News from Elsewhere

News from Elsewhere

“Why bother about evidence?” Cycling UK responds to Tory MPs’ call to end emergency active travel funding | road.cc


“So-called War on the Motorist is a myth,” says national cycling charity as it urges opponents of active travel measures to heed experts

“Why bother about evidence?” That’s the question posed by Cycling UK in response to a letter from 14 Conservative MPs, including former minister for cycling Robert Goodwill, as they appealed to transport secretary Grant Shapps to withdraw emergency active travel funding for initiatives such as pop-up bike lanes and low traffic neighbourhoods.
The letter, which we reported on earlier today – our previous story appears in full below – was also supported by anti-cycling lobby groups Fair Fuel UK, the Association of British Drivers and the Motorcycle Action Group, as well as the Road Haulage Association.

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Car-free neighbourhoods: the unlikely new frontline in the culture wars I The Guardian


Tim Lewis Sun 1 Nov 2020

Covid measures to encourage cycling and walking in UK cities should have been a victory for the environment and wellbeing. So why are communities so divided?

On a rainy Tuesday evening, a couple of weeks ago, Tom – not his real name, for reasons that will become clear – took his 12-year-old son to football practice. Training is two miles away, and usually they would travel by car. But, over the summer, the area where they live in Ealing, west London, was designated a low-traffic neighbourhood (LTN). This meant that its streets would be altered to encourage “active transport” such as cycling and walking, typically by placing planters and bollards across key intersections. The introduction of the LTN scheme in Ealing had created confusion among motorists and congestion on the main roads. It also led Tom to dig out his bicycle, which he bought when he moved to London in 2003 but which had been gathering dust for 15 years.

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Assessment of Gent’s traffic circulation plan – Transport & Mobility Leuven


Short description:

A year after the implementation of the traffic circulation plan in Gent, Transport & Mobility Leuven conducted an extensive analysis of its effects.  In this study, we address why certain effects occurred and examine the functioning of the new circulation with the specific role of the closed streets and the extension of the restricted traffic area.
Within the scope of this project, we validated and interpreted a large number of data sources.  To this end, our project team applied its vast expertise related to both qualitative as well as quantitative analysis.  Our researchers conducted a thorough data-analysis of, amongst others, real-time measurement of speed and traffic intensity. Next to that, we also studied modal choices and movement patterns .  The results of this study are published in a publically accessible report, that TML drew up together with the city of Gent.

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Who needs SUVs? Dear Keir, walk to the tailor next time | The Guardian


Martin LoveSun 1 Nov 2020 07.45 GMT

They’re big, they ooze status appeal and they carry with them an unmistakable sense of entitlement – even the driver’s elevated seating is called a “command” position. So is it any wonder that SUVs have transfixed motorists since they started to emerge in the US in the brash 1980s and self-serving 1990s?
Rugged off-roaders, built like tanks and boasting all the subtlety of a Donald Trump meet-and-greet, are hardly new to our roads. It was only a couple of years ago that Land Rover’s bestselling and much-cherished Defender celebrated its 70th birthday. But these are 4x4s that were built to do a proper job of work. A real 4×4 is a prodigious feat of automotive engineering that ensures you can drive into the teeth of the most inhospitable environment on the planet and stay warm, dry and safe.

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Cycling King Alfred’s Way, the new off-road trail around Wessex | The Guardian


A 350km circular trail was launched this summer, knitting together ancient bridleways and millennia of English history

Rob PennSun 1 Nov 2020 07.00 GMT

From the top of Tan Hill, in the milky light at the end of an impeccable autumn day, Wiltshire rolled away beneath our feet, into deep history. The views of this quintessential English downland – a landscape that inspired Richard Jeffries, Edward Thomas and Thomas Hardy – were outstanding.
Representing our ancient relationship with these chalk hills were hillforts, burial mounds, embankments and stone circles. A hobby hovered below us, then banked and accelerated, shadowing the shape of the hill. We were only two days into our journey along King Alfred’s Way. Already, I couldn’t remember the beginning.

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What the new lockdown rules mean for YOU as a cyclist in England | road.cc


On Saturday evening, Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced the new National Restrictions that will come into effect in England at 0001 hours this Thursday 5 November to combat the rapid rise in coronavirus cases both in the UK and abroad – and as with the previous lockdown announced in March, there are implications for cycling, whether for sport, leisure or as a means of transport.

What is being widely termed a second lockdown is due to run until Wednesday 2 December, although few would be surprised if it were extended belong that, with the government underlining that “the single most important action we can all take, in fighting coronavirus, is to stay at home, to protect the NHS and save lives.”

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Experts says Britain is heading for gridlock with vocal minority nixing schemes to reduce motor traffic | road.cc


Motor traffic already back to pre-lockdown levels despite huge percentage of people still working from home
A series of road transport experts has this week predicted precisely what the government fears – that the nation is heading for gridlock as people continue to shun public transport in favour of cars. The warning comes as many local authorities scrap emergency active travel schemes in response to opposition from a vocal minority.

According to the government’s own figures, motor traffic is already back to almost 100 per cent of levels before lockdown, despite 28 per cent of the workforce still working remotely.

While the prospect of a second national lockdown currently looms large, Rachel Aldred, Professor of Transport at the University of Westminster, has predicted that ultimately up to 2.7m more people who had previously commuted by public transport could switch to travelling by car when measures are eventually lifted.

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Good Cycling Facility of the Week: 21/10/20 – Cycle path running alongside a rural main road in Utrecht | CEoGB

This week’s Good Faciltiy is a cycle path running alongside a rural main road in Utrecht province in the Netherlands. The road – the equivalent of an ‘A’ road in the UK – has an 80kph (50mph) limit, but anyone cycling will go nowhere near it. The parallel cycle path is some distance away from it, and separated by tree planting.
This makes cycling safe and also enjoyable, removed from the noise and stress of passing motor traffic.

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Lithuania’s trade-in program is swapping people’s old cars for new e-bikes – electrek


Micah Toll

Believe it or not, a cash-for-clunkers plan helped get old and polluting cars off the road, replacing them with efficient and traffic-reducing personal electric vehicles like e-bikes and e-scooters.

Shocking, right?
Trading in old cars for new electric bikes
Perhaps it’s not so shocking for Lithuanians, who jumped at the opportunity to swap their old cars for new e-bikes.
The program was developed by Lithuania‘s Environmental Project Management Agency (APVA), part of the country’s Ministry of Environment.
The program began this summer with a budget of €8 million.
To qualify, citizens can apply for and then receive a subsidy of up to €1,000 (nearly US$1,200) for the purchase of a new electric bicycle, bicycle, e-scooter, e-moped, e-motorcycle or even public transportation credits, after exchanging their old vehicle, according to LRT.

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