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Driver charged over three incidents of cyclists rammed in road rage attacks; Councillor demands mandatory helmets and 'road tax'; Movistar pro's wounds from Vuelta barbed wire crash; Sir Chris Hoy gets a cargo bike; Paralympic gold + more on the live blog

It's Friday and it's a bank holiday weekend - what more could you want? Dan Alexander has the honour of keeping you entertained with the final live blog of the week...

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27 August 2021, 15:51
As good as it gets in the UK?

Name the road, bonus points if you've been up it...may as well chuck it on the bucket list if you haven't... 

27 August 2021, 14:06
Driver charged over three incidents of cyclists rammed in road rage attacks in Adelaide
Adelaide man charged road rage ramming (screenshot 9 News)

Nine Australia reports a man has been charged after allegedly ramming cyclists in three seperate road rage attacks in Adelaide. He is also alleged to have lied about his car being stolen.

Police say the white Ford Fairmount was travelling on Lady Gowrie Drive, North Haven at around 6.30am when the driver steered at a cyclist, knocking them to the ground. The rider suffered bruises and grazing.

A short while later a second cyclist was then forced off the road into the verge before a third cyclist was hit by the driver of the same vehicle, throwing him off the significantly damaged bike.  

Police arrested a 25-year-old man who has since been charged with endangering life, leaving the scene of an accident, property damage and making a false report to police as investigators dispute the claim his car was stolen at the time of the offences. The suspect is due to appear in court next month.

27 August 2021, 13:38
Friday fail
27 August 2021, 13:05
Local Bike Shop Day tomorrow: support your local store
Bike shop interior (CC BY-ND 2.0 jun.skywalker:Flickr).jpg

Tomorrow is Local Bike Shop Day, an annual celebration to raise awareness of services offered by independent cycle shops across the country and the role they've played in supporting cyclists over the past 18 months. 

New shop The Bicycle Rooms in Stratford upon Avon is launching this Saturday and will offer free safety inspections all day.

Elsewhere Cycle Solutions Uplands is joined by Gower Gelato, who will be handing out Gelato pots free to customers who spend in store or book their bike in for a service. G64 Cycles in Glasgow is offering 3 for 2 on bike maintenance lubricants/cleaning as well as free lights and a cable lock to any bikes sold on the day.

27 August 2021, 12:43
Cycling in Wales up 68 per cent during lockdown, new government report reveals - motor traffic levels dropped to lowest level since 90s
Gravel Fondo Cymru wales

Cycling in Wales increased by more than 68 per cent during 2020 as motorised traffic on Welsh roads fell to levels not seen since the 1990s, according to new Welsh Government research. Cyclists covered more than 320 million vehicle-kilometres (vkm) on Welsh roads last year, compared to 190m vkm the year before.

The trend follows a spike in cycling activity elsewhere in the UK during the Covid lockdown and emergence from restrictions. Interestingly the the number of vehicle-kilometres clocked up by cyclists in Great Britain in 2020 was the highest since 1962.

By contrast, car use in Wales fell by 26.3 per cent during lockdown, with motorists driving over 7.5 billion fewer vkm than in 2019. However, the volume of motorised traffic in Wales was still equivalent to 7,760km (4,823 miles) per person.

Greg Wilson of Quotezone.co.uk commented on the numbers: "It’s extraordinary that lockdown saw cycling increase to levels not seen since 1962, a time when less than 40% of households owned a car."

27 August 2021, 11:26
More Paralympic success in the velodrome

Kadeena Cox followed up on yesterday's success to add the C4-5 500m time trial to ParalympicGB's medal tally in Tokyo. The 30-year-old defended her title from Rio, beating Canadian world champion Kate O'Brien's time by 0.411 seconds.

"I knew I was going to have to do something special, and that if I put everything together that me and my coach had worked on, it would be amazing," she told the BBC. "I executed a race that was near-perfect - I'm so happy."

27 August 2021, 10:41
Wout van Aert, Mark Cavendish and now world champ Julian Alaphilippe confirmed for Tour of Britain

If Wout van Aert and Mark Cavendish wasn't already enough, Deceuninck-Quick-Step have confirmed their world champion and all round entertainer Julian Alaphilippe is coming to the Tour of Britain as part of his prep for the defence of his rainbow jersey. Some of you may remember Alaphilippe won the race back in 2018, winning the stage into Bristol also.

The race will be the French darling's final outing in the rainbow jersey, but who'd bet against him defending his crown in Flanders next month? "I am really looking forward to racing the Tour of Britain, which will be my last in the rainbow jersey, that I have been so proud to wear for the last 12 months," Alaphilippe said.

