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Updated: More than 9 in 10 drivers complying with Bank Junction ban

MP had accused City of London Corporation of banning vehicles for financial, not safety reasons

UPDATED: The City of London Corporation says that more than nine in 10 motorists are complying with a ban on vehicles other than buses and bicycles at Bank Junction.

The local authority that governs the Square Mile began an 18-month trial of the ban, which applies from 7am to 7pm on Mondays to Fridays, in May this year, and was responding to comments made by a Conservative MP who claimed the ban was motivated more by a desire to raise money through fining motorists who ignore it, rather than for safety concerns.

The ban, which is currently being undertaken on a trial basis, is aimed at making the junction safer for vulnerable road users, whether on foot or on a bike, as well as improving air quality and relieving congestion on the bus routes that run through it.

In a statement, the Corporation said: “Our number one priority for the experimental scheme at Bank junction is to improve safety. For too long it has been one of the capital’s dangerous hotspots. 

“We have made every effort to inform the public of the traffic restrictions. 

“This included generating publicity, meeting local businesses, residents and road user groups and sending over 16,500 letters.   

“There are over 100 road signs and advance warnings in the area advising drivers about the closure to vehicles and we used the services of a sign expert to ensure these were as clear as possible. We also initially issued warning letters when the scheme started. >  

“The objective of the Penalty Charge Notices is to act as a deterrent. >  

“Any funds generated from the scheme will be held in reserve and as required by legislation directed towards funding various highway or road maintenance improvements.

“We now see less vehicles pass through the junction during the 12 hour restriction than would pass through in an hour, before the scheme was implemented.

"This equates to over 90 per cent compliance to the scheme.

"As a safety scheme, our end goal is to see 100 per cent compliance at the junction." 

The introduction of the ban in May was welcomed by cycling campaigners, who had lobbied for safety improvements at the junction since the death there of 26-year-old Ying Tao in 2015, when she was crushed by a lorry as she rode to work.

> Day 1 of Bank Junction vehicle ban - but video shows some drivers ignoring it

While the City of London Corporation initially sent warning letters to motorists caught flouting the ban, in June it began fining them, with vehicle registrations captured using seven cameras equipped with Automatic Number Plate Recognition (APNR) technology around the junction.

Nevertheless, large numbers of motorists are continuing to drive through Bank Junction outside the permitted hours.

The Daily Star reports that an average of 1,498 drivers were fined each day between 7 June and 17 July, according to a Freedom of Information request.

With a fixed penalty notice of £130 being issued to transgressors, total fines during that period were almost £200,000 a day.

The newspaper extrapolates that to being equivalent to almost £50 million a year – although that figure, equivalent to around 375,000 individual fines, seems to assume that drivers would not change their behaviour after being caught the first time.

Charlie Elphicke, Conservative MP for Dover, told the Daily Star: “The cameras on this junction are fleecing motorists for £200,000 a day.

“Many people would say this looks like a case of revenue-raising rather than anything to do with traffic safety.

“Cameras [that] are simply there to raise revenue cause big resentment and are incredibly unfair,” he added.

Following Ying Tao’s death, the campaign group Stop Killing Cyclists held a vigil and die-in at the junction that was attended by hundreds of riders.

When the ban was implemented in May, the group’s co-founder, Donnachadh McCarthy, said it was an “historic day for cyclists and pedestrians in London.

He added: “We congratulate City of London for taking the steps to change the lifestyle for cyclists in the city.”

The introduction of the restrictions was also welcomed by Green Party London Assembly Member Caroline Russell, who described Bank as "a notoriously dangerous junction."

She said that incidents in which vulnerable road users are injured or killed "are happening to our friends and neighbours.

"Road safety isn't just a problem for someone, it's a problem for all Londoners,” she added.

In a guest blog published on road.cc in January this year, Christopher Hayward, chairman of the City of London Corporation’s Planning and Transportation Committee, outlined details of the experimental safety scheme.

The aim was “to improve the safety of road users and pedestrians with the aim of reducing casualties and improving air quality at one of London’s busiest junctions,” he wrote.

> Guest blog: London's Bank junction trial aims for dramatic reduction in cyclist and pedestrian casualties

He continued: “A number of casualties and fatalities have highlighted very real concerns about safety at this junction.

“With cyclists now making up to 50 per cent of the traffic crossing the junction in peak times, we felt that it was fundamental that cyclist safety be seen as very important.”

He added that the City of London Corporation hoped the restrictions on motor vehicles would lead to a reduction in casualties of between 50 and 60 per cent.

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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36 comments

Avatar
alansmurphy | 6 years ago
1 like

Strange headline road cc.

More than 9 in 10 cyclists don't use the motorway on their bikes but you put a story up every time one does!

Avatar
pockstone | 6 years ago
4 likes

Thank you ribena, for making a little clearer what a travesty of so called democracy we live under. Unfortunately I'm sufficiently inured to the gravy train that I'm not surprised to find our elected 'representatives' coining it from the likes of the RHA. 

What really worries me is that some are happy to go beyond 'lobbying'  but lie (or regurgitate the lies of their sponsors ) for the sake of a few measly grand, and at the same time belittle unnecessary deaths and actively seek to defend those deaths as an unfortunate consequence of 'business as usual'.

I would  recommend that Charlie Elphicke and his ilk be taken to the mortuary for a look at the broken remains of loved parents, siblings and children who die under the wheels of HGVs, so he can be better apprised of what it is he is defending for his thirty pieces of silver.

Avatar
don simon fbpe replied to RedfishUK | 6 years ago
2 likes

RedfishUK wrote:

embattle wrote:

Probably more effective to have some sort of temporary barrier to stop cars etc but then that might affect the non existant requirement for revenue...cough.

 

Buses are allowed through so, a physical barrier would be difficult.

Seems to work in Manchester.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BWnfeDtnuds

Avatar
jollygoodvelo replied to don simon fbpe | 6 years ago
2 likes

don simon wrote:

RedfishUK wrote:

embattle wrote:

Probably more effective to have some sort of temporary barrier to stop cars etc but then that might affect the non existant requirement for revenue...cough.

Buses are allowed through so, a physical barrier would be difficult.

Seems to work in Manchester.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BWnfeDtnuds

That silver car getting caught after seeing the barriers up in the first place absolutely cracks me up.  Please can we have some of these in London?  I can't wait for the compilation of hundreds of Uber Priuses getting caught  4

 

One observation by the way - the £200k figure is almost certainly false.  The tickets will be £65 if paid (or contested) within 14 days, so just under £100k.  Still a massive chunk of money, it would be nice if they used it for further 'public space improvements' in the City...

Avatar
craigp replied to jollygoodvelo | 6 years ago
0 likes

jollygoodvelo wrote:

One observation by the way - the £200k figure is almost certainly false.  The tickets will be £65 if paid (or contested) within 14 days, so just under £100k.  Still a massive chunk of money, it would be nice if they used it for further 'public space improvements' in the City...

 

There's some speculation that the PCNs are not valid either

Avatar
ChrisB200SX replied to Anthony7 | 6 years ago
0 likes

Anthony7 wrote:

Without physical separation, cycles and cars cannot peacefully co-exist. For the sake of our economy and well-being, maybe cycling itself needs to take a hard look in the mirror - at least according to this article: https://www.accredited-times.com/2017/08/17/need-ban-cycling-now/

I've got 5 bikes and 2 cars, sometimes the bikes go inside the cars. I have never known them to fight, maybe I just brought them up well.
Or, perhaps you meant that drivers will always kill and maim other road users?

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