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Bodmin council admits getting more people to cycle, walk and take public transport is 'unrealistic' - so decides to build another road instead

Only two per cent of people in Bodmin currently cycle or take the bus

Bodmin Town Council has said that it doesn’t think the town would be able to shift significantly to walking, cycling and public transport.

Although it has said this would be desirable, revitalising town centre trading and improving air quality, the council has said it is ‘unrealistic’.

According to This is Cornwall, the council is now exploring ‘other solutions’, including creating a northern relief road to bypass the town.

One commenter on the article wrote: “About time someone in authority admitted that once you've bought a car and are spending hundreds of pounds a month on VED, insurance, servicing, and most of all depreciation, you're not going to leave it at home and stand at a bus stop for 10 mins to spend another £2.50 per day getting to work.”

In the council’s Town Plan for Bodmin, published in October last year, it noted:

Currently Bodmin has a higher proportion of people walking to work than national averages, yet has a much lower proportion of people cycling to work (only 1% of journeys being made by bike). Hills, lack of suitable cycle infrastructure and busy roads are the likely causes for this low figure.

Currently only 1.25% of all trips in Bodmin are made by bus. This is set against a national average of 8%. However, this low usage in Bodmin can be attributed, in part, to the fact that there is a limited town service, which currently doesn’t visit all key areas of housing and employment.

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44 comments

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clayfit | 10 years ago
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Increase the cost of petrol and car tax. Charge supermarkets a tax on parking spaces. Use the money raised to make public transport free or minimal cost, as well as frequent and integrated. How hard can it be?

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userfriendly | 10 years ago
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Raise petrol costs. Raise VED. And lo and behold, more people will take to bicycles.

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RedfishUK replied to userfriendly | 10 years ago
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userfriendly wrote:

Raise petrol costs. Raise VED. And lo and behold, more people will take to bicycles.

Charge people for "Free Parking" in out of town business parks and shopping areas

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cybernaut replied to userfriendly | 10 years ago
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Speaking as someone who has commuted on country lanes and as an ex courier, even I would think twice about doing it again. Add the average fitness level of a typical commuter, terrain like that around Bodmin, drivers who do 60+ even on single-track lanes around there and I for one can see why it's not a popular method.

Most people are reluctant to spend the extra time involved in turning their commute into a ride. Add in that most employers, particularly small businesses are unwilling/unable to provide shower and changing facilities and this is an up-hill battle.

Things that work in cities and larger towns are just not solutions for the country. Increasing the costs of car ownership for those with no viable alternative is just stupid. I saw a study a few years back that said most (70%?) of commuter car journeys were under 2 miles. In the country that simply isn't so.

I think it's time that those occupying Westminster find a more targeted solution to the car issue than VED & fuel taxes. Since most of the problems with car use are urban anyway.

I may prefer to ride myself, but I recognise I am in a minority here.

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oozaveared replied to userfriendly | 10 years ago
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userfriendly wrote:

Raise petrol costs. Raise VED. And lo and behold, more people will take to bicycles.

No it won't. I am old enough to have been driving in the late seventies when petrol climbed from 50p a gallon to over £1 a gallon and by 1985 it was £1.50 a gallon. Now that's a gallon or 4.55 litres. Plenty of talk and that no-one would carry on driving if petrol went over £1 a gallon. That's 21p a litre.

So no the costs of motoring will not deter because they are relative. The relative cost of driving has gone down and that's because despite the austerity we are actually getting richer and richer as a country.

People may moan about the costs of motoring but the roaods are not full of small economical cars with owners just about able to keep them on the road. There are plenty of people who are quite willing to pay more and more for their cars. They are not deterred by costs however much they moan about the cost.

I still think that they should be taxed to the hilt and so long as people will sit their idling their engines or buying bigger and bigger cars rather than smaller and smaller ones, then petrol is still to cheap. Putting up the cost of motoring will not deter people from driving.

