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Jun 23

It is your money or your licence: France welcomes rosbif drivers

Of course we normally want to put a positive spin on buying, moving and living in France but it is important to keep clients up to date with French news and issues, so here goes another story about the woes of speeding when driving in France. 

We send hundreds of people on viewing trips each month so it only seems right to publish this article about speeding in France and the consequences of it, the article appeared in The Times newspaper on the 22nd June 2014, so hopefully our clients can take note and get to the property viewings safe and sound and with enough money left to be able to buy a house in France!

Drive safely within the limits and everything swill be fine, but break the speed limits and........

British holidaymakers in France face draconian penalties this summer as a hidden force of gendarmes cracks down on speeding, reports Dominic Tobin

IT'S 4.03PM on the A16 autoroute, which runs between the outskirts of Paris and Dunkirk, via Calais. Standing next to a British-registered Audi TT is a man with shoulders hunched like a schoolboy, receiving a dressing-down from a French traffic officer.

Cle France Driving advice 1

Hiding under a bridge on the A16 last week, Gérard Andrieux, left, and Yves Renard of the French police catch a British driver speeding in his Audi TT.

He is being asked to hand over his driving licence — which he does. It will be posted back to him, but not for weeks, and in the meantime he is told he is banned from getting back behind the wheel in France for three days. As he makes his apologies, his wife is sent to a nearby cash machine — accompanied by a policeman — to get the money to pay a 135 euros (£108) on-the-spot fine.

Welcome to speedy justice, French style. The driver has been clocked with a laser gun by a crack team of gendarmes out to catch British drivers who forget that France is not a playground. At 179kph (111mph), on an autoroute with a 130kph (81mph) limit he was lucky not to have his car seized, the authorities say. They are gearing up for a bumper summer as the annual exodus of holidaymakers begins and drivers head for holiday homes and campsites on the south and west coast of France.

This strict enforcement of speed limits is all about safety, of course, but it also yields big dividends. Unlike their British counterparts, the police in northern France use on-the-spot fines as their main weapon. Armed with laser guns and concealed under motorway bridges and in roadside hedges, they are catching more British drivers than any other west Europeans.

More than 1m British holidaymakers are expected to be driving into France this summer, mainly through Calais and down the A16, or the other major route south, the A26, and French police predict they will collect a total of 1.73bn euros (£1.38bn) in speeding fines in 2014, up from 1.66bn euros last year.

Cle France driving advice 2

The first the driver knows of it is when he is pulled over at the next toll booth.

In Britain, police generally give motorists some leeway above the speed limit before they are stopped. The pelotons motorisés — the name for the traffic gendarme units — stop drivers even if they edge above the speed limit by 1kph. Neither are drivers given the courtesy of being warned that they are entering a zone where speed traps are in operation on the routes that radiate from the ferry ports and Euro-tunnel. The pelotons motorisés have taken to examining the manifests of trains and ferries, checking for high-powered sports cars that they suspect might be more prone to speeding, and deploying squads of officers to target them.

Once a car has been clocked above the speed limit there is no requirement for photographic evidence; if the policeman says the car was speeding, it is up to the driver to prove he was not. Justice, when it comes is summary and swift: as well as on-the-spot fines, drivers can receive an instant ban.

While the gendarmes insist they have no special remit to catch British drivers, they point out the temptation for Brits to take advantage of the long, straight roads in France that are relatively uncongested. Added to that is the surge in popularity of organised rallies whose participants can sometimes forget that strict limits apply, even though organisers don’t condone law-breaking.

Known as rallyes sauvages (or wild rallies) in France, these events typically follow public roads towards the sun and sea in southern Europe. They attract wealthy, speed-loving owners of rare supercars. In 2006, police seized a Ferrari 360 and Porsche 911 for the offence of reckless driving. The two drivers, both British, were travelling at more than 150mph during that year’s Cannonball Run. At a subsequent court hearing, the cars were permanently confiscated and auctioned off. The Ferrari owner bought back his car for €88,000 (then £60,000).

Cle France driving advice 4

He is asked to surrender his driving licence and is told he is banned from driving for three days.

Sharing intelligence with Kent Police, the gendarmes now scour lists of cars booked onto Channel Tunnel trains or ferries, on the lookout for a telltale cavalcade of fast cars. “They know we react quickly and so they have started trying to cross during the evenings, at night, or around midday [when many French police officers go home for lunch],” says Captain Jean-Claude Derudder, second in command of the road safety department in the Pas de Calais region. “That doesn’t stop us from setting up speed checks quickly.”

Buying tickets for the Channel crossing at the last minute won’t help. “We only need 20 minutes to set up a speed check,” says Derudder. As it takes at least 30 minutes to cross the Channel, we have plenty of time.”

