Mrs Connor; 17 April 2018 Inquest into the death of Molly Jean Mills (Concluded 15.02.2018) Response to Regulation 28 Report (000271-180215) am writing in response to the Regulation 28 Report following the recent inquest into the death of Molly Jean Mills. The inquest concluded that Jean died as result of injuries sustained in a Road traffic Collision on A6o06 Melton Road, at the combined entrance to Home Farm and the Defence and National Rehabilitation Centre_ As result; asked Nottinghamshire County Council, as the Highway Authority for this road, to take action to address concerns about the junction: can confirm that we are already considering a number of highway improvement measures at this location. The inclusion of this work in the 2018/19 Highways Programme was recently approved by the Council's Communities and Place Committee_ However there is some investigatory work to be carried out before we can finalise our proposals. Firstly we need to consider if the access to Home Farm can be closed on permanent basis. We are obliged to explore this option as the most obvious and effective solution, since it would remove the opportunity for the right-turn manoeuvre that Jean attempted, and therefore almost guarantee that a similar collision would not occur in the future. This would require consultation with the various parties affected. Should we receive objections then this closure may not prove possible without specific authorisation from the Secretary of State. Should it not prove possible or desirable to close the access, we are considering a package of alternative measures to assist drivers attempting to turn right at that location. This includes revisions to the position of the existing central traffic island, and its associated road markings, to make it easier for vehicles to gain access to the right-turn lane when approaching from the east This should allow drivers to position their vehicles where can wait more comfortably for a safe gap in the oncoming traffic. Another measure under consideration is the introduction of a localised reduction in speed limit to improve safety for all road users in the vicinity. This would be supported and reinforced by the introduction of improved signing to encourage lower speeds along this Nottinghamshire County Council; County Hall; West Bridgford, Nottingham NG2 7QP May you they

stretch of road. A speed limit change would also need to be subject to public consultation process_ The works should be undertaken within the 2018/19 financial year, subject to the results of consultation and detailed design work.
Action Should Be Taken
The fact that a Regulation 28 report has been issued should not be interpreted as a criticism of the recipient organisation. This point has been made clearly in the case of R (Dr Siddiqui and Dr Paeprer-Rochricht) v Assistant Coroner for East London.
Report Sections
Investigation and Inquest
On 20 September 2017 I commenced an investigation into the death of Molly Jean Mills. The investigation concluded at the end of the inquest on 15 February 2018. The conclusion of the inquest was Road Traffic Collision.
Circumstances of the Death
The family advised us that Mrs Mills preferred to be referred to as Jean, so I will respect that wish in this report. Brief Summary Jean was driving on the A6006 Melton Road, near to the village of Stanford on Soar in Nottinghamshire, on the morning of 6th June 2017. She was involved in a collision with a lorry at the junction which has entrances to Home Farm on one side, and the Defence and National Rehabilitation Centre (‘DNRC’, currently under construction) on the other. Jean was travelling in the direction of Zouch, and made a right turn towards Home Farm, into the path of a lorry travelling on the A6006 towards Rempstone. Jean’s injuries were initially not thought to be life-threatening, but she died in hospital on 17 July 2017 after contracting bronchopneumonia, because of the rib fractures she suffered in the collision. Although Jean also suffered a fall in hospital, I concluded that the injuries she sustained in the collision were the cause of her bronchopneumonia and death. I was assisted in this respect by evidence from a consultant radiologist and a Home Office pathologist. The Collision We had clear evidence (via tacograph and dashcam footage) that the lorry was not speeding. The driver was not under the influence of alcohol. Whilst the driver reacted quickly and applied his brakes when Jean’s vehicle appeared in front of him, he did not have sufficient opportunity to avoid the collision. I found no fault with the lorry driver’s manner of driving or the action he took to try to avoid the collision. I found that Jean made her manoeuvre without checking adequately for oncoming traffic. Driver error undoubtedly played a part. However, I also reached the conclusion that the layout of the junction made a collision like this more likely. The layout poses a risk of future deaths.
Related Inquiry Recommendations

Public inquiry recommendations addressing similar themes

Data sourced from Courts and Tribunals Judiciary under the Open Government Licence.