If you want to get people out of their cars then you have to make it impossible for them to use them for certain journeys. If you cannot actually park the car or drive it in the middle of towns then that may work. You just have to persuade councils to forego the parking revenue (as if ) and to be the first town to say it doesn't want people shopping there if they bring a car. ie very brave if done by individual councils.

I am, as you can see, pretty pessimistic about reducing the use of motorised transport.

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Some Fella | 10 years ago
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I blame Dr Beeching.
And Thatcher.

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Gus T replied to Some Fella | 10 years ago
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Don't blame Dr Beeching, whatever the outcome of his report was, Ernest Marple was going to build more roads to help enrich his families road building business> Beeching has been incorrectly blamed for Marple's greed and corruption for far to long.  16

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northstar | 10 years ago
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So they can afford to build more "roads" for "cars" but come up with the usual nonsense when it comes to walking, riding etc....heard it all before, excuses, excuses.

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oldstrath | 10 years ago
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So the council believes that the proportion cycling to work is low because of hills, lack of infrastructure and too many cars. The hills excuse is fairly pathetic - even for those unable to do the hills by themselves, ebikes would make them possible. The other two are works of the council, not acts of god. They could make roads and parking too uncomfortable and expensive for cars, and convert some roads to cycle paths. Political will is needed, so it's easier simply to shrug and pretend that all the problems are inevitable.

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bambergbike | 10 years ago
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If they haven't got the resources for improved public transport (this may not be true, but let's assume it is), they need to make the most of their existing services by integrating them much better with cycling. If people find secure parking for their bikes at the points from where they get buses, or if they can take bikes with them on public transport, it becomes realistic to make 10 mile journeys by bus even if people have to cycle 2 miles to get to the bus stop and maybe another mile or so to get from the nearest bus stop to their final destinations. Or at least, it would become realistic if the area had a cycling network that made trips by bike subjectively safe, quick and convenient - they probably need to work on that.

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RedfishUK | 10 years ago
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Another example of just how difficult it is to change the mindset...a logical conclusion would obviously be
"We have tried and tried for the last 70 years to solve our transport problems by building roads, but congestion is getting worse...we need to seriously look at some alternatives"

Now I imagine the bus service in a rural area is pants, but people will use decent public transport. When I moved to Leeds from London 15 years ago everyone thought we were odd for only looking at suburbs with railways stations, as the services were poor and under used..now the trains are modern, there are more of them and the main issue is overcrowding...

We know what doesn't work, we need to have some faith in other solutions and give them money AND time.

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mrmo replied to RedfishUK | 10 years ago
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RedfishUK wrote:

Now I imagine the bus service in a rural area is pants, but people will use decent public transport. When I moved to Leeds from London 15 years ago everyone thought we were odd for only looking at suburbs with railways stations.

Are you trying to equate Leeds with Bodmin! one a fairly large city the other little more than a village! Leeds has a population of c500,000 and Bodmin town less than 20,000!

I wonder why one might be able to support a decent public transport system and the other isn't!

Although i could mention the per capita subsidy for public transport. Unsurprisingly London has the highest and the west country the lowest!

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RedfishUK replied to mrmo | 10 years ago
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Are you trying to equate Leeds with Bodmin! one a fairly large city the other little more than a village! Leeds has a population of c500,000 and Bodmin town less than 20,000!

no i was saying that people will shun poor public transport, but will use reliable, frequent public transport...and by extension as we have no real cycling infrastructure, if it existed people would use it.

(Also my experience is only of a limited area of Leeds, the train line only serves a few towns and villages, nearer 20,000 of Bodmin than the 500K of the whole Leeds Unitary area)

What Bodmin council seem to be saying is that there is no point investing in other solutions because at the minute no one is using that mode of transport.

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mrmo | 10 years ago
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not in the least surprised, in any rural area buses are almost pointless. Frequency, cost, etc just make them unusable by most people, particularly if they have another means of transport available.

As for the use of bikes, the biggest deterent is cars, so what do you expect when everyone is using cars. Also if the average journey length is short enough why bother cycling when you can walk instead?

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