Drivers were caught speeding on tens of thousands of occasions in Dorset last year, analysis shows, writes Bradley White.

Dorset Police recorded 23,825 offences in 2019-20, according to analysis of Home Office figures by the RAC Foundation.

This was 5% more than the 22,716 logged during the previous year, slightly below the 8% increase across the 43 police forces in England and Wales.

The number of people caught breaking the speed limit across the two nations hit 2.6 million in 2019-20.

There was wide variation between areas – North Yorkshire saw the largest spike with the figure more than doubling, while Avon and Somerset Constabulary recorded a 32% drop.

The RAC Foundation said this could be down to a variety of factors, including differences in road networks, traffic volumes, policing priorities and resources, and the availability of detection technology.

The group’s director Steve Gooding said there were large disparities across all forces.

He said: “Not for the first time there seems to be a patchwork approach to speed enforcement across England and Wales, with different constabularies dedicating varying levels of resource into catching those who break the limit.”

Mr Gooding said it is unclear whether reduced traffic levels during lockdown will lead to fewer speeding offences being committed compared with previous years, or if open roads will tempt some drivers to go even faster.

Figures obtained earlier this year showed Dorset Police recorded a dramatic drop in the number of drivers caught speeding at the start of lockdown in April, compared to a year earlier.

In Dorset, cameras caught the vast majority (93%) of recorded speeding offences last year, which accounted for 88% of all motoring offences over the period – compared to 85% across England and Wales.

Speeding drivers in the area were fined on around 19,600 occasions, while around 2,600 offences were cancelled.

Court action was the next most common outcome (1,100), followed by a speed awareness course (497).

The RAC’s analysis shows the number of detected speeding offences across England and Wales has risen by 49% since 2011-12.

But the figure dropped by 29% in Dorset, from 33,400 eight years ago.

Mr Gooding added: “As always we need to have regard to the bigger picture.

“All motoring laws are there to make our roads safer, hence tackling speeding is important but it is only one aspect of driver behaviour that warrants attention if we are to break out of the plateauing of road fatalities in recent years.”

A Home Office spokeswoman said: “How the police deal with speeding offences is an operational matter and will be enforced at the discretion of the individual police force.

“How forces approach speed enforcement may be governed by their own assessment of local issues, which could include targeting dangerous roads to reduce harm or cracking down on high-risk offenders.”