The month of May keeps throwing one curveball after another, as this Tory government (on its way out, some would argue) seems quite intent on legislating laws for cyclists.
The ‘dangerous cycling bill’ was first agreed to be passed by ministers in the House of Commons last week, amidst severe backlash and criticism from cycling and walking charities and campaigners, and then disregarded after PM Rishi Sunak decided to call a general election on the 4th of July, leaving the Lords with not enough time to pass the bill and make it into a law.
And now yesterday, another hot topic — insurance for cyclists was debated in the House of Lords, with Lord Hogan-Howe expressing his feelings about why it should be legislated. He said: “Over the last 20 years injuries of pedestrians hit by cyclists have drastically increased — more than doubling. Every day, we see people ignoring one-way signs, going across pedestrian crossings, through red lights and across pelican crossings while pedestrians are on them.
“Cyclists are not even governed by speed limits in the way that motor vehicles are. Has not the time come for the Government to consider insurance to compensate people for the damage that cyclists can cause, and for registration marks to identify those who have committed an offence and deter those who might?
“Finally, where a cyclist commits an offence and has a driving licence, their licence might be endorsed with points for the offences which they have committed as a cyclist. Many may consider this to be a vote loser, but I think it is a vote winner.”
Fortunately, there was hardly in agreement with Lord Hogan-Howe. Lord Davies, Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State in the Department for Transport, replied saying that “dangerous cycling puts lives at risk and is completely unacceptable” and “cyclists are required to comply with road traffic law”.
> Grant Shapps: Cyclists should have number plates, be insured and subject to speed limits
However, he added that the government had considered mandatory registration and insurance for cyclists as part of a comprehensive review in 2018 and decided against it “as the cost and complexity of introducing such a system would far outweigh the benefits”.
I wonder if the government had already reviewed the proposal in 2018, why did former Transport Secretary Grant Shapps raise the issue again in the summer of 2022, leading to his now-infamous backpedalling, a U-turn so sharp and quick that it would put the best bike handlers to shame.
The issue of bike insurance also came up in the news on Sunday, as the Spanish city of Zaragoza launched an ordinance that could make it mandatory for cyclists to have an insurance and carry that with them at all times, with the police having the power to stop anyone and ask them to show it. Even children learning how to cycle would legally be required to have an insurance.
> “Pure bile and prejudice”: Cyclists slam local government’s proposal to introduce “mandatory bike insurance” and urging cyclists to “encourage overtaking” in Spanish city
Meanwhile, a number of other Lords were also in agreement that introducing a mandatory insurance for cyclists would be detrimental and not cost-effective, the feistiest of responses in yesterday’s debate came from Lord Ian Austin of Dudley.
“My Lords, this is utterly ridiculous,” he said. “Everybody using the roads should abide by the rules, but the figures bear out that many more pedestrians are hurt by drivers than by cyclists. Frankly, every day I see cars jumping red lights, speeding and going across pedestrian crossings, and the police are not able to enforce all of those at the moment.
“The best way to make our roads safer is to get more people on bikes. That would improve the environment and public health. Is the Minister not completely right to say that this will cost a fortune, be incredibly complex and massively bureaucratic and, as the noble Lord, Lord Hogan-Howe, knows better than anybody, with the pressures that the police are already under, be utterly unenforceable.”
“Hear, hear,” the chamber echoed in unison.
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"I believe that this (compulsory insurance for cyclists) is a vote-winner."
So there it is in plain sight. Not something that will makes people's lives better but simply something that will help keep these corrupt bastards in power. Once again putting party before country.
I hope these Tory cunts are out of power for a generation.
https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/clocking-strava-cyclists-regents-park...
Made it to the first sentence before the paywall kicked in. Sure enough there's a "lycra-clad" right up there. So we can safely ignore this one.
Gotta love election season
I read it, didn't really have much of a point to the article. Basically, they went there, saw not a lot, quoted some facts that didn't back up the article's attempt at fuelling the hysteria:
"During 90 minutes in the park this week, The Times recorded a handful of cyclists travelling above the 20mph speed limit for cars, although many were below the limit."
"The Outer Circle is one of the most popular segments in the UK, but also the most controversial. The segment for one lap of the park, 2.7 miles, has now been taken down, or “flagged”, as hazardous. Some 42,284 Strava users have ridden two laps of the park 2,162,122 times."
On Jeremy Vine.
The more dangerous encounter is with the big lorry, and that had to squeeze in as there in a transit unloading too close to the junction on the other side of the road.
Lords Debate
Have not listened yet, but did no one tell Lord Hogan-Holier-than-Thou that a large majority of cyclists probably *do* already have liability insurance via Household or other.
And the - like IDS - he needs to turn his brain on and do some f*cking homework.
