DRIVERS in Essex are being urged to take care and act responsibly following a rise in the number of people killed or seriously injured on the county’s roads over the last 12 months.

Sixty-three people died and 955 were seriously injured on Essex’s roads in the last year.

The figures compare to 44 deaths and 788 people seriously injured in 2015.

Motorcyclists and young men were again the most vulnerable road users.

Essex Police says it has has taken steps to tackle poor driving with regular operations targeting issues such as speeding, people using their mobile phones behind the wheel, and not wearing a seatbelt.

Nearly 51,000 people in Essex were put on driver education courses in 2016.

Chief Insp Scott Egerton said: "These figures are concerning and behind them lie ruined lives, tragedy, and emergency services who have attended many hundreds of traumatic scenes.

"I need the whole county to be ashamed of these figures and work together to improve road safety and driver behaviour.

"All road users have a part to play in keeping our roads safer. We know that tiny changes – wearing seatbelts, not using phones at the wheel, and driving at the appropriate speed and to weather conditions – make a big difference and genuinely do save lives.

"No police officer who has had to knock on the door of a family and tell them their loved one has died in a road traffic collision will ever have anything other than zero tolerance for criminality on our roads.”

The number of people arrested for drink or drug-driving in Essex over the Christmas currently stands at 129 - 92 for drink-driving and 37 for drug-driving.