Transport Minister Sadiq Khan has announced the recipients of the final tranche of the government’s £60 million cycling budget for the current year. England’s Cycling Demonstration Towns, the Peak District National Park, and Sustrans, the sustainable transport charity, are each set to get a share of the £10 million available. The cash will finance new routes, as well as other features such as parking facilities.
Announcing the funding, Mr Khan said: “The new money for the Cycling Demonstration Town and the Peak District National Park represents a great opportunity for people to join the cycling revolution. By getting more people cycling, we can help tackle congestion and pollution, as well as helping to promote health and fitness.”
The six Cycling Demonsration Towns, which share £3 million, are Aylesbury, Brighton & Hove, Darlington, Derby, Exeter and Lancaster. A survey showed 27% more trips by bike being made there and growth in the number of new cyclists, with Mr Khan saying, "I have been hugely pleased with the Cycle Demonstration Town project and these results prove that when you provide the right facilities and support, more people will get on their bikes.”
Phillip Darnton, Chairman of Cycling England, said, “this is fantastic news for our demonstration programme. Cycling England and the Department for Transport set out in 2005 with six cycling towns to show that investing in cycling can deliver real impact – in tackling congestion and pollution, and improving health.”
He added, “the results from the original six towns, and the promise shown by the new wave of 11 additional cycling towns and one cycling city alongside other cycling demonstration projects such as the Peak District National Park, give us great confidence we can make a real difference to the travel culture of the UK.”
Mr Khan also revealed that Sustrans would benefit from £6 million additional funding “to install cycle parking and build cycling and walking links to schools, making it easier for children, and others living nearby, to travel on foot or by bike.”
The remaining £1 million is going towards a proposed cycle trail from Buxton to Bakewell through the Peak District, following a railway line – including four tunnel sections – that was closed in the 1960s, and envisages cyclists arriving at each end by train, then getting on their bikes. The trail would also link with the existing Monsal, High Peak and Tissington Trails.
Additional funding for the £3.785 million project is coming from Cycling England, which has committed £1.25 million, while The Peak District National Park Authority is asking Derbyshire County Council for additional funding.
The national park’s director of operations, Richard Campen, welcomed the funding, saying that the project “will create both a spectacular cycling route and a realistic alternative to the car, enabling more people to make healthy choices for themselves and for the environment,” and that it would “also benefit local tourism businesses with rail and cycle-based travel packages.”
Finally the DfT also announced that it was producing a best practice guide on sustainable travel initiatives for consideration under their third Local Transport Plans, and which would assist them in meeting sustainable transport targets.
Straight into the sun is perhaps an exaggeration, but at that time it would be about ESE, and there are bits of the road which head roughly SSE, so...
7 October was just a bit of harmless fun until the "msm" ramped it up.
It's not censored if you just pirate it
an example of Kesgraves "best cycling infrastructure in the country" https://maps.app.goo.gl/GsCMbzDUTPdq59qS9
They are not going full gas at every point. They would destroy themselves. And tactics, they save themselves for when effort is really needed....
It turns out that that is national police policy. We found out from this process that there is national 'secured by design' policy which causes...
Been available for quite a while, full GRX mechanical 12 speed. Probably around the same time as 105 mechanical 12 speed if I were to guess.
Less harmful citrus degreaser is easy to find at £8 or less for 5 litres. Works ok for me, even diluted up to 4:1. Both paraffin and white spirit...
Nope, it's to keep your straps down and quieter. Plus most sunglasses are polycarbonate and aren't going to shatter like glass anyway
And, more seriously, where's the coverage of the closure of the cycle lane which forces you to cycle on the Totton bypass.