"I had a successful race in Britain the last time I was there in 2018, and I know it will be a hard-fought race this time. It will be the perfect race for me to take on, ahead of the world championships. We come here with a strong team and will look to race hard, as we always do."

27 August 2021, 10:28
Road (race) rage
27 August 2021, 09:57
Ribble Cycles sponsors grassroots British CX team
Garden Shed UK - Ribble - Verge Cyclocross team (press release)

Ribble Cycles has taken on sponsorship of Garden Shed UK - Ribble - Verge Sport CX team as they look to build upon previous success in the upcoming season. Full disclosure, when I first looked at this press release I thought Ribble had sponsored an actual garden shed. Not my sharpest moment. There was me thinking Clive from Telford would be nipping out to get his lawnmower from a Ribble branded shed. 

Anyway, Garden Shed UK - Ribble - Verge Sports the cyclocross team was founded in 2019 by Tom Dussek and Jenson Young to offer support and racing opportunities to U23, Junior and Youth riders. Key rider Oli Akers, winner at Koppenbergcross and Youth National Series enters his third season with the team.

27 August 2021, 09:42
"The school run is about to get a whole lot more fun": Sir Chris Hoy joins team cargo bike

Top comment from someone questioning Chris' abilities to ride a cargo bike on British roads. Yeah, the six-time Olympic champion and 11-time world champ is going to struggle...

Perhaps they were from Bath Conservatives...who on Wednesday said you can't use a cargo bike anywhere hilly, only to get shut down by a cargo bike courier who's been delivering up Bath's steep hills for years...

And while we're on the subject of Tories talking nonsense about 'steep hills', you might have seen the news this morning that a Camden cycle lane has been voted through despite a Conservative claim the three per cent incline was too severe.

27 August 2021, 09:10
"Don't try to go against a barbed wire fence": Movistar domestique Nelson Oliveira shares pictures of war wounds after crashing into a barbed wire fence during stage 12 of the Vuelta

Ouch, ouch, ouch. Poor Nelson Oliveria ended up in the barbed wire on stage 12 and finished the stage 14 minutes down on the day's winner Magnus Cort. The Portuguese rider on the Movistar team rolled across the line bloodied and with little of his team shorts left around his legs. 

The veteran campaigner reassured concerned fans on Instagram: "Don't try to go against a barbed wire net - I'm fine and nothing serious, tomorrow will be another day - thank you all for your affection"

Shades of Mitch Docker at the Tour of Flanders and Johnny Hoogerland at the Tour de France in 2011. Many other riders, including Ineos' Adam Yates and Dylan van Baarle were involved. Max Schachmann has abandoned the race and Alpecin-Fenix Grand Tour debutant Tobias Bayer didn't finish the stage.

27 August 2021, 08:57
Peloton slashes prices as gyms reopening and less need for home exercise sees sales growth slow
peloton bike plus.PNG

Home trainer maker Peloton will slash the price of its flagship model in response to slow sales off the back of gyms reopening and reduced demand for home workouts. The US firm will cut the price by around 20 per cent to $1,495 from Thursday, which will apply to all its markets in the US, UK, Canada, Australia and Germany.

More to follow shortly...

27 August 2021, 07:51
Councillor demands mandatory helmets and 'road tax'...accuses cyclists of 'splitting hairs' when educated on the fact there is no such thing

Let's start Friday with some local politics silliness. Cllr Judy Butt from Poole's hot take stemmed from the proposed Highway Code changes that will see cyclists given priority at junctions when travelling straight ahead. It will also establish a hierarchy of road users, with those with the potential to cause the most danger to others deemed to have greater responsibility.

"HELMETS MUST BE MANDATORY!!" is Judy's price for the changes and she couldn't help herself having a sly point about the "law must mirror their responsibility on the road and other tax playing (sic) motorists safety". Yes, sometimes it does seem like we play road tax when talking about cycling online.

In fairness to Cllr Butt she was happy to engage on the subject (if you can give a local politician credit for explaining controversial their opinions?) 

 And here it comes...

Dan is the road.cc news editor and joined in 2020 having previously written about nearly every other sport under the sun for the Express, and the weird and wonderful world of non-league football for The Non-League Paper. Dan has been at road.cc for four years and mainly writes news and tech articles as well as the occasional feature. He has hopefully kept you entertained on the live blog too.

Never fast enough to take things on the bike too seriously, when he's not working you'll find him exploring the south of England by two wheels at a leisurely weekend pace, or enjoying his favourite Scottish roads when visiting family. Sometimes he'll even load up the bags and ride up the whole way, he's a bit strange like that.

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69 comments

Avatar
carlosdsanchez replied to Captain Badger | 3 years ago
4 likes

I don't think it's users falling off the treadmill, it's young children getting pulled underneath if they get caught on the belt as it goes over the rear roller.