Officers have the power to seize cars for speeding alone. A staggered series of penalties was introduced in 2006, beginning with on-the-spot fines and moving on to an instant driving ban if drivers were caught at more than 40kph over the speed limit. Motorists speeding by more than 50kph over the limit could have their cars seized. It was a fate suffered by a Ferrari F355 owner last Sunday evening. Caught travelling at 191kph (119mph), the driver from London was forced to make his own way home after paying a €750 court deposit.

It is not just supercar owners who are being caught in the clampdown. Ordinary British holidaymakers are easy prey for the gendarmes.

Last Monday,we crossed the Channel to witness the French tactics as officers prepared for the summer by setting a trap for British spectators returning from the weekend’s Le Mans 24-hour race in the Sarthe deparmtent.

Cle France driving advice 4

His wife then gets behind the wheel and is escorted to a cash machine in order to be able to pay a €135 deposit, pending a court hearing in November.

Yves Renard (his surname means “fox”) and his colleague Gerard Andrieux head to a discreet spot underneath a bridge, five miles from the autoroute’s final toll booth before Calais. Renard points the radar gun at oncoming traffic and reads out the speed of any car breaking the 130kph limit. Andrieux picks up his mobile phone and passes the details to his colleagues lying in wait at the toll booth. The first time most drivers know they are in trouble is when the toll barrier lifts and they are directed to pull over in the lay-by.

“In the past, people just raced through France at 200kph with wads of cash in their pocket, paid the fines at the roadside and then carried on,” says traffic officer François Maquinghen. “But that has stopped since the rules changed because they know that they will lose their car.”

“If you are going at 131kph you could be stopped,” says Maquinghen. “We are tougher at some points on some routes where there have been a lot of accidents. At others, you might not get stopped unless you are going faster than 150kph.”

It isn’t long before a British driver is caught. Joe Adams, 24, an engineer from Dartford, Kent, is caught travelling at 150kph in his Lexus GS and is handed a €45 fine. “I don’t recall speeding and I didn’t see the speed gun,” he says. “They’re not as visible as in Britain.”

Without enough cash to pay the fine — police accept only euros or French cheques — Adams has to hand his passport to the gendarme and drive to the nearest cash machine, then return to pay the fine.

Matthew Yates, clocked at a similar speed in his Maserati GranSport, accuses the police of using speed traps as revenue-raisers. “Doing 151kph on a wide, clear 130kph road is nothing,” says the 43-year-old from Chichester, who organises events for fellow Maserati owners. “And the 45 euros fine isn’t too bad.

“But they don’t seem to stop the French. There were French cars overtaking me but I’m the one who’s been stopped. We know it’s only for the money and I’ve come to expect it.”

In three hours at the roadside we notice only one French car being stopped and six British, but the police insist that they take no notice of where a car is registered. They just want to stop drivers who are travelling at dangerous speeds.

That said, the gendarmes think that dealing with British drivers is a pleasure. “They are very polite, they don’t argue and they always pay,” says Mégane Painset, a three-year veteran of the highway patrol. “Usually the excuse is that they were late for their ferry. But they still have to pay.”

There’s only one problem in the gendarmes’ eyes, though: they are still unable to access drivers’ details from a registration plate alone. Which means the hundreds of speed cameras across the motorway network are virtually useless in catching speeding British drivers. That is about to change. As revealed last month in Driving, a new law being drawn up by the European Commission will allow French police to track down British drivers from next May. And then there really will be no escape for British speeders.

Stiff penalties

French penalties depend on the speed drivers were travelling when they exceeded the limit. In urban areas, fines are set at 90 euros for 1-39kph above the 50kph limit. On faster roads, including autoroutes, these apply:

1-19kph (up to 12mph) over limit

45 euros (£36) on-the-spot fine.

20-39kph (12-24mph) over limit

90 euros (£72) on-the-spot fine.

40-49kph (25-30mph) over limit

135 euros (£108) court deposit and instant three-day driving ban in France only. This is followed by a court case, often several months later, when the ban could be extended for up to three years (two or three months is typical). The court retains the deposit as a fine unless the driver successfully argues it was wrongly imposed.

More than 50kph over limit (31mph-plus)

750 euros (£600) court deposit and car impounded. This is followed by a court case. If the motorist is deemed to have been driving dangerously, their car can be permanently confiscated. The court can retain the deposit and increase the fine to 1,500, or 3,000 euros for repeat offenders.

This article originally appeared in The Sunday Times on Sunday 23rd June 2014.

Blog submitted by: David at The French Property Network - Cle France.

Add CommentViews: 767
Jun 23

We just wanted to say thank you for helping us

Hi Sharon and David,

We just wanted to say thank you for helping us through a bad time for us and we now know our house is sold and are positive to find another one where we will be just as happy.

Kind Regards, John and Sandra.

Cle France are always working hard to sell your property and find the next one! John and Sandra have now sold in the region of Aquitaine and are looking for property with Cle France in Lower Normandy departments of Orne, Manche and Pays de la Loire department of Mayenne.