On the claim that injury cost has doubled in 20 years, that's about the same as inflation, and niles per pop cycled is up 50%.
Who was the Lord who called him out on his BS?
Talking of crows, is it wrong for me to sing to myself the Ki-ora advert song when I notice a crow out and about, and to continue the more I see in the group?
As I wrote below, this ASL stuff is like arguing about how many angels fit on the head of a pin- a waste of time. Lancashire Constabulary doesn't understand it either: they claimed that if the lights turn red after (some unspecified part of...) the vehicle crosses the ASL, it is legal for the driver to continue to cross the true stop line after the light has turned red. The reason stated was that the true stop line and the box are only for cyclists. The legal stop line has not been altered by the advent of the ASL- the fault of motorised vehicles stopping in the box is a separate one which is, I'm sure, never prosecuted. In practice, on the A6 lights where I film my red light offences, they're crashing through at 50-60 mph when they should have decided to stop 3 seconds before when the lights turned amber
I once had an argument with a motorcyclist about me having crossed the white line at a junction. The cycle lane to the left had a van parked in it so I had gone round the outside of the queue, and when I arrived at the advanced stop box there was said motorcyclist stopped in it. Not wanting to stop to the right of him I pulled in front to the left and waited, when he started to berate me for 'jumping the light'.
Of course, he'd jumped the light too, but didn't seem to know that the stop box isn't for motorcyclists.
Of course, he'd jumped the light too, but didn't seem to know that the stop box isn't for motorcyclists
These disputes about lesser points are hardly relevant when the police here excuse pretty much any red-light offences by motorists, just as these were determinedly not acted upon
https://upride.cc/incident/pj23vmc_honda125_redlightcross/
https://upride.cc/incident/g16dht_hgvtrainer_redlightcross/
https://upride.cc/incident/k7ddy_audia4_redlightpass/
IME, probably yes - but of course he could be stopped there legally if the lights changed after he crossed the first line.
However, if one anticipates lights changing in much the same way that many drivers don't seem to, stopping in the ASL is almost always avoidable.
They should be treated in very much the same way that yellow hatched boxes are: don't enter unless your way is clear. You can easily adjust the speed of approach so that if you could stop at the further line, you could stop at the first, or if you can go through the first as the lights start to change you can safely clear the second.
It's just that peope don't give a monkey's about that... because cyclists innit.
I've never been "forced" to stop in an ASL when driving. I use this one weird trick called "paying attention and planning my driving". It will never catch on with the majority of drivers but it works for me.
As a peer, and a cross-bench one at that, Crocodile Dunpolicing is two steps removed from any concern about vote-winning for his position.
He was, however, responsible for enforcing criminal law in the UK's largets police force; a role which one might assume tips its cap in the general direction of evidence from time to time.
So it remains a mystery why he should think that the key impetus for making draconian changes to affect a minority, vulnerable user group - ahead of any changes to protect them - is how it polls, rather than the evidence for its efficacy, equality or ethical validity.
What a chump!
Maybe he's received a nice gift from some interested party?
https://www.bristolpost.co.uk/news/uk-world-news/joey-barton-calling-jer...
What is this nonsense that cyclists are the only road users who don't have tax, insurance or a form of identification, as per the lords debate. What about horses, horse-drawn carriages. Or indeed, the most numerous category of road users: pedestrians.
You're applying logic, and this whole boondongle is just about being divisive and trying to prevent people from cycling or taking up cycling. Remember, Sunak did his best to kill people with his "Eat Out to Help Out" scheme and this attack on cycling is trying to ensure that more people will die from cardiovascular and inactivity related diseases.
Quite so.
What about also the fact that many of us routinely have identification, do have insurance (far more than would be required under the RTA if we were driving motor vehicles). And that the penalty for killing another road user is disproportionately heavier for those who were cycling at the time than for those driving.
'Leave the racing to that cyclist who averaged 52mph on that segment featured in the telegraph.'
they say a day is a long time in politics, yesterday alot of people were smugly celebrating the demise of the IDS amendment in the criminal justice bill.
and then up pops a question in the Lords, showing theres just as much antipathy towards cyclists in the unelected upper chamber, and absolutely a way for the bill and the IDS amendments to be resurrected post election.
in fact it wasnt just the one Lord, surprised Road.cc didnt cover the whole Q&A session as Lord Winston (Lab) then asked about licensing for cyclists, a theme he has repeatedly laboured on, insisting without licensing it would be impossible to force cyclists to obey the laws.
Lord Birt (cross bench) asked, "Does the Minister agree that bikers, like other road users, should be required to display identifiers and be held responsible for their unlawful and unsocial actions?" insisting that cyclists make the pedestrian experience nerve wracking and hazardous.
and Baroness McIntosh (con) asked that "the Government undertake to confiscate any bicycle if the owner or rider of it perpetrates a major breach of road traffic offences"
that snapshot may not have concluded any real change, but rest assured if an opportunity to do something about cyclists presents itself, as a bill or as an amendment to a bill they have to scrutinise, there will be more support for it in the Lords than you imagine.