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joe9090 replied to carlosdsanchez | 3 years ago
2 likes

He was making a topical joke. Maybe all the new sense of humours are sold out due to asian lockdowns...

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Captain Badger replied to joe9090 | 3 years ago
5 likes

joe9090 wrote:

He was making a topical joke. Maybe all the new sense of humours are sold out due to asian lockdowns...

In fairness it might be my sense of humour - I just can't get the spares anymore, it's held together with duct tape and zip ties...

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Owd Big 'Ead | 3 years ago
1 like

Poor Chris Hoy.

Those Raleigh cargobikes are utterly crap, best avoided.

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HarrogateSpa replied to Owd Big 'Ead | 3 years ago
1 like

I'm sure he's being paid to ride and promote it so he probably doesn't mind.

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Jem PT replied to Owd Big 'Ead | 3 years ago
1 like

Owd Big 'Ead wrote:

Poor Chris Hoy.

Those Raleigh cargobikes are utterly crap, best avoided.

With thighs like his I doubt he even realises.

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AlsoSomniloquism | 3 years ago
0 likes

Re: Chris Hoy Top Comment. 
I think it was more of a "how dangerous the roads are" rather then any comment on Hoy's abilities. 

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Secret_squirrel | 3 years ago
1 like

It's worth noting that Peloton have cut the price of their base model the Bike NOT the flagship Bike+ model that actually has a power meter and ERG mode and is a proper smart bike.

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bloodylazylayabout | 3 years ago
5 likes

'Road tax clearly the generic term for the £30 to over £200 paid by motorists each year depending on car'

I'm assuming that 3 is a typo & that a politician is not deliberately misusing actual figures

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Hirsute replied to bloodylazylayabout | 3 years ago
0 likes

Not sure what you mean.

VED starts from £0 and goes up through 20/30/115/130 up to 2245 depending on emissions and date of registration.

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quiff replied to Hirsute | 3 years ago
8 likes

I think that was bloodylazylayabout's point - they hope the councillor typed a '3' in front of '0' accidentally and weren't trying to mislead, because VED actually starts at £0.

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bloodylazylayabout replied to quiff | 3 years ago
3 likes

Indeed

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jh2727 replied to Hirsute | 3 years ago
9 likes

hirsute wrote:

Not sure what you mean.

VED starts from £0 and goes up through 20/30/115/130 up to 2245 depending on emissions and date of registration.

My favourite reply on twitter, was the person who calculated that it would cost about £150m to charge VED on bicycles at the same rate as cars (i.e. £0 in, £3.50 out (admin costs)).

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Steve K replied to bloodylazylayabout | 3 years ago
1 like

bloodylazylayabout wrote:

'Road tax clearly the generic term for the £30 to over £200 paid by motorists each year depending on car'

I'm assuming that 3 is a typo & that a politician is not deliberately misusing actual figures

Probably. 3 and £ are on the same key, just pressed it again accidentally after lifting off shift.

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bloodylazylayabout replied to Steve K | 3 years ago
0 likes

Steve K wrote:

bloodylazylayabout wrote:

'Road tax clearly the generic term for the £30 to over £200 paid by motorists each year depending on car'

I'm assuming that 3 is a typo & that a politician is not deliberately misusing actual figures

Probably. 3 and £ are on the same key, just pressed it again accidentally after lifting off shift.

Must be, only logical explanation

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alexuk | 3 years ago
5 likes

Its beggars beleif that these 'officials' have absolutley no idea about how the roads are funded? how can this person be an active decision-maker in the council, and not understand the basic principles of how the roads are funded? Beyond a joke.

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vsmith1 replied to alexuk | 3 years ago
0 likes

I am wondering how much is actually funded from local funds as well as national. The VED is national, yet local councils would have some schemes funded locally, so that is via the Community Charge. As cyclists live in houses, then they are paying.

Also on the same reasoning (that's an oxymoron here), should horse riders also have mandated helmets?  

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Hirsute replied to vsmith1 | 3 years ago
2 likes

The poll tax stopped in 1992/93.

Local councils are funded by council tax, business rates, general grant (rsg), specific grants and numerous fees and charges.
Your county council, London borough, unitary, metropolitan maintains and provides the local infrastructure that cyclists use.

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jh2727 replied to alexuk | 3 years ago
5 likes

alexuk wrote:

Its beggars beleif that these 'officials' have absolutley no idea about how the roads are funded? how can this person be an active decision-maker in the council, and not understand the basic principles of how the roads are funded? Beyond a joke.

To be fair to the woman, she only has 22 years experience.

