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“What the hell is the council playing at?”: MP Rupert Lowe claims new cycle lane is “a complete sodding waste of money”; Sport switch? Record-breaking Winter Olympian invited to test with pro cycling team + more on the live blog
SUMMARY

"What the hell is the council playing at?": MP Rupert Lowe claims new cycle lane is "a complete sodding waste of money"
Rupert Lowe is the former Reform MP suspended by the party last year amid claims he had threatened then-party chairman Zia Yusuf. Lowe denied the allegations and no charges were ever brought, but now standing as an independent MP for Great Yarmouth he has founded the Restore Britain party. Yesterday, polling by Findoutnow suggested the Farage-rivalling politician is currently polling at around seven per cent and Lowe has stated he wants to “get our country back” if elected.
For now though, Lowe has bigger issues to contend with… a new cycle lane in his constituency…
“This was, and I mean to sound blunt, a complete sodding waste of money. What the hell is the council playing at, honestly?” Lowe wrote on Facebook.
Opposition to cycling infrastructure projects and culture wars-y attacks on active travel were a particular favourite of the former Conservative government, and while Reform leader Nigel Farage has not been quite so gung-ho in his proclivity to make anti-cycle infrastructure statements a part of his political arsenal, Restore leader Lowe appears happy to raise the ‘issue’ in his local constituency.
With that said, Lowe’s former boss Farage did last month suggest Labour’s proposal to lower the drink drive limit was “designed by the Islington cycling classes”.
Anyway, after that whistle-stop-tour through the right of British politics’s current views on cycling, we thought we’d brace ourselves and take a look at the comments to see how Lowe’s post went down.
We were quite reassured to find this ray of reason: “Many cyclists drive cars and many car drivers ride bikes. Good cycle infrastructure makes it safer to cycle and the more people that cycle the more room for cars and the less potholes there’ll be in the long run. The benefits for all of us are endless. It doesn’t matter what it is, there’s always something else the money could be spent on.”
Why are you trying to bring calm, logical discussion to a Facebook comments section, sir?
Potholes were a common topic being discussed, many seeing it as an ‘either, or’ situation. One point we didn’t see was that the funding for these sorts of projects comes from central government and is separate to local budgets for fixing potholes. So, even if a large sum was spent on the cycle lane, that money wouldn’t have been used to fix potholes instead.
Council “scaling back underused cycle lane” to allow more cars on busy route and make “best possible use of road space we have”

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Scottish Borders Mountain Bike Innovation Centre to receive £15.5m investment from UK government

A major project to build a Mountain Bike Innovation Centre and Trail Lab at Innerleithen in the Scottish Borders has received backing from central government, with £15.5m set to be invested in the project.
The centre is forecast to generate £86m in gross value and will create more than 225 jobs across the south of Scotland across the next decade, according to the News and Star.
The facility will include bike engineering workshops, brand experience units, event spaces, officers, labs and teaching areas, and construction is expected to begin in the spring for completion sometime in 2027.
“It’s great news that main construction works can now get underway on the Innerleithen Mountain Bike Innovation Centre,” Kirsty McNeill, the Scotland Office minister for the UK government commented.
“Opening for business in 2027, the full project — backed by £19 million UK government funding — is bringing jobs and investment to the region and will attract riders from across the country and beyond to a world class facility.”
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Wout van Aert out of Omloop Het Nieuwsblad with illness

Wout van Aert has been ruled out of Omloop Het Nieuwsbald, Visma-Lease a Bike confirming the winner of the 2022 edition has fallen ill.
Van Aert was looking to make his return to racing after a crash that ended his cyclocross season prematurely. In many ways it was remarkable that the Belgian was even in a position to line up on Opening Weekend, however now a different setback has ruled him out.
“Obviously it’s a big blow for me to miss out on my first race, having prepared for the classics season the whole winter,” Van Aert said.
“We had a good training camp at Sierra Nevada and I was feeling really strong. But unfortunately, it’s also that time of the year where it’s easy to fall ill. I remain positive about the feeling I had on training and am confident that I will be able to return to racing soon. Just not this Saturday.”
As we mentioned on yesterday’s blog, no male cyclist has ever won Omloop and Flanders in the same season, and only Johan Museeuw and Greg Van Avermaet have won Omloop and Roubaix in the same year since the mid-90s… so maybe this is all just keeping Van Aert on for him to finally win a big one.
"We’ve loved every minute, especially our customers": Popular bike shop to close after almost half a century serving the community

