Showing posts with label speeding. Show all posts
Showing posts with label speeding. Show all posts

Thursday, April 19, 2007

Getting away with speeding - no surprise there then! Actually 20 is PLENTY


Less than half of speeders prosecuted Autocar, UK - A BBC radio programme will tonight reveal that more than half of speeding drivers caught by speed camera in London get away without any kind of prosecution ...

Speed cameras miss half of speeders Auto Trader UK, UK - Stuart Milne. Less than half of motorists caught on camera speeding or jumping traffic lights are being prosecuted. Cameras in London photograph half a ...

Speeding: getting away with it News - What Car?, UK - Many drivers who are caught speeding or going through red lights are not being prosecuted, according to a new investigation. ... Perhaps we need to thing of more original ideas for traffic calming? See Living Streets and 20 is PLENTY campaign

Monday, April 16, 2007

Lib Dems promise to get Wales moving

"GET WALES MOVING!" Lib Dems
I have asked the Lib Dems what they will do about inconsiderate parking.

I wrote 'When will you decriminalise parking and stop parking on double yellow lines and on the pavement.

Please look at my albums of pics - Whitchurch Village has always got cars parked on double yellow lines stopping the bus pulling in. Sophie Howe -New Labour -was campaigning outside Iceland in Whitchurch on Sat and told me 'It is a police matter' & she had 'rung the police several times about the problem,' so in the 7/8 years she has been a councillor in Whitchurch she couldn't do a thing about it! Will the Lim Dems put an end to this and parking on the pavement?

JOIN
Living Streets if you agree that we should:

Create communities free from fear of traffic
Excess traffic speed kills. Especially at risk are the vulnerable - pedestrians, cyclists, children and elderly. But excess speed also kills the life of our streets as fear of accidents means children are kept indoors, people are less likely to walk to local amenities and community interaction is inhibited. We want:
Comprehensive speed management plans for all of our cities, towns and villages
20mph speed limits on all the community streets where we live, shop, work and play

Speed control through widespread traffic calming and enforcement techniques

Stop pavement parking

Vehicle parking on pavements, at pedestrian crossing points and alongside dropped kerbs is on the increase. This poses a major barrier to walking, particularly for those with mobility difficulties. In London pavement parking has been banned and decriminalised so that local authorities rather than police can enforce the ban.

We want:
The Welsh Assembly to give councils effective powers against pavement parking and anti-social parking Councils to decriminalise procedures and introduce fines for bad parking

Design streets for all
For decades roads have been designed predominantly for traffic, ignoring the needs of walkers even where there are more people travelling on foot than in vehicles. Streets and public spaces should be more than traffic corridors, for instance as playgrounds, meeting places and markets.

We want:
More space for walking and cycling, less for cars and lorries
Streets classified and redesigned by their use as play, residential, mixed or distributory

Give walking a higher profile

Walking is a vital ingredient of health and social inclusion as well as a key component in environmental and transport policies. The contribution walking makes to our communities must be recognised by the Welsh Assembly and local authorities.

We want:
A joined-up national policy framework for walking in Wales
A major role for walking and sustainable travel in national, regional and local transport policy

Councils to produce Walking Strategies linked to Health Improvement Programmes like
Walking Works Wales is a new Living Streets initiative, funded by Health Challenge Wales

Upgrade walking networks
Local pedestrian networks are often in a poor state after decades of neglect, leaving inadequate footway widths, safety hazards, unnecessary obstacles to movement and visual clutter. Basic standards of accessibility for disabled users, as expected to follow from the Disability Discrimination Act, are not being met.

We want:
Community Street Audits of key walking routes to schools, community facilities and public transport

Resourced improvement programmes for upgrading footpaths and public space

Better walking access in new developments

Shops and essential services need to be within a 15 minute walk of homes to be truly accessible on foot. We want new developments to achieve a mix of housing with shops and essential services nearby to minimise the need to travel. New areas and planning proposals should be designed to ensure walkability, with direct, attractive and safe path networks to key local facilities.

We want: Walkability testing for all new development proposals, by local authorities at the planning application stage.

The Welsh Assembly Government to highlight the needs of pedestrians to developers, planners and engineers through guidance, training and awareness raising

Promote walking
Walking is easy, cheap, and often social. We need to encourage people to walk as part of their daily lives.

We want:
The Welsh assembly Government to continue to strongly promote the advantages of walking for health, transport and the environment by supporting more walking initiatives

Local authorities and community plan partners to adopt walking as a key measure of the success of Community Plans and Joint Health Improvement programmes

A series of sustainable travel towns introduced across SWales to test approaches to active travel, with walking and walkability as key components of the approach

Make public transport accessible
Walking is an essential part of public transport trips but often pedestrian routes to bus stops are inaccessible, particularly for those whose mobility is impaired. The quality of pedestrian access in and around many rail and bus stations is also poor. Under the Disability Discrimination Act it is unacceptable for this to continue. We believe a better pedestrian environment will encourage more walking and public transport use, helping to ease congestion and improving health.

We want:
Walkability Audits of all bus and rail stations and main routes to them

Tuesday, March 20, 2007

Get rid of the cars!

One man's dedication to ridding the streets of cars and handing power back to pedestrians appears to be working wonders ...new role as chair of Living Streets.

.........Underlying Loveday's approach is some hard economics. He has shown the good burghers of Norwich that giving pedestrians the right to roam is good for business. Examples are at every turn as he takes me on a guided walk around the city. Despite its name, Gentlemen's Walk has been traffic-free since only the early 1990s. "Traders didn't like the idea at first," Loveday recalls, "so we did a three-month trial and found that pedestrian flow increased by 300% at peak times." Result: no further objections from retailers.
Chris Arnot Wed March 14, 2007 The Guardian
Cardiff could learn a lesson here. Don't give in to the car lobby!

Friday, December 29, 2006

Cars parked inconveniently is Anti social behaviour


I thought it might be useful to get Professor Stuart Cole view on this campaign. So I wrote to ask.

Please could you give your support to my campaign to stop pavement parking, reduce congestion in cardiff and improve public transport.

I was doing some research on asbos and found that the government's favoured measure of anti-social behaviour ignores those problems that the public tell them are of most concern. A Home Office study found that the public ranked 'speeding traffic' (43% ‘very big’ or ‘fairly big’ problem) and 'cars parked inconveniently' (31%) as the two biggest 'anti-social' problems in their area. 'Teenagers hanging around' (28%) was ranked only the sixth most significant problem and 'noisy neighbours' (9%) was twelfth.

also cited in House of Commons Home Affairs Committee Anti–Social Behaviour Fifth Report of Session 2004–05 although vechicle related nuisance "Inconvenient/illegal parking" is perahps convienently missing missing from other research asking residents for their concerns anout asb!

Monday, December 25, 2006

Welsh speed camera torched!

UK: Welsh Speed Camera Torched
TheNewspaper.com - Washington,DC,USA
A speed camera in Monmouthshire, Wales was destroyed by fire. The same device on the A48 in Caerwent had been attacked two previous times. ...


Why do motorists think that laws restricting speeding are somehow there to be broken? That is such a selfish attitude!