More than £5 million will be spent in Scotland over the next three years to get people cycling. Seven local authority areas are taking forward the wide-ranging initiatives through the Scottish Government’s Smarter Choices, Smarter Places (SCSP) scheme, supported by the Convention of Scottish Local Authorities (COSLA).
The scheme which was launched last year and to encourage people to cut the number of times they use their car in favour of more active and sustainable forms of transport. It is hoped it will act as a catalyst for change across Scotland.
The projects are based in Dundee, Glasgow’s East End, Falkirk, Dumfries, East Renfrewshire, East Dunbartonshire and Orkney and will include things like self-service cycle hire schemes, Get Cycling roadshows in schools, upgrading cycling and walking routes, and improving public cycle storage facilities, and bike racks.
The aim is to get 10 percent of the population out of cars, buses and trains, and onto bikes as a study by the Scottish Government for its draft Cycling Action Plan for Scotland showed that 88 percent of respondents would like to cycle more often, yet just two percent of Scots cycle to work and only one percent of children cycle to school.
Transport Minister Stewart Stevenson said: “We must encourage a change in the mode of transport we use. We need to look at new ways of persuading people out of the car and onto more sustainable forms of travel such as trains, buses, walking and cycling." The success of three similar “sustainable travel demonstration towns” in Darlington,Peterborough and Worcester from 2004-2008 has proven the value of establishing sustainable travel choices.
The £10-million DfT scheme produced an increase in sustainable travel use and resulted in a nine per cent reduction in car use across the three towns, with annual savings of more than 17,000 tonnes of carbon dioxide.
There was a 12 per cent increase in cycling in Peterborough and a 19 per cent increase in Worcester, while Darlington, which received further Government cash to improve facilities for cyclists, saw levels of cycling more than double over the same period.
The results were achieved through simple measures such as improving cycle and walking routes, better public transport links, more pedestrian-only areas, travel advisors visiting homes providing tailored travel plans, car sharing schemes and discounts on bus and train tickets.
I'd agree there are a lot people who want no change whatsoever (or rather just don't think about change, busy getting on with life). Until...
I like how drivers make the case for making monitoring covert, not overt.
She seemed a bit upset about a minor misjudgement that could have killed someone and is going to cause months of stress and inconvenience.
No we don't agree, personally I would take primary, even if only for a short period although I can understand why some riders might not want to...
And which looks very like the bag produced by indy bag manufacturer Wizard Works…...
If it was a 'no vehicles' sign (all white circle centre), it would mean cyclists could ride in the hours that HGVs and disabled drivers are allowed...
The bit at the start and end looks like a cycle lane, but the bit they drive on looks just like a patched filter lane for traffic lights.
Hey, you 4 execs helped run a company into the ground and have no jobs anymore... Come work for us because you have great experience in the...
£11.5k for a bike weighing over 8kg that's 2 fingers to customers let alone UCI
I'm going to show my bike a picture of this shed and tell it, "If you don't behave..."