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Anti-cycle lane campaigners conga along seafront to protest new “Mickey Mouse” road layout

Opponents of Clevedon’s active travel scheme also claimed that “high speed lycra clad cyclists” pose a danger to children on the town’s new bike lane

Campaigners opposed to the installation of a segregated cycle lane and one-way system along Clevedon’s seafront formed a conga line at the weekend to protest against the new road layout, which they say has turned the North Somerset town into “Balamory from hell”.

On Sunday afternoon, around 300 activists paraded along the promenade as part of a protest organised by the ‘Save Our Seafront’ campaign, a local residents’ group demanding that North Somerset Council scrap its almost-completed initiative to create space for active travel and reconfigure parking in the town, SomersetLive reports.

The campaign’s latest demonstration was organised to highlight what it regards as the council’s “ridiculous” decision to paint ‘wavy’ lines on the new one-way road, which the local authority says will help reduce driving speeds as well as curbing the “potential abuse of parking” along the seafront.

> Controversial cycle lane roadworks blamed for “killing Christmas trade” 

As well as the new ‘wobbly’ lane, North Somerset Council’s plans to improve Hill Road and The Beach in Clevedon also include the creation of a bidirectional 400-metre-long cycle lane, new cycle parking provision, widening the pavement along the seafront, and building parklets outside cafés.

Additional car parking has also been created at the eastern entrance of Hill Road to replace those spaces removed due to the installation of four new pedestrian crossings as well as loading bays to service local businesses.

The speed limit on the seafront and surrounding roads – where in September 2020 a cyclist sustained critical injuries in a collision involving a motorist – is to be reduced to 20mph, and it will also be made one-way.

According to the council, the scheme “aims to encourage more walking and cycling in the town” as part of its “commitment to promoting healthier lifestyles and tackling the climate emergency”. 

> Ex-cabinet minister Liam Fox protests against planned seafront bike lane funded by government money

However, while a public consultation found that 50 percent of locals supported the plans, compared to 42 percent who opposed the scheme, since the initiative was announced ‘Save Our Seafront’ has led a high-profile campaign against the redevelopment and penned a petition to the council which attracted over 6,000 signatures.

The Conservative MP for North Somerset and former cabinet minister Liam Fox is among the locals opposed to the measures, and in early 2022 tweeted that “huge numbers” joined a protest “on a cold and windy January day against North Somerset Council’s plans to destroy our seafront with a cycle lane that is neither needed, wanted, nor a good use of scarce resources.”

Last month, we reported that the roadworks required to finish the project have also been blamed for driving away customers from local shops and restaurants, and “killing Christmas trade” – despite most traders in the town declaring their support for the new active travel measures.

And now, Save Our Seafront has turned its attention to the newly painted road layout on the promenade – converted to a one-way street to allow for the installation of the bike lane – which has seen its wavy lines attract the attention of the national press, who have dubbed it a “snake lane” and a “driving lane for drink drivers”. 

North Somerset Council says the wavy lines are “a design feature to reduce the potential abuse of parking at these locations and help make the road feel narrower, which is a technique used to slow traffic speeds.”

“A wavy line provides uncertainty to the driver and is proven to help reduce unwanted parking,” a council spokesperson told the Metro last week

“Causing confusion to drivers is never a good idea”

Nevertheless, the unusual design has prompted the opponents of the scheme to renew their campaign with a fresh wave of protests and petitions claiming the layout will make the seafront more dangerous and harm businesses.

“The curving lines on Clevedon seafront are Mickey Mouse crazy. Causing confusion to drivers is never a good idea,” Save Our Seafront spokesperson Cathy Hawkins told SomersetLive.

“We are against the changes for many reasons and want the seafront to be put back to how it was. But we are primarily concerned about the safety issues, loss of parking, and the effect on local businesses in the area who are 100 percent against the scheme.

“We received safety information from North Somerset that shows, in the last five years, there have been only two personal injury accidents in the whole scheme area. This is an exceptionally good safety record and suggests the expression when auditing road schemes, ‘if it isn’t broken, don’t try and fix it’.

“Both accidents involved injury to non-motorised road users (one pedestrian and one cyclist), and the changes are likely to increase the potential risk for similar accidents of both natures.”

The activist, however, failed to acknowledge that one of those incidents, as noted above, involved a collision between a cyclist and a motorist, leaving the person on the bike with critical injuries.

Hawkins also told the local newspaper that the group has written to the Secretary of State for Transport, Mark Harper, to ask whether any mechanisms are available to bring the scheme to a halt on safety grounds.

“We protested the changes on Sunday in the hope that North Somerset will at last listen and talk to us about our safety, parking concerns and the detrimental effect on trade for the local businesses,” Hawkins continued.

“We have begged them for over two years to meet and talk to us about this scheme, but they have always refused, and despite the leader of the council, Steve Bridger, saying that he will engage with the community and listen, he has failed to do so, even when we wrote to him personally to request a face to face meeting.

“This lack of engagement and our real concerns that the silly wriggly line making the seafront look like Blobby Land is dangerous for cyclists, motorists, and pedestrians means we have had to take this direct action and have more actions planned.”

