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Cyclists hit back at ‘propaganda’ after children in face masks are used to protest London Cycle Superhighway 11

Regents Park Cyclists say stunt was ‘distasteful’ and ‘illogical’

Cyclists have criticised a recent protest against London’s Cycle Superhighway 11, describing it as ‘illogical propaganda’. Coverage of the protest in Ham and High featured a photograph of schoolchildren wearing face masks in reference to the pollution ‘caused’ by the proposed cycle lane.

The protest – which involved Hampstead parents and pupils and took place outside St Stephen’s in Rosslyn Hill – was co-ordinated by solicitor Jessica Learmond-Criqui.

Learmond-Criqui has previously said that CS11 will “act as a cork” to traffic, forcing cars onto narrow residential roads and worsening air pollution.

Restating her position, she said: “Hampstead is already bad and in excess of safe NO2 levels for adults and kids. The readings are off the scale.

“Hampstead and Belsize area is the biggest educational park in the world. There are over 55 schools and colleges in Hampstead and Belsize with at least 12,500 school children going to school here every day – many under seven years old. Why is the mayor encouraging TfL to force up to 475 extra cars per hour into some of our narrowest residential side roads?”

Justin McKie, of Regents Park Cyclists, rejected suggestions that CS11 would exacerbate pollution problems and took particular issue with how Learmond-Criqui had tried to make her point.

“I find it very distasteful that a photo of kids in face masks, which were in fact surgical masks and would do nothing to filter out pollution, was used in a propaganda fashion to protest at the CS11 scheme.

“Because of the adjustment made to CS11 plans, I do not believe that the mass displacement of traffic because of CS11 will happen. The issue is that hundreds of parents get into their cars every day to take their children to school. There needs to be an incentive for these people to use alternative methods of transport.

“It is also illogical. The aim of the cycle superhighways is to encourage cycling and reduce pollution.”

A 2014 study, which used MPs as guinea pigs, found that London’s worst air pollution is actually found inside cars.

Using monitors that measured the amount of microscopic carbon particles that were inhaled, researchers found that walking around Whitehall and Oxford Street, the MPs inhaled six to seven million particles per breath. At their destination, London's City Hall, levels fell to three million particles per breath. Travelling in taxis, they were found to have inhaled up to 50 million particles per breath.

A similar experiment carried out by the BBC earlier this month found that for six out of ten days, a Bath taxi driver was exposed to pollution in excess of World Health Organisation’s (WHO) recommended limits. In contrast, the exposure of a cyclist travelling the same roads always remained below.

Alex has written for more cricket publications than the rest of the road.cc team combined. Despite the apparent evidence of this picture, he doesn't especially like cake.

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35 comments

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wycombewheeler | 7 years ago
26 likes

maybe they have a point. pollution levels are too high. Just ban private cars everywhere in zone 1 and 2, and let all roads become cycling bus and lgv only. No need for cycle superhighway.

How many of the children wearing masks in this stunt are routinely driven less than 2 miles to school?

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Housecathst | 7 years ago
26 likes

It's amazing that Hampstead parents are blaming cyclists for causing pollution. I bet they all use a Chelsea tractor for any distance greater than the couch to the fridge. 

So there problem is that there going to be moved from polluting the main roads to polluting the side streets, it sounds like they need to close these rat runs too, problem solved. 

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emishi55 replied to Housecathst | 7 years ago
11 likes

Housecathst wrote:

It's amazing that Hampstead parents are blaming cyclists for causing pollution. I bet they all use a Chelsea tractor for any distance greater than the couch to the fridge. 

So there problem is that there going to be moved from polluting the main roads to polluting the side streets, it sounds like they need to close these rat runs too, problem solved. 

 

 

At a meeting over a year ago at the same church hall, Learmond Criqui and a packed hall of hysterical motorists (most of who had turned up to have a go at the authorities threatening to deprive them of their short cut to the West End) with TfL and Andrew Gilligan, it was announced quite clearly that TfL would work with Camden council to mitigate any rat-running possibly created by the scheme.

This important point has been ignored time and time again by the duplicitous Learmond Criqui.

The CS11 scheme went on to receive overwhelming support as we know.

 

However, this hasn't stopped Le Criqui from devoting her time to repeating her alternative facts (in a manner shown by one Donald T to achieve results, where FACTS and EVIDENCE don't fit with the  world view of the grotesque and over-entitled).

 

It should be noted that London mayor Sadiq Khan, unlike his excellent namesake Janette in NY (who, during a seven year long 'Street Fight',  when she achieved some 400 miles of cycle lanes), has signalled via his deputy Val Shawcross, a willingness to listen to 'stakeholders' such as Criqui's pro-rat-running group. Shawross has announced she may consider 'cycle lanes' through the park as an alternative to the scheme that was due to go in.

So. Despite a massive win for a scheme that would involve someone in a van spending about half an hour in a van goung around and locking SOME of the gates for, SOME of the time, Criqui's demented 'gridlock' bilgewater has caused the mayor to not only backtrack, but to consider something else that would require - more meetings, more consulting, more delay.

 

The 'new' London mayor. Next month - one year into the job. 

Vacuous appeasement of a mob of Hampstead ne'er-do-wells.

 

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burtthebike | 7 years ago
19 likes

Well, we all knew that the petrolheads would fight back when cyclists threatened their generations long domination of the road, but claiming that cyclists will make pollution worse is desperate indeed.  Shows that they really don't have any valid arguments at all if that's the best they can come up with.

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leaway2 replied to burtthebike | 7 years ago
11 likes

burtthebike wrote:

Well, we all knew that the petrolheads would fight back when cyclists threatened their generations long domination of the road.

It is not that many generations either. I am approching 60 and it was very rare for any school children to get driven to school.

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