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Mail Online blames London Cycle Superhighway for pedestrian deaths that never happened

Death of man struck by van is first near Ludgate Circus since protected bike lane opened

Mail Online, the sister website of the Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday, claims that a Cycle Superhighway on a road in London “has been blamed for several deaths” after a pedestrian lost their life there after being struck by a van driver last week.

However, road.cc’s research finds it is the first fatality in the vicinity since the separated infrastructure opened last year.

Even before the Cycle Superhighway was built, the City of London Corporation highlighted that the location, at the junction of Ludgate Circus, was one where “many pedestrians ignore the pedestrian crossings.”

James Poyner, who sent road.cc a link to the Daily Mail’s article, told us of Friday’s death: “Really sad story but the idea that the segregated cycle lane is to blame is nonsense.

“The lights work, if people are willing to wait 45-60 seconds.”

The fatal crash happened yards from Ludgate Circus on New Bridge Street, which is on the route of the North-South Cycle Superhighway, which then continues along Farringdon Road.

Mail Online’s article, published on Friday, said in the headline that the victim was a woman – in fact, it was a man – and opens with the sentence: “A pedestrian has been killed after being hit by a van on a busy London street where a segregated cycle path has been blamed for several deaths.”

It continued: “The area is notorious for deaths because of its large junctions and lack of pedestrian crossings.

“Bystanders who saw the aftermath of the collisions raised concerns over the kerb of the so-called 'cycle superhighway' which pedestrians see as a convenient place to cross the road.”

Mail Online has vociferously opposed segregated infrastructure for cyclists in the capital, but in  this case its claim that pedestrians were killed there prior to last week’s fatality is not true, with none on record in the area since the Cycle Superhighway was opened nor in the previous decade.

Sam Jones, Cycling UK campaigner, told road.cc: “It’s quite a leap of logic to blame a static piece of infrastructure designed to keep people cycling safe for the tragic death of a pedestrian caused by a motor vehicle.

“Rather than seeking to further its clear anti-cycling agenda under the pretence of concerns about road safety, perhaps the Daily Mail might like to ask why the government isn’t doing more to address the 10 percent increase in pedestrian fatalities on our roads last year?”

While the Daily Mail does not provide an example of another fatality involving a pedestrian at the location in question, it does highlight the case of cyclist Janine Gehlau, aged 32, crushed to death when a tipper truck driver turned left across her path in October 2014.

The driver of the tipper truck involved, Vincent Doyle, was subsequently acquitted by a jury at the Old Bailey of causing her death by careless driving despite evidence suggesting he had not checked his mirrors.

Earlier in 2014, 32-year-old Victor Manuel Ben Rodriguez lost his life as a result of head injuries sustained when he was hit by a lorry while cycling through the same junction.

In the same week that the incident that claimed Mrs Gehlau’s life took place, the City of London Corporation, in a report compiled as part of its initial response to a consultation on the route of the Cycle Superhighway, said of Ludgate Circus: “It is already a location where many pedestrians ignore the pedestrian crossings.

Junction of New Bridge Street and Ludgate Circus (looking south, via Google Street View).PNG

“The proposed stagger crossings, reduced refuges island widths, excessive increases in wait times and the additional two-way cycle lane running through the junction, will add further risks and collisions, particularly to pedestrians.”

The report added: “Pedestrian crossings need to be simple, straightforward and useable. At Ludgate Circus, they need to be single stage crossings.”

In its response to the consultation, Transport for London (TfL) confirmed that the plans for Ludgate Circus had been changed to provide single stage rather than staggered crossings.

Local office workers who spoke to the London Evening Standard after Friday’s fatality did say however that some pedestrians were waiting on the kerbs of the Cycle Superhighway to cross the road, instead of the signalised pedestrian crossings, one of which is just yards from where the collision happened.

PR manager Anthony Gale said: “Normally I cycle that route every day but I got the train this morning. I think the superhighway does make it better but it is the [Ludgate Circus] junction itself that is the problem, as the traffic lights all change together and the pedestrians walk diagonally across it.

“Yesterday a pedestrian was nearly hit by a cyclist. She was on her phone. She waited on almost identically the same spot. The cyclist had to swerve around her and the cyclist was quite irate about it.

“What happens is that because the crossings are quite far apart, people see a little island [the superhighway kerb] and they try to cross. That is a big issue. Often you see pedestrians on their phone waiting to cross. 

“I think there is an issue with how packed the pavements tend to be. When pedestrians use the cycle lane they’re not necessarily aware of the cyclists - there can either be no cyclists or 40 or 50 cyclists coming towards them, because of the way they are held on Blackfriars Bridge. Everyone ends up crossing in a higgleldy-piggeldy way.”

Another local worker who spoke to the newspaper claimed that there had been eight incidents of differing severity in the area in the preceding months and said, “It can’t continue.”

She went on: “These deaths [sic] are avoidable” – possibly the source of the Mail Online’s assertion that there had been a number of pedestrian fatalities at the location.

“People hover near the traffic lights. There used to be an island in the middle where you could cross. Now it’s not obvious where the danger might be coming from. Often you see tourists jumping – they lose their judgement. It’s like a jinxed junction – it doesn’t work.”

Pedestrian and cyclist deaths and serious injuries near Ludgate Circus before Cycle Superhighway

Using TfL’s interactive London Collision Map, we analysed collisions between 2005 and 2015 in and around Ludgate Circus in which a cyclist or pedestrian was killed or seriously injured. The period pre-dates the opening of the North-South Cycle Superhighway.

We found that on what is now the route of the Cycle Superhighway itself (new Bridge Street-Ludgate Circus-Farringdon Road), two cyclists were killed and 10 seriously injured (one of the latter in a collision with a pedestrian who sustained slight injuries). Four pedestrians were seriously injured, all in collisions involving light or heavy goods vehicles.