Soon after the wavy lines were revealed along the seafront last week, Conservative MP Fox once again criticised the initiative, which he dismissed as “not necessary”.

“A vast amount of public money is being spent to solve a problem which does not actually exist,” the former Secretary of State for International Trade said.

“We do not have major road safety issues on Clevedon seafront at present, despite it being a Victorian amenity. We will, however, have safety issues in the future as a result of the incompetent plans of the current North Somerset Council.

“The project is not popular, not safe, not affordable, not properly consulted upon and not necessary. It damages historic amenity, will disadvantage visitors, especially the elderly, will disrupt local trade and impede access to local residents.”

Sharing a post from Clevedon Conservatives highlighting the new road layout, the party’s Yatton branch also echoed Fox’s claims that the scheme will pose significant risks for locals, including the potential for “car doors opening into [the] cycle lane” and the apparent danger of “mixing high speed lycra clad cyclists with children”.

Responding to Sunday’s protest, North Somerset Council once again defended the layout and wavy lines, which it says are due to be finished with a surface treatment in the spring.

“Safety is a priority and a road safety audit was completed when the scheme was designed. There will also be a further one undertaken when it’s completed,” the spokesperson said.

After obtaining a PhD, lecturing, and hosting a history podcast at Queen’s University Belfast, Ryan joined road.cc in December 2021 and since then has kept the site’s readers and listeners informed and enthralled (well at least occasionally) on news, the live blog, and the road.cc Podcast. After boarding a wrong bus at the world championships and ruining a good pair of jeans at the cyclocross, he now serves as road.cc’s senior news writer. Before his foray into cycling journalism, he wallowed in the equally pitiless world of academia, where he wrote a book about Victorian politics and droned on about cycling and bikes to classes of bored students (while taking every chance he could get to talk about cycling in print or on the radio). He can be found riding his bike very slowly around the narrow, scenic country lanes of Co. Down.

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81 comments

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Hirsute replied to brooksby | 1 year ago
1 like

Ok, so what's the difference between independent and no political group ?

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brooksby replied to Hirsute | 1 year ago
0 likes
hirsute wrote:

Ok, so what's the difference between independent and no political group ?

Your guess is as good as mine.

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Hirsute replied to brooksby | 1 year ago
2 likes

Maybe they are members of something like the monster raving loony party.

Policies of minting a 99p coin and forbidding greyhound racing in order to "stop the country going to the dogs".

 

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David9694 replied to brooksby | 1 year ago
4 likes

Oh please Miss, Miss pick me, Miss 

Now, David let's see if anyone who wasn't in local government for 20 years knows. Anyone?

Mi-i-ss!!

David, your arm's going to fall out of its socket one of these days. Go on. 

It's the Local Government & Housing Act 1989, Miss and the  The Local Government (Committees and Political Groups) Regulations 1990. The Act implemented the Widdicombe Committee's recommendation as to proportionate  appointments to local authority committees.

That's nearly right, David...

Well, Miss, to achieve that the councillors have to establish designated political groups, and the overall number of committee seats is decided and then and then... 

Yes...

And then the Monitoring Officer applies the basket principle to allocate the available committee seats to each group in accordance with the proportion of seats on the council each group holds. 

And the "no political group" councillors ?

they probably won't get any seats on committees. 

Very good David, well done. You can sit down now. 

But There's more Miss, as local government has got more politicised, independent and other non-aligned councillors often struggle to get elected against the main parties, yet people often say councillors shouldn't be political.

BBBRRRIINGGG!

that bell is for me, not for you!

 

 

 

 

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OnYerBike replied to David9694 | 1 year ago
1 like

So in layman's terms:

"The Independents" are registered as a single political party for the purpose of the local government, and so treated as a group in the same way as other political parties. The fact that Independent politicians might have very different policies to each other is irrelevant to being a single political party, legally speaking. 

"No political party" are not members of The Independents or any other registered political party.

Right?

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David9694 replied to OnYerBike | 1 year ago
1 like

Your personal political affiliations/ which ticket you were elected on don't officially have to reflect which political Group you join - if they will have you, you are in. 

To keep it simple, if there were 50 committee seats (say 5 committees of 10) on a council of 50, your group gets a 1:1 share of these seats, to the nearest integer, of course. If it's 40 seats available (e.g. 5 x8), then you need a spreadsheet to crunch the numbers. You have to sort out the remainders (fractions of a person) manually. 

The non-aligned 3 may have been elected as independents, or have dropped out of their party.  The Cllrs in the Independent Group could have stood as such or have become such and may or may not agree with one another other in practice - the Group would be a flag of convenience in that scenario.  The problem for independents at election time is you're reliant on your personality, not a party brand and organisation to get votes. 

I can't remember what you do if you've got non aligned Cllrs. The object of the Act is the fair allocation of committee seats, but the mechanism is political groups. I can't magic the three into a political group, so I think I'd do the calculations with 47 as the denominator, so for example the Conservative Group would 13/47ths of the basket of committee seats, whether it was 50 or 40 etc. 

