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Move Box Hill cycling events to Uxbridge, says Mole Valley UKIP candidate

Paul Oakley blames Boris Johnson for growth in sportives – and wants them moved to mayor’s likely parliamentary seat

The UKIP candidate in Mole Valley, the constituency that includes Box Hill, says that if elected he will lobby to have cycling events there moved to Uxbridge – where Mayor of London, Boris Johnson, is standing for the Conservative Party and is expected to secure his return to the House of Commons.

While he stops short of naming it in a leaflet distributed to local residents in the safe Tory seat, Paul Oakley’s principal target appears to be the Prudential RideLondon-Surrey 100 sportive and the Classic pro race that follows it. This year’s third edition will be held on Sunday 2 August.

In the leaflet, a copy of which was sent to road.cc by Mole Valley resident Rich Clark, Mr Oakley – a barrister who lives in south east London – says:

Bikes, Boris, Box Hill and Beyond: Boris Johnson conspired with Surrey County Council to introduce regular cycling competitions to the Surrey Hills. These have boxed-in locals and led to traffic chaos. If elected I will work with the Greater London Authority to have these events moved to Uxbridge. See how he likes it!

The Prudential RideLondon-Surrey 100 is the highest profile event taking in the beauty spot above Dorking, but as we reported last month, 18 others are due to include the climb between April and November, a number the  Box Hill Neighbourhood Council described as “excessive.”

Even prior to the road races at the London 2012 Olympic Games, there was vocal opposition locally to the number of cyclists attempting the climb, part of which is owned by the National Trust, and there have also been claims of anti-social activities such as riders urinating in people’s gardens or verbally abusing residents.

Organisers of the Vachery Triathlon, which takes place in the area, said that onerous conditions introduced by the council that perhaps reflected “the anti open-road cycling furore from local politicians and protesters experienced [in 2013]” lay behind the decision to cancel last year’s event.

Ahead of the inaugural edition of Olympic legacy event RideLondon-Surrey 100 in 2013, which attracted more than 20,000 participants, local businessman Ian Huggins launched a petition titled ‘Stop Surrey Being Turned Into a Cycle Track which attracted 3,543 supporters.

It is people holding that type of anti-cycling sentiment to whom Mr Oakley’s electoral promise is presumably designed to appeal – although it’s worth noting that a rival petition from road.cc reader Keith McRae in favour of such events in Surrey achieved 3,985 signatures.

Following that first edition of the RideLondon-Surrey 100, changes were made to the route for 2014 in consultation with Surrey County Council to ensure that half the county’s roads affected by the event would re-open three hours earlier than was the case in the debut year.

At the time, Helyn Clack, Surrey County Council’s cabinet member for community services, said: “We’re pleased the event organisers have been able to incorporate our suggestions into the improved delivery of the event and done even more to limit disruption to residents and businesses well ahead of this year’s events.”

She also emphasised the benefits the event brought with it, saying: “If last year is anything to go by, this year’s Prudential RideLondon-Surrey Classic and 100 events will be a shot in the arm for local shops, cafes and pubs along the route, and the loop around Dorking is an exciting new feature.”

As it turned out, last year’s event was hit by atrocious weather, forcing organisers to shorten the route on safety grounds to cut out the planned climbs of Box Hill and Leith Hill.

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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33 comments

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LondonDynaslow | 9 years ago
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You realise that this idiot has actually retweeted your story? One of 7 people to do so, in fact!

https://twitter.com/roadcc/status/585454771747848193

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riotgibbon | 9 years ago
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you can have a good bit of fun up and down the end of the escarpment at Harefield, just north of Uxbridge. For a bit

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ianrobo | 9 years ago
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well the answer is obvious, strange how Nimby's fail to complain about 4x4's which in every way are far more damaging to Box Hill and residents than bikes ever will be

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notaclimber | 9 years ago
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I went up it Monday, was it cyclists blocking the road all the way up, or was it cars, chugging fumes, all queuing to get in the car park? I wonder what is 'healthier' for a national park?

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mrchrispy | 9 years ago
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Am i right in thinking that box hill gets all this attention as its the only hill worth mentioning round them parts?

125m over 2.5k isn't much to get excited about is it!

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ianrobo replied to mrchrispy | 9 years ago
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mrchrispy wrote:

Am i right in thinking that box hill gets all this attention as its the only hill worth mentioning round them parts?

125m over 2.5k isn't much to get excited about is it!

sounds tiny to me, the one I do regular in South Wales is 200M over 1.7K

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dave atkinson replied to mrchrispy | 9 years ago
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mrchrispy wrote:

Am i right in thinking that box hill gets all this attention as its the only hill worth mentioning round them parts?

