Vandals have targeted LTN planters in Deeplish, Rochdale on the first day of their installation, overturning and setting them alight.
The traffic filtering scheme was introduced by the Rochdale Borough Council as a part of the Milkstone and Deeplish Active Neighbourhood in February this year, on a six-month trial period.
The new planters had been installed for just a day when a few people decided to take matters into their hand and indulge in arson.
Following a consultation in 2021 which received “area-wide support for highway changes”, the council decided to implement the measures on a trial basis.
This is not the first time vandals have used fire to get rid of LTN filters. Last year, a ‘civil war’ ensued in Oxford as bollards and planters were repeatedly targeted, when half of the planters and bollards were ripped out in less than 24 hours of their installation, with people using power tools to cut them down.
A few months before this in March, another road user rammed it off the road where it was stopping motorists drive past a primary school.
Moreover, anti-LTN groups on Facebook have previously threatened arson, which became a reality in July, when a group of hooded men set fire to the bollards in Iffley, Oxford at night, melting them down to a black gunk of metal.
Rochdale’s episode seems to have been in more than one location. On the Facebook post with the video, with people commenting similar incidents happening in Ashfield Road and Durham Street nearby.
The post, as expected, drew reactionary comments from people who couldn’t hide their joy at the act. “We need to find and thank the hero what has done this” wrote one person, while another commented: “Reaction is good its time we take over the country back”.
A few people also argued that the Active Neighbourhood was the latest step in locking them in “the 15-minute prisons”.
Schemes like these have been labelled as ‘controversial’ by some in other parts of Greater Manchester, with Manchester Evening News reporting that modal filters in Longford Park, Stretford were ‘incredibly divisive’ for the community. However, in the council’s consultation, a majority of the public voted in favour of the low traffic network.
There were quite a few, though, who expressed their shock and concern at the event. A Manchester photographer wrote on Twitter: “This is shocking, but has happened elsewhere. Please hope Councillors and Rochdale Council stay strong. Near me similar happened nr [sic] Longford Park. Thankfully the trial was allowed to happen & residents backed it. Now all is settled and those roads are no longer rat runs.”
> Anti-LTN vandals won't intimidate us, says Chris Boardman
Similar events took place in Levenshulme, Greater Manchester as well, with drivers literally ramming the planters down. Thankfully, they were swiftly repaired by the community and bolted down.
Teething problems, or initial hostility towards filters, is widely documented, and is evidenced by the fact that these vandalism acts take place very soon after the bollards or planters are installed.
Tom Jeff commented on Facebook: “What you need to understand is that it'll take a couple of weeks for these changes to become widely known, after which point the fuss will die down. Local residents will appreciate the improved safety and much quieter streets. The vandals will go elsewhere (you don't think these are the only laws they break do you?) and life will return to normal. Except it'll be more pleasant.”
“No matter how much vandalism these criminals cause, as they're speeding around your residential roads, the council will just keep spending your money repairing the damage they cause. Until finally, they're made permanent.”
Amidst all this mess, Harry Gray from Salford, Manchester perhaps provided a fresh breath of sanity: “If you feel like telling Rochdale council how angry you are a small minority of thugs can destroy a scheme that the many are in favour of. Send them an email here: highways [at] rochdale.gov.uk.”
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41 comments
Progress and necessary change is hard for some to swallow. They will come round eventually to the idea that motorised transport is not the answer for sustainable neighbourhood living. Patience needed alongside education to help non-LTN believers see the light.
Yes and no, I gather the experience elsewhere is that there's always a bit of resistance when they're put in (and frankly no matter how hard consultation is tried, someone will claim to have been unaware of it all) but once they've bedded in over a few months no-one wants them out.
Interestingly the same old arguments about emergency services etc. seem to be being trotted out on FB about this, along with new ones about 15 min cities.
Something there is which doesn't love a planter... the one just up the hill from it was trashed time back. Not sure if this one has been officially moved here - this was a "covid-era" one and the council's pulling some of that "experimental" stuff out.
These thugs need putting away!
Surely it'd be easy and not even that expensive to have a motion/sound activated camera either in or around LTN planters when they're installed. They're likely to be a target of aggression, so catch the aggressors and get them to pay for the damage and possibly give them community service sweeping bike lanes or cleaning pavements.
You just need the right kind of hardy driver-tolerant plant.
There must be lamposts that they could be mounted on, or I'm sure some of the locals would volunteer to have such a camera on their property.
It's hard to believe people who will set fire to planters aren't involved in other criminal behaviour?
Is everyone trashing and burning France in the pension protests involved in other criminal behaviour?
Come to London if you want to sightse some cameras.....
Just replace planters with community BBQ facilities to keep both locals and arsonists happy.
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