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lonpfrb replied to brooksby | 1 year ago
0 likes
brooksby wrote:
hirsute wrote:

Ok, so what's the difference between independent and no political group ?

Your guess is as good as mine.

Agnostics & Atheists?

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eburtthebike replied to Hirsute | 1 year ago
2 likes
hirsute wrote:

Ok, so what's the difference between independent and no political group ?

Independents are people with no principles or strategy or much understanding of anything, who make grand promises that they never carry out.  Quite why they aren't in the tories baffles me.

No political group are those who are too indecisive to be an independent.

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Simon_MacMichael replied to The Larger Cyclist | 1 year ago
4 likes

The Larger Cyclist wrote:

I was guessing that as the Tory MP was against it, the Council was Labour controlled but it seems to be a Tory majority if not actually fully in control!

North Somerset was Conservative-controlled from 2007-19, but has no overall control since then, Independents won 13 seats in 2019, as did the Tories (who lost 23 seats, but remain the largest main party).

Interestingly, however, the Conservatives did not win any of the five wards that make up Clevedon itself - two are independent, two are Lib Dem, one is Labour.

Plenty of past instances though of MPs opposing their local council's plans for active travel, etc,  even when it is same party, and it isn't confiened to Conservatives - my own MP, Lanbour's Rupa Huq, opposed Ealing Council's LTN plans (which were subsequently scrapped, partly as a ressult of the usual small but noisy opposition).

 

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brooksby replied to Simon_MacMichael | 1 year ago
2 likes
Simon_MacMichael wrote:

North Somerset was Conservative-controlled from 2007-19, but has no overall control since then, Independents won 13 seats in 2019, as did the Tories (who lost 23 seats, but remain the largest main party).

Interestingly, however, the Conservatives did not win any of the five wards that make up Clevedon itself - two are independent, two are Lib Dem, one is Labour.

North Somerset is interesting in some of the gerrymandering which went on in the Pill/Ham Green/Abbots Leigh area a couple of years ago.  Boundaries moved around, to shore up the Conservative councillor who was the then leader of the council.  Allegedly.

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David9694 replied to brooksby | 1 year ago
0 likes

They do seem pretty keen on reorganising in Somerset.

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IanMK | 1 year ago
8 likes

So much to unpack

"Huge numbers joined the protest", around 100 people or put it another way 0.5% of the population.

"want the seafront to be put back to how it was" climate change denial, unless we do more to cobat climate chage our coast line will change forever.

"Both accidents involved injury to non-motorised road users" If this acceptable then for clarity we need to know what the unacceptable level of injury would be.

"despite it being a Victorian amenity" perhaps try to recreate it as a victorian style amenity with a distinct lack of cars.

danger of “mixing high speed lycra clad cyclists with children”  We aren't catholic priests  Seriously, would love to see children out on their bikes using safe cycle infra. If I want to go high speed there's always a perfectly good road.

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Clem Fandango replied to IanMK | 1 year ago
10 likes

"lycra clad" - check

says it all really

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IanMK replied to Clem Fandango | 1 year ago
10 likes

Exactly, you may get some "mamils" heading out that way for a well earned coffee and cake. They are not going to be speeding up and down trying to beat their PB on Strava. The infra has presumably been built so that families (and others) can get on their bikes and cycle to the beach and leave their car on the driveway. That's exactly what this was designed for.

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ShutTheFrontDawes replied to IanMK | 1 year ago
7 likes

The fact it's Clevedon doesn't surprise me at all.

There have always been no-cycling signs along the path adjacent to the sea front, but they're all stickers that some pleb has put up, and not actual signs put up by the council. And saying people have complained (not to my face of course, but through loud tutting and moaning) about my kids cycling along there. Needless to say, the signs and the miserable cretins were all ignored.

This is just another example of the self-elected Clevedon fun police and should be similarly ignored.

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jaymack replied to ShutTheFrontDawes | 1 year ago
5 likes

I'm proud to come from a long and unbroken line of plebs.

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ShutTheFrontDawes replied to jaymack | 1 year ago
6 likes
jaymack wrote:

I'm proud to come from a long and unbroken line of plebs.

Can you stop putting the stickers up then, please?  3

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NOtotheEU replied to ShutTheFrontDawes | 1 year ago
2 likes
ShutTheFrontDawes wrote:

This is just another example of the self-elected Clevedon fun police and should be similarly ignored.

Like the 'keep off the wall' signs. Loved running along those as a kid & I used to let my son do the same whenever we visited (& occasionally joined him 😁)

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Car Delenda Est replied to IanMK | 1 year ago
5 likes

Strange how they claim to be protecting children by making them entirely dependant on adults for transportation, that's not a healthy power dynamic and we certainly shouldn't be enforcing it.

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ShutTheFrontDawes | 1 year ago
7 likes

"Huge numbers" alongside a photo of <100 people.

It's a good thing the disgraced former Secretary of State for Defence, the Right Honourable Dr Liam Fox MP is no longer in charge of anything important, isn't it?!

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Clem Fandango replied to ShutTheFrontDawes | 1 year ago
8 likes

really diverse looking group too aren't they?

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