CTC says that delay in the government drawing up its Cycling and Walking Delivery Plan is acting as a “slow puncture” to getting more people on bikes. The national cycling charity has today launched a campaign to urge the Treasury to put money aside for cycling when Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne makes his Autumn Statement next month.
It’s now more than a year since Prime Minister David Cameron promised a “cycling revolution” in response to the Get Britain Cycling report published in April 2013 by the All Party Parliamentary Cycling Group.
That report, which followed a six-week Parliamentary Inquiry, called for sustained investment of £10 per head per year initially to take cycling’s share of journeys up to 10 per cent by 20202.
However, neither the Coalition Government – nor, it has to be said, the Labour Party which says it broadly supports the recommendations of the report – has committed to that level of funding.
With a little more than six months to go until the May 2015 General Election, CTC says it is worried that no agreement has been reached over the money that may be made available, and in response has launched its #Funding4Cycling campaign.
The initiative urges cyclists and those who support bikes as a means of transport to state their case to the Treasury, which is inviting submissions from the public by 17 October ahead of the Autumn Statement, which the Chancellor will make to Parliament on 3 December.
Submissions to the Treasury can be made through a dedicated website CTC has set up for the purpose, which you can find at www.funding4cycling.org.uk.
CTC’s chief executive, Paul Tuohy, said: “The Government’s cycling policy is like a bike with a slow puncture: it’s totally deflated and failing to make progress. Long term annual funding of at least £10 per person is the repair kit needed to get it rolling again.
“Officials at the Department for Transport clearly understand the measures needed for cycling to become a normal activity for people of all ages, backgrounds and abilities.
“However, that only going to happen if ministers and all relevant departments – including the Treasury – can agree on a plan and the funding needed to deliver it,” he added.
In March this year, when he was invited by the APPCG to speak before an audience of cycle campaigners and media including road.cc, transport minister Robert Goodwill insisted that the government's Cycle City Ambition scheme would enable spend of £10 per head per year.
However, he was quickly taken to task by CTC's Roger Geffen, who reminded the minister that the level of spend was sought at nationwide level and each year, rather than being restricted to certain places over a fixed period.
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9 comments
CTC is absolutely right in getting politicians to commit to funding. After all, we've had decades of them telling us that they fully support cycling, but they never fund it, so nothing changes. It doesn't matter how much support they spout, if they won't fund it, it's just empty rhetoric.
Every cyclist should get behind this campaign, and writing to their MP as well.
“Officials at the Department for Transport clearly understand the measures needed for cycling to become a normal activity for people of all ages, backgrounds and abilities.
NO NO NO they do not
Empty promises from a government mere months before a general election? Surely not...
I can't wait ... Proper infrastructure in twenty thousand years time
I do like to share this whenever the name Robert Goodwill comes up. From Private Eye last year
Robert Goodwill seems to have made it his main mission to mislead people about cycle funding by clever (mis)use of statistics.
That guy is useless. He should be fighting for cyclists, not making excuses to cyclists on behalf of the government.
Not with such optimistic and ambitious attitudes from cyclists at any rate .....
If we want to change things enough to achieve something really worth while we're going to need existing cyclists to have a bit of hope and belief!
Never.
Gonna.
Happen.
"10 per cent by 20202" is more realistic