During the same period, on Fleet Street and Ludgate Hill close to their junctions with Ludgate Circus, four cyclists and three pedestrians were seriously injured in collisions with road traffic vehicles.

NB: This article was amended on 27 October 2017 at the request of the Daily Mail to clarify that the article to which it refers was published on the website Mail Online and not in the newspaper.

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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20 comments

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thereverent | 7 years ago
0 likes

Interesting they've updated the story yesterday to change the headline slightly.

You can always complain to IPSO https://www.ipso.co.uk/make-a-complaint/ on the grounds of factual accuracy. Remember to compain both about the Daily Mail story and the Mail Online story.

Avatar
thereverent replied to thereverent | 7 years ago
2 likes

thereverent wrote:

Interesting they've updated the story yesterday to change the headline slightly.

You can always complain to IPSO https://www.ipso.co.uk/make-a-complaint/ on the grounds of factual accuracy. Remember to compain both about the Daily Mail story and the Mail Online story.

I complained through IPSO and now have an e-mail back from MailOnline explaining how they corrected the article.

I'll see if I get one back from the Daily Mail (as they have been very clear that they are seperate organisations in the past).

 

Avatar
davel replied to thereverent | 7 years ago
0 likes
thereverent wrote:

thereverent wrote:

Interesting they've updated the story yesterday to change the headline slightly.

You can always complain to IPSO https://www.ipso.co.uk/make-a-complaint/ on the grounds of factual accuracy. Remember to compain both about the Daily Mail story and the Mail Online story.

I complained through IPSO and now have an e-mail back from MailOnline explaining how they corrected the article.

I'll see if I get one back from the Daily Mail (as they have been very clear that they are seperate organisations in the past).

 

Good work

Avatar
mike the bike | 7 years ago
4 likes

 

Every person over the age of 40 should be required to read the Mail for five minutes a day.  It will familiarise you with how it feels to have a stroke.

Avatar
crazy-legs | 7 years ago
9 likes

This would be the same Daily Mail that today published a headline screaming about the injustice of drivers being used as "£1bn cash cows" for "relatively minor" offences like speeding and jumping red lights.

http://singletrackworld.com/forum/topic/rljing-only-a-minor-offence-say-...

The same Daily Mail that recently called for a crackdown on RLJing by cyclists because of how dangerous it is.

Wouldn't even use it to line the cat litter tray.

 

Avatar
brooksby replied to crazy-legs | 7 years ago
2 likes

crazy-legs wrote:

The same Daily Mail that recently called for a crackdown on RLJing by cyclists because of how dangerous it is.

Yes, but that's different...  After all: er, something...

Avatar
petergilheany | 7 years ago
6 likes

Ignoring the DM's spin on the issue I cycle through that junction every day and I think it definitely needs some design tweaks to make it safer for pedestrians. I'm sure the need to worship the god of traffic flow will preclude it but additional green man phases would make a real difference during rush hour.

Avatar
Leviathan | 7 years ago
4 likes

Nazi Rag.

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Goldfever4 | 7 years ago
3 likes

Ridiculous leap by DM but unsurprising in London where everyone is impatient or a tourist.

Avatar
LJS replied to Goldfever4 | 7 years ago
2 likes

Goldfever4 wrote:

Ridiculous leap by DM but unsurprising in London where everyone is impatient or a tourist.

lovely bit of stereotyping there.

Avatar
Goldfever4 replied to LJS | 7 years ago
1 like

LJS wrote:

Goldfever4 wrote:

Ridiculous leap by DM but unsurprising in London where everyone is impatient or a tourist.

lovely bit of stereotyping there.

Part joke part own experience as a Londoner who escaped.

Avatar
Beecho replied to Goldfever4 | 7 years ago
4 likes

Goldfever4 wrote:

Ridiculous leap by DM but unsurprising in London where everyone is impatient or a tourist.

You forgot the homeless. Shame on you.

Avatar
IanW1968 | 7 years ago
1 like

Although I cant actually read the article due to the ads on this site. 

Avatar
IanW1968 | 7 years ago
7 likes

The people who work at the Daily Mail are cretins, cant we just laugh at them and anyone who reads that junk?

Avatar
Gourmet Shot replied to IanW1968 | 7 years ago
7 likes

IanW1968 wrote:

The people who work at the Daily Mail are cretins, cant we just laugh at them and anyone who reads that junk?

No because its an insidiously hateful publication 

Avatar
slow_going replied to IanW1968 | 7 years ago
7 likes

IanW1968 wrote:

The people who work at the Daily Mail are cretins, cant we just laugh at them and anyone who reads that junk?

 

Not when that junk often ends up influencing public opinion and political decision making. Our current political culture is in absolute thrall to the Daily Mail and Daily Express in particular.

Avatar
beezus fufoon | 7 years ago
11 likes

- the junction was one where “many pedestrians ignore the pedestrian crossings.”

yes, in London we call that "a junction or any of the road space in between junctions"

Avatar
Grahamd | 7 years ago
5 likes

Am beginning to think that Donald Trump must read the DM.

Avatar
Dnnnnnn replied to Grahamd | 7 years ago
7 likes

Grahamd wrote:

Am beginning to think that Donald Trump must read the DM.

Trump can read?

Typically misleading from the DM. Anyone with critical thinking skills would see how tenuous their connections are (and how clear their agenda) - but I'm not sure they're aiming for such an audience. No shame about using a tragedy to fuel their hateful agenda - SAD!

Avatar
rliu | 7 years ago
21 likes

Has truth ever mattered to the DM? Disgusting poison and stain on this country.

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