Can we just start with a crack down on illegal mopeds first?
All those delivery drivers using throttles, having assistance above 15mph, more than 250w motors, those are all unlicenced mopeds, lacking number plates and lacking insurance.
I'm not saying all cyclists are perfect, but almost all the issues I see in my city of "cyclists" jumping lights, riding on pavements etc are actually these illegal mopeds.
It would be interesting to drill in to this his claim "Over the last 20 years injuries of pedestrians hit by cyclists have drastically increased". If cycling increases incidents will inevitably increase. Has he conflated cyclists and scooter data? How many of these cyclists Did have insurance? When an incident occurs this rarely gets mentioned. Also how many would be uninsurable because they weren't Road legal (which is exactly your point)?
Also why does the question of insurance not apply to other groups. Eg if I'm cycling on a cycle path in a park and I get hit and knocked off by a rogue football should I be able to claim on that kids public liability insurance?
It's a red herring designed to attack cycling.
According to cycling uk 2% of Pedestrians casualties caused by cyclists compared to 98% by drivers.
Which might actually suggest "wait a minute then - scale the numbers by trips / milage / time* and cyclists look quite dangerous, because there aren't many".
I think there are a couple of points to counter that. First the actual numbers are really small (as well as when compared to the casualties from drivers). Second there are some question marks about "involved in collision" in some of the data sets.
In addition I don't think you can just extrapolate from those numbers to e.g. say "but but if we have e.g. four times as many cyclists we'll have four times the casualties"! That's because I don't think you can get that kind of significant increase in cycling without fundamentally changing our approach to road safety and indeed the infra. And that is a significant enough change that other bets are off.
Of course I guess it's possible the UK could somehow design infra that encouraged more cycling but did nothing to make it safer for pedestrians OR reduce the volume of motor traffic ... but I doubt you can realistically have one without the other. People cycling are generally not keen to cycle around or indeed into pedestrians either!
* Previously been debate about the fairest comparison method. I think this always comes with a "pinch of salt" since "exposure" to cyclists and drivers is actually different e.g. in the UK due to (badly designed) "shared use" the amount of time potentially in conflict will differ etc.
I believe it is over a 4 or 5 year period so it equates to around 2,500 involving cyclists compared to 122,000 involving drivers. That said I did not drill deeper enough to determine how comparable the injuries were. I would hazard a guess that the severity of the injuries could be potentially less compared to the injuries caused by drivers. However as you alluded to proper infrastructure where cyclists and pedestrians are likely to interact this figure would likely reduce?
Involving cyclists rather than caused by.
Sorry I stand corrected I was sitting in the barbers at the time of typing and trying to retrieve the numbers I had seen somewhere 😉. I think this was also based over a 4 or 5 year period? Also probably doesn't go into the details of what the incident or injury for example is compared to drivers.
“Finally, where a cyclist commits an offence and has a driving licence, their licence might be endorsed with points for the offences which they have committed as a cyclist. Many may consider this to be a vote loser, but I think it is a vote winner.”
might as well drive to the pub then, since it seems I could still be banned even if I cycle.
"“Over the last 20 years injuries of pedestrians hit by cyclists have drastically increased — more than doubling"
I wonder what the change in number of people cycling is over the last 20 years. In London I expect it has much more than doubled. So each individual cyclist may be less likely to collide with a pedsestrian. The lord paints a picture of increasing lawlessness, but I think it's just a question of growth.
And of course "hit by cyclists" does not differentiate between pedestrians crossing correctly (or on the pavement) and being injured by cyclists doing wrong, and pedestrians walking into the road in front of cyclists without looking, relying only on their ears. A trend which has surely increased since the introduction of smart phones.
I was stopped at the lights earlier and it was green for peds. The lady waiting was so engrossed in her phone, she failed to cross and had to wait for the next cycle. I did shout 'green' but she was too far away.
It should be noted that even the government report* showed of the 20 fatal incidents between cyclists and peds, 6/20 were down to the ped, 4/20 cyclist 5/20 equal and 5/20 no attribution.
* STATS19 reported road casualty data between 2011-2016 confirms that during this period there were a total of 2,491 collisions between cyclists and pedestrians
resulting in a pedestrian casualty (but not necessarily amounting to fault on the part of the cyclist).
Conclusion - registration, tabards and insurance are required for pedestrians.
I can't out-accelerate a car when I'm cycling, but I usually beat them to at least the other side of the intersection when the light turns green. I believe that's because I'm looking at the light while waiting for it to change, instead of taking the red light as an opportunity to check Twitter.
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