Author name: Steven Edwards

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Encouragement | As Easy As Riding A Bike


Posted on December 1, 2020

I’ve long held the suspicion that the use of ‘encouragement’ in relation to cycling is a classic example of a weasel word. It’s a word that sounds positive (after all, who could possibly object to cycling being encouraged?) – but that, when it comes to its use in practice, amounts to an abdication of responsibility. ‘Encouragement’ involves persuading people to do something, and… that’s about it. We want you to cycle, but we’re going to do very little to help you. In fact, we might even ‘encourage’ you to cycle while we are actively making things worse.
News from Elsewhere

Annual bike sales to run at more than double new car registrations by 2030 – Cycle Industry News


Mark Sutton 2 December, 2020

Annual bike sales will run at more than double new car registrations by 2030, according to new forecasts by a trio of European cycling organisations.
The trend analysis of 30 European countries by CONEBI, CIE and the ECF illustrates that based on the current trajectory 10 million more bikes are expected to sell per year in Europe by 2030, representing a 47% rise on the 2019 tally. Once reached, the 30 million bikes sold annually will run at more than double the number of passenger cars registered per year in the EU.

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Four in 10 Londoners say they are cycling more since COVID-19 outbreak | road.cc


Almost all are doing so to avoid public transport or driving, according to survey from Halfords

Four in 10 Londoners (39 per cent) say they are cycling more since the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic, according to a new survey from Halfords – and almost all (87 per cent) are doing so either to avoid the risk of infection while using public transport or to avoid adding to air pollution and traffic congestion while driving, or both.  

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A new cycling underpass in Utrecht | Bicycle Dutch


Utrecht opened a new cycling underpass in the canal route through the city on the rainy morning of 1 December 2020. The underpass replaces the only remaining at-grade intersection in a main cycle route next to a canal. According to the Utrecht chapter of the Fietsersbond (Cyclists’ Union) it remains now possible to cycle from Houten – via Utrecht – alongside the canal all the way to Amsterdam, a journey of almost 40 kilometres, without seeing a single traffic signal.

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Sadiq Khan set to seize control of High Street Kensington to reinstate cycle lanes being axed by council | Evening Standard


Ross Lydall1 hour ago

SADIQ KHAN today suggested he was seeking to seize control of Kensington High Street in order to reinstate cycle lanes being ripped out by the Tory council.
The Mayor said Transport for London was considering “all other options” in addition to seeking a refund of the £320,000 of public money given to Kensington and Chelsea council to install the segregated lanes on either side of the high street.
TfL can apply to convert a major road into a “red route”, thus bringing it within its strategic route network, if the borough agrees. If the borough objects, it is up to Transport Secretary Grant Shapps to decide.

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2016) Motorway removed to bring back the original water | Bicycle Dutch

It had been a motorway for over four decades, but now Utrecht has its old city-moat back! What better way to start the new year than with this new beginning for Utrecht? The “motorway from nothing to nowhere”, which was finished in the mid-1970s, still had 11 lanes when it was closed early 2010. While most Dutch cities (and that includes Utrecht) have a car-free city centre now, Utrecht also had a ridiculous motorway right in its heart, at the point where the old city centre met the modern heart around the central railway station. No longer! Everything has changed back to how things were for well over 800 years. So what is the story here?

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Cyclists with Extinction Rebellion flags protest removal of cycle lane – MailOnline (Note: The article contains a series of…inaccuracies––SE)


Rory Tingle
Today dozens pro-cycling protesters from around London took part in a ‘festive joyride’ that spilled out into lanes used by drivers. 
Steven Edwards, 60, a guitar teacher and Extinction Rebellion activist from Camden, North London, told MailOnline: ‘I’m here to protest about the insane ripping out of this cycle lane.
‘It needs to be extended and expanded – I can’t think of anything worse than to remove it. Cycling is beneficial in every possible way. There are big opponents though, including taxi drivers.’  
David Lincoln, 53, a community nurse from Islington, called for similar routes to be installed on every major road in the capital.

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“Shameful, callous and retrograde”: 200 join protest against removal of Kensington High Street cycle lanes | road.cc


Council’s scrapping of infrastructure comes as Londoners urged to keep cycling and walking as lockdown lifts

Around 200 people took to their bikes on Kensington High Street this morning in protest at the decision of the Royal Borough of Kensington & Chelsea’s decision to remove emergency cycle lanes there this week – a decision that the head of London Cycling Campaign (LCC) has described as “shameful, callous and retrograde.”
The protest, held in accordance with lockdown rules, came as Londoners are being urged to continue cycling and walking to ease pressure on the city’s public transport network ahead of restrictions being lifted at midnight tonight.
This morning, cycling and environmental campaigners – plus at least four dogs in bicycle baskets – joined children, parents and staff from the Fox Primary School in Kensington to protest against the removal of the lanes, which had only been installed in September.

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Council axing Kensington cycle lanes after just seven weeks told to refund £300,000 of Government cash | Evening Standard


Ross Lydall 30/11/20

A Tory council was today facing demands to refund an estimated £300,000 of Government cash after deciding to rip-out controversial cycle lanes in Kensington High Street.

Kensington and Chelsea council said work to remove the lanes would start on Wednesday – sparking a massive backlash including from the borough’s teachers and cyclists.
Will Norman, the Mayor of London’s walking and cycling commissioner, said he would seek to recover the Government cash so it could be reallocated by Transport for London to other boroughs.
He said he was furious that cyclists were being injured and killed but the council had now blocked three major safety schemes.

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Kensington and Chelsea council criticised for scrapping cycle lane | The Guardian


Peter Walker

Separated bike lane in Conservative-run borough to be removed after seven weeks
Mon 30 Nov 2020 17.04 GMT
First published on Mon 30 Nov 2020 16.44 GMT
A Conservative-run council has been accused of favouring the convenience of car drivers over the wellbeing of local people by scrapping a popular cycle lane after opposition from 0.2% of the borough’s population.
Kensington and Chelsea council, which last year vetoed its section of a cross-London bike route, has said it will remove the separated cycle lane along Kensington High Street, seven weeks after it was installed.

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