125m over 2.5k isn't much to get excited about is it!

it's not the biggest or steepest hill in the area but it is a recognisable and iconic climb thanks to the olympics and that. so naturally all the sportives want to use it. there's tons of great climbs west of dorking, many of the routes include some of them too

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JonD replied to dave atkinson | 9 years ago
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Dave Atkinson wrote:
mrchrispy wrote:

Am i right in thinking that box hill gets all this attention as its the only hill worth mentioning round them parts?

125m over 2.5k isn't much to get excited about is it!

it's not the biggest or steepest hill in the area but it is a recognisable and iconic climb thanks to the olympics and that. so naturally all the sportives want to use it. there's tons of great climbs west of dorking, many of the routes include some of them too

Plus there's the NT cafe at the top  1

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pruaga | 9 years ago
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Are there any nice hills in Uxbridge?

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Nilxs | 9 years ago
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Sorry Ukip, you just lost my vote.

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Nilxs | 9 years ago
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Sorry Ukip, you just lost my vote.

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fukawitribe replied to Nilxs | 9 years ago
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Nilxs wrote:

Sorry Ukip, you just lost my vote.

"Just" ?

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Bazza155 replied to Nilxs | 9 years ago
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Nilxs wrote:

Sorry Ukip, you just lost my vote.

Why?

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ianrobo replied to Nilxs | 9 years ago
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Nilxs wrote:

Sorry Ukip, you just lost my vote.

you were going to vote for the party of little englanders and going back to the victorian era ?

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catfordrichard replied to ianrobo | 9 years ago
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ianrobo wrote:
Nilxs wrote:

Sorry Ukip, you just lost my vote.

you were going to vote for the party of little englanders and going back to the victorian era ?

We did get a lot of nice new railway lines in that era though. Lots of capacity to take the cars off the roads...

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gwarpigs | 9 years ago
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Given the opportunity to pose a question to one of these anti-cycling nobs, I would ask simply 'Why?', and then 'Why?' again, then again, and I would bet at least two figs that after the second 'Why?' (if not the first), that the nob would be entirly flummoxed and unable to answer any further. Try it yourselves; it's remarkable how quickly you get to the point where the arguments against become entirely void.

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DAG on a bike | 9 years ago
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Never ridden Box Hill and can't recall last time I went up at all.

I have ridden on the Surrey hills many times and I am always amazed at the state of their roads. In the main they're atrocious, but with the occasional stretch of newly resurfaced tarmac (presumably adjacent to some influential local's residence).

I know that UKIP have some rather 'odd' ideas, but moving Box hill to Uxbridge? That's one feat of engineering.

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Bazza155 | 9 years ago
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As a resident in Boris's new constituency all I can say is brilliant. A cycle race on my door step.

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rliu | 9 years ago
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UKIP - the party for people who hate other people

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jollygoodvelo replied to rliu | 9 years ago
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rliu wrote:

UKIP - the party for people who hate other people

The party for people who are terrified that their lack of achievement has left a gap for someone to overtake them.

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ADaASasA | 9 years ago
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Muppet. But at the same time, even though I love cycling round there, there are some reasonable concerns from residents and it's good that Ride London was able to reflect these in the shortened times of road closures.

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ADaASasA | 9 years ago
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Muppet. But at the same time, even though I love cycling round there, there are some reasonable concerns from residents and it's good that Ride London was able to reflect these in the shortened times of road closures.

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ianrobo | 9 years ago
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that may be true but that do represent a certain profile of people in our country who think like that.

Lets call them all Jeremy Clarkson

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Adders69 | 9 years ago
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Ah, our old friends the Monster Raving UKIP party ...

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Leviathan | 9 years ago
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As long as we move Box Hill to Uxbridge as well. How about this, the Gherkin is 180m tall, Box Hill is 'only' 125m tall. Why not build a tower with a spiral climb around it? If it i okay to do a rollercoaster why not a road climb. Check this out: if it okay for Lord Foster to design with jumbo markers so can I...

you're welcome.

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AJ101 | 9 years ago
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The problem with cycling events is that they attract a lot of foreigners - The tour de france, the giro d'italia, all these foreign sort of places. The sooner we are out of Europe the sooner we can leave them to ride their own events. And re-instate the Milk Race. Oh look it's 1950 again!

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ragtag replied to AJ101 | 9 years ago
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I think ASO should have told Froome and Contador to do one, neither pays road tax in France. As for the Tour of Britain, that's just an immigrant's dream  35

Sadly this misinformed bunch of fascist hate-mongers appeal to the same politically blinded fools that watch Fox in America, and only believe what they want to believe.

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therevokid | 9 years ago
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ukip arse strikes again ... and people vote for these idiots ???

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Ants | 9 years ago
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Coming into our towns... spending their money...

Are people from different towns or counties the new "foreigners" for this bunch to revile?

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mike the bike | 9 years ago
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The poor wee dears of Surrey, it must be just awful for them. Those Syrian refugees, lounging about in their free tents, don't know they're born, do they?

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