A popular Lancashire bike shop is closing after nearly five decades serving customers in Penwortham, near Preston. The Lancashire Post reported the shop is set to close, one of the owners, David Butcher, explaining the decision.
“The two remaining partners of three have decided it’s time after nearly 40 years and 50 years respectively between them that it’s time for a new chapter to begin,” he said.
“Retirement is the driver mainly for one of the partners and change for the other. Running a small business in the current climate is becoming harder and harder every year. Rent, rates, permits and tax increases with no improvement’s have taken a toll over the years.
“We walk out with heads high, suppliers and customers all treated the right way. Accounts all settled. One door closes another one opens.
“We’ve loved every minute, especially our customers […] We’d like to thank all our customers over the years for their support and patience. They are an amazing diverse bunch. Just keep on cycling, it’s great for your health and wellbeing.”
Seven years of accumulated tubeless sealant or the skeleton of a long-since decayed carcass?
Sport switch? Record-breaking Winter Olympian invited to test with pro cycling team
The dream of seeing record-breaking 13-times Olympic medallist Johannes Høsflot Klæbo switch endurance sports and come give road racing a go appears to still be alive.
You’d imagine, like triathlon star Kristian Blummenfelt, ultimately the safety of staying in a sport where you’re already one of the best in the world (sorry, the best ever) will be too strong, but Klæbo’s cycling switch from cross-country skiing appears on the table, if he wants it.
Speaking to Velo, Uno-X Mobility boss and former world champion Thor Hushovd revealed he has indeed invited Klæbo to do some testing with the team.
“I told Klæbo last year that once the Olympics were over, he should consider testing a few sessions with the Uno X team,” Hushovd said.
“I’ve ridden with him, and it’s obvious he’s a natural cycling talent. He sits beautifully on the bike, has great control, and adapts quickly. With the engine he has, he could succeed in almost any endurance sport. I’ve always said that Klæbo has an extraordinary physical capacity, something truly unique.”
The Norwegian was one of the stars of the Winter Olympics, winning a mind-boggling five gold medals. It was a clean sweep and a repeat of the five-timer he pulled off at last year’s world championships too. Overall, Klæbo has won 15 world titles and 11 Olympic golds. Staggering… but can he do it on a rainy afternoon at a 1.2 in Belgium? You know you want to, Klæbo.
“There’s still a long way to go”: 4 in 10 London cyclists still feel unsafe in the city

> “There’s still a long way to go”: 4 in 10 London cyclists still feel unsafe in the city
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Laudable effort. Will a full review of the bike be following?
By their very nature the dockless bike schemes will result in bikes being parked in stupid places. The user has little incentive to find the correct place to park it. More so if they are tourists with a cruise liner to catch and only 3 hours to explore. So, if the operation can't be made to fit within the councils required operating method, then it should be removed. I'm pretty sure another operator will come in and propose a system acceptable to the council if they believe they can make money. I strongly suspect that the current operators can only make money by tacitly allowing bikes to be left where the tourist money wants to leave them, so time to rethink the financial model me thinks!
@bikercub "If they are good enough to be supporting the Groupama-FDJ United World TourCycling team, we should be looking at them as a contender." No, that only means that they paid enough to become a sponsor. Let's put the "pros use better stuff" myth to sleep, finally. And by the way, the trickiest part of a GPS computer is not data collection - that can be done by absolutely all of them. The hard part is the general user interface and turn-by-turn navigation, none of which really matters for a pro cyclist - and that brings us back to why any GPS computer could be good enough for just about any pro cyclist.
@mdavidford Absolutely, I am assuming that the OP means those lanes where it's so tight it's actually impossible for a cyclist to get through if there is a large vehicle, obviously if they can squeeze by each other nobody needs to go back.
You are quite correct about uniform signage. However this seems to be a fairly atypical set up. Having experience and knowledge of it would in theory make mistakes less likely. Part of my job involved writing operating and maintenance procedures for food manufacturing machinery. I quickly learnt that people need to be given direct, simple, non-conflicting, non-ambiguous instructions. If it is possible to make mistakes, then they will be made. The best of of avoiding a mistake is to design flaws out of the system.
I do not in anyway support the Daily Telegraph's continually mad anti-cycling journalism but, it must be said, that this particular section of cycle lane on King Street in Hammersmith has been an absolute disaster ever since it re-opened. It certainly wasn't perfect for cyclists before but ever since they remodelled the cycle lane to run as a two way lane on one side of the road it has become much much more dangerous and confusing for pedestrians, drivers, motorcyclists and cyclists alike. I'm not saying that all cycling infrastructure is badly designed but, on my 12 mile commute from home in South London to work at the West end of King Street, this cycleway is where I feel most unsafe. It's not an inditement on active travel but it should be a lesson in planning because it's been closed on 5 or 6 occasions since to be remodelled to correct issues that should've been obvious before it opened. I have been using this road to get to work since long before the re-modelling and it has definitely, in my opinion, worsened not just the safety of cyclists but also the relationship between drivers and cyclists in this area.
In principle, it shouldn't matter if you're familiar with a particular junction - that's precisely why we have (relatively) uniform signage across the country (I had this from a driver recently - Him: sorry, I don't know the area. Me: but a no entry sign is the same everywhere...). But in practice in a busy environment like this, simply adding another sign saying look out for cyclists is limited help. I don't love cycling on contraflows / a two way cyclelane on a one way street for that reason. In fact there's a crossing I don't love as a pedestrian which is look right (bikes) look left (bikes) look right (cars), island, catch breath, look left (cars), look left (bikes). (Yes, you could wait for a green man, but then it's still look everywhere (Deliveroo)).
I'm not familiar with Jeremy Vine's favourite cycle lane. However I do have sympathy with drivers if they have to deal with "Look both ways for cyclists" as well as "One Way" and "No Entry" signs. Especially if the driver is not familiar with the junction.
@mitsky Alas for a second there I was awarding the motorist in the window there points for wearing hi-vis in their car, then I realised they were also wearing a motoring helmet...
While I understand it in context, I quite liked this to conclude a bike light review: "it’s a reliable set for the price, so long as you aren’t looking to ride in the dark"