Thanks you Cle France

Add CommentViews: 175
Jun 20

Sharon has been an absolute superstar sorting everything out for us

Hi David, Thanks for your email. Yes Sharon has been an absolute superstar sorting everything out for us. Thanks for all the links. I'm sure some of them will be useful.

We're looking forward to our busy weeks holiday and will be in touch with one of you when we get back

Regards, Alex & Dave.

Alex and Dave have got all the details for their viewings set up across most of Lower Normandy starting in Manche, driving through Calvados and onto property viewings in the Orne department.

Thank you Cle France

Add CommentViews: 358
Jun 19

The Great Normandy Truffle Hunt...

Ask any normal Frenchman around here (and I live right on the boarder of southern Normandy in Pays de Loire) if truffles can be found locally and you'll either be regarded as a sad deluded Anlgaise or a joke. The more polite will just give a great Gallic shrug whilst puffing the cheeks out like an aged trumpeter. In general, it should be admitted, the question will just result in guffaws.

However, the question is not as daft as it sounds. In theory wherever there are oak trees you should be able to find truffles. There is nothing to say that the elusive fungi can only be found in warmer climes of the south. In fact, like most fungi they can be found all over Europe. I once listened to an Englishman on the radio telling us how he found truffles as far north as Inverness in Scotland. He went on to explain that the Brits did not appreciate them and that he high tailed it to Paris whenever he had a couple of kilos where he could get a decent price for them.

To do this what you do need, of course, is a means to locate them. This is really where the trouble starts. Listen to your southern French expert and he'll assure you the only way is to have a traditional pig. This puts most northern compatriots out of the picture as they would not be seen dead walking around with a pig on a lead. To the northerners a pig represents jambon, saucisson, charcuterie and rillets. Walking a pig on a lead round here would get you put away.

Hence, no one round here even tries and the elusive truffle remains the domain of the crafty southern French. If only a metal detector type of machine could sniff them out, but then, I suppose, we'd all be at it. However, dogs can be trained to sniff them out and I have a friend whose dog did just that all on his own.

The fist time it happened he had no idea what the animal was bringing him and he threw it thinking the dog was playing a game. The dog brought it back and this happened a few times till he thought it was odd shape and nothing like the normal stick, and brought it home. As it happened I was visiting there at the time and quickly identified it as a truffle.

He didn't really believe me and took it to an expert for confirmation. I put this in as proof that dogs can sniff them out but there is a problem. In general they need training and few people have the patience or the nous because it takes time and you have to have a nice fresh truffle.

So the favourite of gourmets round the world, weighing in at up to 1000€ a kilo, will remain the highly prized luxury it is, whilst kilos go to waste all around us.

Fraser Blake at home in France  A Rant to Far Book cover  Dear Chips book cover 

Fraser Blake, 70, author of 'Dear Chips' and 'A Rant Too Far?' grew up in Africa, was at school in Scotland, and worked for the British South Africa Police in Southern Rhodesia. He has taught English in Saudi Arabia and sold and renovated hundreds of properties in Northern France.

In 1998 Fraser was selling houses in the Mayenne department of the Pays de la Loire region and so was the obvious choice, when Cle France was started, to be their first agent on the ground in France. In retirement he writes, blogs, cooks, drinks wine, and hosts to dinner unlimited numbers of ex-pats.

Always on hand with a viewpoint, Fraser is going to share his views on France, the French and the British, and other people who buy in France. Sometimes informative, sometimes funny, painfully true, outrageously opinionated but always entertaining so we hope it adds a slightly different dimension to the usual normality of searching through the fantastic properties for sale on the Cle France website.

If you want more? then follow the links above where you can buy Fraser's published books.

Add CommentViews: 384
Jun 13

Languedoc-Roussillon or Bust!

Foreign Intrigue Fridays: Languedoc-Roussillon or Bust!

house for sale in south of France

We're baaaack! In France, that is, for another tempting bargain, this time in the southernmost Languedoc-Roussillon region, which borders Provence, Spain and the Mediterranean. We also have it on good authority that this is where a lot of actual French folks prefer to summer, as it's far more affordable and less crowded than some of those neighbouring locations.

Priced at $270K, this fully reno'd 1400 square foot 2 bed/1.5 bath stone home is conveniently located in the tiny village of Moussan, home to 9th century Chapel Saint-Laurent. We're loving the large living room fireplace, beamed ceilings, modern kitchen, small courtyard and two sunny terraces.

And with so much to see and do nearby, you'll never be bored: the sea is less than a half hour's drive and the surrounding towns are chock full of historic churches, castles, even a section of the famed Canal du Midi, a UNESCO World Heritage Site. J'adore!

You will, too—see more here.

From the original Blog Posting on "I Could Be Happy Here" featuring property from around the world.

Add CommentViews: 440

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