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hawkinspeter | 3 years ago
12 likes

So, in exchange for the dramatic new changes to the Highway Code (previously it was absolutely fine for drivers to turn left across cyclists at junctions), there needs to be some retribution for cyclists not being killed so often? Is the mandatory helmet like some mark of shame? Or is it more like the Nazis forcing Jews/Gays to bear some visible badge?

Well, at least we can't disagree about the huge revenue stream that would come from taxing cyclists' emmissions. I wonder if the government has looked into the potential costs/benefits of such a system?

Judy Butt is clearly a world-class mind and with such progressive views she's surely the kind of leader we need to help us deal with the world's climate catastrophe.

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Sriracha replied to hawkinspeter | 3 years ago
8 likes

I guess she must be campaigning for "road tax" on electric cars too then? I must have missed it.

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quiff replied to Sriracha | 3 years ago
5 likes

I know it doesn't exist yet, but surely as electric vehicles become more prevalent, it won't be far off. We might have to start quietly dropping that limb of the "road tax" argument.

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Hirsute replied to quiff | 3 years ago
9 likes

Ultimately, it will be road pricing based on road type, time, capacity and something about axle weight to the fourth power for road wear.
Or just recognise that roads used by cyclists are provided by local councils for which we all pay council tax.

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IanMK replied to Hirsute | 3 years ago
4 likes

I would think going forward, in the short term,  there is a stong argument for getting rid of VED entirely and just collecting an emmisions tax through fuel duty. As you say, though, road pricing will come in ultimately.

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brooksby replied to IanMK | 3 years ago
0 likes

IanMK wrote:

...As you say, though, road pricing will come in ultimately.

And at that point, I wonder how heavy the hammer will fall on cyclists?

I mean, we won't be able to say the VED is a fee on emissions (which is why we don't pay it on our bikes).  And the advanced motoring w*nkers will be all over the media saying how cyclists use the road, and "we" are being charged to use the roads so why aren't they?

Or will we get evicted from the national roads network...

Discuss  3

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Dnnnnnn replied to IanMK | 3 years ago
0 likes

IanMK wrote:

I would think going forward, in the short term,  there is a stong argument for getting rid of VED entirely and just collecting an emmisions tax through fuel duty. As you say, though, road pricing will come in ultimately.

It would have to be the very short term, as hybrid and electric vehicles profilerate. Fuel Duty is currently a huge income stream for the Exchequer, and its loss will have to be compensated.

Road pricing is the rational alternative from many perspectives - it's just that it's politically toxic. Elements of it may be brought in by stealth, though. Everyone always wants bold political gestures - yet for important-but-controversial things, it's often more politically-savvy to be sneaky about it!

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Sriracha replied to Dnnnnnn | 3 years ago
4 likes
Duncann wrote:

IanMK wrote:

I would think going forward, in the short term,  there is a stong argument for getting rid of VED entirely and just collecting an emmisions tax through fuel duty. As you say, though, road pricing will come in ultimately.

It would have to be the very short term, as hybrid and electric vehicles profilerate. Fuel Duty is currently a huge income stream for the Exchequer, and its loss will have to be compensated.

Road pricing is the rational alternative from many perspectives - it's just that it's politically toxic. Elements of it may be brought in by stealth, though. Everyone always wants bold political gestures - yet for important-but-controversial things, it's often more politically-savvy to be sneaky about it!

A tax based on mileage seems appropriate, multiplied by some indicator of road wear like axle weight, number of axles, etc.

The mileage to be recorded at the annual MOT with the tax added to the bill (like VAT). The annual MOT would have to apply to all motor vehicles, even new ones. Those who prefer could pay monthly in advance by DD with any discrepancy settled at the MOT.

Obviously vehicles that do not legally require an odometer would be exempt, and axle weights below a minimum threshold would be zero rated in any case.

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Hirsute replied to Sriracha | 3 years ago
3 likes

I think you could sell that one !

Get the garage to collect the tax on behalf of hmrc sounds a winner for the government.

Rural areas will be up in arms, so whether the tories will vote for it is another matter.

 

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TheBillder replied to Hirsute | 3 years ago
0 likes
hirsute wrote:

Rural areas will be up in arms, so whether the tories will vote for it is another matter.

Road pricing usually has an anti-congestion aim as well, so different roads and times of day have different prices. That can help to reduce the cost to rural drivers who have fewer public transport options, but it's difficult to get right without introducing opportunities to game the system (such as a Londoner driving out just past the M25, using local roads to do more miles and then back in). Then add in the cost of the technology and the privacy issues...

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IanMK replied to Dnnnnnn | 3 years ago
0 likes

I read somewhere that Sunak has a load of proposed policies (taxes) to reduce CO2 levels. The trouble for the Tories is that they are particularly toxic in the Red Wall constituencies, that are still waiting to be levelled up. I note Labour are pretty quiet on this as well.

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