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Why your crews can’t find marker posts

The location was precise. The control room understood it. But the system that needed to act on it couldn't. Why marker-post references break down on the way to the crew.

navigation

A caller reports an RTC on the M1. They’ve done exactly what the Highway Code tells them to – they’ve found the nearest location marker post: “48, 9B.”

The control room takes the call, logs the reference, and dispatches a crew. So far, so good. The CAD system can handle a marker post reference. The operator knows exactly where that is.

But here’s where it gets interesting. The information now needs to travel.

Maybe it goes out over the radio. Maybe it’s passed later as part of a METHANE message – E for Exact location. “M1, marker forty-eight, nine bravo.” The crew heading to the scene hears the reference. They understand it. But their navigation system – whether that’s a consumer sat nav, their phone, or whatever’s bolted to the dash – has no idea what to do with it.

So the crew falls back to “which junction are we near?” They estimate distance from the last junction they passed. On a dark motorway at 2am, that estimation adds time, adds stress, and adds risk.

The location was precise. The system that received it understood it. But the system that needed to act on it couldn’t.

What these signs actually tell you

Most UK drivers have seen the large blue signs along motorways. Three rows of information: road number, carriageway letter, distance. These driver location signs are spaced every 500 metres. Smaller white distance marker posts also line the carriageways of motorways and major A-roads, at 100-metre intervals. Both use the same system – distance in kilometres from a designated start point, measured to one decimal place.

When someone reads out a marker post reference, they’re giving you a location accurate to 100 metres. On a road stretching over 200 miles, that’s remarkably precise.

The gap isn’t in the control room

CAD systems in police, fire, and ambulance control rooms can resolve marker post locations. The operators are trained on them. The problem is what happens after the control room.

When that reference is passed over the radio to a responding crew, it enters a different world. Frontline responders – particularly those without integrated MDT navigation – are working with tools not built for them. Google Maps. TomTom. Waze. None of these can interpret “marker 48, 9B.”

In practice, someone in the control room eventually converts the reference to a description: “between junctions 12 and 13, about a mile past 12.” You’ve gone from 100-metre accuracy to “about a mile.” That margin matters, especially on roads with emergency access points in between junctions.

Closing the gap

Screenshot of marker posts shown in Blue Light Maps

If a crew hears “marker forty-eight, nine bravo” over the radio, they should be able to type that into their nav and get routed directly there.

This is one of the datasets we integrate into Blue Light Maps. It’s not flashy – no AI, no machine learning. Just a dataset that should be in every responder’s toolkit.

Have a similar problem in your region? Let us know and we’ll add the data to make your life easier.

Part 1 of our series on why location is harder than it looks for emergency services.

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Summary

This article explains the disconnect between precise location marker posts on UK roads and the inability of standard navigation systems used by emergency crews to interpret them. While control rooms can understand these 100-meter accurate references, the information often gets lost or degraded when passed to frontline responders whose tools lack this capability, leading to estimation and delays. Blue Light Maps aims to bridge this gap by integrating marker post data into their navigation solutions.

Key Facts

Frequently Asked Questions

What are marker posts on UK motorways?

Marker posts are signs along motorways and major A-roads, spaced at 100-metre intervals, that use a system of road number, carriageway letter, and distance from a designated start point to indicate location with 100-metre accuracy.

Why do emergency crews struggle to use marker post references?

While control room systems can interpret marker post references, frontline responders' navigation tools (like Google Maps, TomTom, Waze) cannot directly process them, forcing crews to estimate locations based on nearby junctions, reducing accuracy.

How does Blue Light Maps address the marker post issue?

Blue Light Maps integrates marker post data into its system, allowing responders to input these references directly into their navigation, providing 100-metre accuracy and closing the gap between control room information and on-scene arrival.

What is the accuracy of marker post references?

Marker post references provide a location accurate to 100 metres, which is remarkably precise for long stretches of road.

Related Entities

Companies
Blue Light Maps, TinySeed
Products
Google Maps, TomTom, Waze, Blue Light Maps
Locations
UK, M1, Olympia, London
Technologies
CAD systems, MDT navigation, AI, machine learning, Naurt