21 thoughts on ““What the hell is the council playing at?”: MP Rupert Lowe claims new cycle lane is “a complete sodding waste of money”; Sport switch? Record-breaking Winter Olympian invited to test with pro cycling team + more on the live blog”
I honestly don’t know why the media reports the endless brain farts of Lowe. He’s got even less Parliamentary representation than the Fag Ash Führer. Why do we never hear anything from the Lib Dems or the Greens?
‘Fag ash fuhrer’, that comment’s made my day, thank you.
Likely due to the right wing oligarchs that almost all our media. Even the BBC is right wing and will even frame questions using a far right wing world view when interviewing Greens or Lib Dems (are they even still around?).
Please always refer to him and them as “Muhammad Ziauddin Yusuf” and “Reform UK Party Ltd”.
As we can all guess at what their “beliefs” are on preferred pronouns.
As the serving MP he is *sitting* as an independent MP for great Yarmouth. When the next election comes he will be *standing* for re-election.
(Along with all the other desirable features which have been lost in the upgrade [sic], please can we have the ability to use bold and italics for emphasis back as well?)
Who needs emphasis? You made your point nicely and precisely.
please can we have the ability to use bold and italics for
emphasisback as well?HTML rules are clearly only partially implemented
“”The Norwegian was one of the stars of the Winter Olympics, winning a mind-boggling five gold medals. It was a clean sweep and a repeat of the five-timer he pulled off at last year’s world championships too.””
not sure why the bottom of the post cut off…
The photo says something different….
He got six (6) golds.
1. Men’s 50km mass start classic
2. Men’s 10km+10km skiathlon
3. Men’s 10km interval start free
4. Men’s sprint classic
5. Men’s 4×7.5km relay
6. Men’s team sprint free
Count ’em.
Why would we need to count ’em when you’ve already numbered ’em?
I reckon that tyre has had caterpillars.
Re: Gt.Yarmouth cycle lane.
What’s with the give way markings at the edge of the road?
It looks like another cycle path joining the cycle lane with stop lines for the cycle lane adjacent to the road.
Does anyone have a bigger picture?
Give Way lines should be on the left of the cycle lane as viewed I think, but probably the people marking out the lines in Gt Yarmouth have little experience of cycle lanes.
There will be new entry in the revised and increased version of the Dutch dictionary :
woutvanaerted (adjective), cursed, jinxed
woutvanaert (substantive), bad luck that keeps coming back
Straits of Hormuz closed. Petrol predicted to rise to £2.00 a litre. Let’s see how underused cycle lanes are now!
Alas, the immediate UK response to increased petrol prices after decades of “we have to drive” is more likely to be cycle lanes blocked by drivers!
Those would be a) protesting about paying fuel taxes when fuel prices go up and b) parking in the cycle infra to avoid driving around looking for a legal parking spot.
We collectively missed an opportunity in the 1970s with the oil crisis. That was one of the factors that propelled the course correction by the Dutch.
(The outlines of that story told here.
They were primed by them being a bit behind the UK in the adoption of the car ahead of all other modes. And indeed the bulldozing of cities to make room for it, and the spike in road deaths resulting from it. Plus they still had mass cycling and reasonable public transport. Indeed they already had some “cycle infra” albeit the primary purpose may have been for the safety of moped riders.)
I was around in 1973 and remember the impact that the oil crisis and the subsequent oil price hikes had. That was a missed opportunity; this may be the second chance we’ve been waiting 52 years for. Hasn’t come to that yet, but we need to be ready if it does.
I hope the government displays the correct ‘moral fibre’ attitude and also piles on the Fuel Price Escalator
@wtjs I’d love to be wrong but this current one doesn’t seem to have fibre or indeed any ability to stick to decisions, never mind ones which might be immediately and noisily unpopular.
(The only exception that immediately comes to mind is something they were forced into – taking some belated action on ex-prince Andrew and Peter Mandelson).