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Councillor fears cycling lobby interference in vote to make shopping street more cycle friendly

Many votes in Newcastle City Council ballot multiples or from outside area... but no indication how they swung ballot

Residents and businesspeople in Newcastle upon Tyne have raised queries about the behaviour of cycling lobbyists after allegations that votes were rigged in a consultation about the future of a busy road.

According to Claire Hawthorn of Jesmond Local, an interim report by Newcastle City Council on the future of Acorn Road showed that more people favoured a radically pedestrianised, cycle-friendly area than the alternatives of a slightly improved shopping street or changing nothing at all.

But North Jesmond ward councillor Gerry Keating and others have expressed concern that many of the votes counted were either from outside Jesmond or duplicate votes, leading to rumours that that the extra-district votes could have come from friends of cycling lobbyists who supported Option A.

Cllr Keating conducted a series of Freedom of Information requests to find out where the votes came from, and saw that some were from as far afield as Whitley Bay.

He told Jesmond Local: “In theory, anyone on the planet could have voted.”

Cllr Keating said that 58 of the 424 votes, more than one in every eight cast, were extra-district votes.  35 of the responses were multiple votes within one dwelling.

“When I was standing for election I said wouldn’t take a view and would accept the outcome unless there were any procedural irregularities and I’m sticking to that,” said Keating.

He said that the changes now likely to go through as a result of the vote could cause traders to move away or not set up shop in the newly pedestrianised area - fearing that trade would fall with fewer cars allowed into the street,

He added: “I think the cycling aspect is a complete red herring – any change will be neutral with regards to cyclists as they will have to navigate Osborne Road or St. George’s Terrace just to get there.”

The scheme, due to come in in January 2015, had been welcomed by Katja Leyendecker and Sally Watson of the Newcastle Cycling Campaign.

Katja Leyendecker had described Option 1 as a “step in the right direction,” but noted that in future, Newcastle Cycling Campaign “would like to see Acorn Road fully pedestrianised along its entire length from Osborne Road to St George’s Terrace”.

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16 comments

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elrick | 9 years ago
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Perhaps joemmo you should go to their meetings since you might make a difference and help improve the cycling infrastructure in Newcastle. I have seen many things that newcycling has challenged the council on and it's far from "pie in the sky" as you say. Have you ever tried cycling around Newcastle with an 8 year old child? The only safe place is either a park or the pavement. The reason they dropped out of the Council's Forum had nothing to do with not getting their own way and everything to do with the council not doing anything, not even following up on the actions they had set themselves 3 months previously.
Like I say if you want to see better cycling infrastructure in Newcastle get off you backside and go join the campaign and help them do things better rather than just bleating from the sidelines. I'm sure you'd be more than welcome.

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spen | 9 years ago
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Jacknorrel that's not slinging mud, that's voicing an opinion.

As a way os howing what I mean consider their plans for the Clayton Road, Abbotsford Terrace, Brandling Park junction. They want Brandling Park and Abbotsford Terrace to be designated as a "Cycle Street" with the removal of on street parking, where none, or few, of the houses have off road parking. They also want to change the priority on the junction so that people on the "Cycle Street" have priority over traffic on Ckayton Road, by far the more busy of the three (https://www.google.co.uk/maps/@54.9855842,-1.6116512,3a,75y,180h,71.29t/data=!3m4!1e1!3m2!1s56kZVVfm61GUQ403lpENnw!2e0)(http://newcycling.org/scr4-jesmond-our-proposal/( there's bben some changes to the website so the figs are missing from the page)

Add to this their assertion that the council should consult them as they have the necessary expertise (I know the chair is a civil engineer working in flood alleviation but riding a bike does not make you an expert on road infrastructure) and their questioning of where the council has a written policy stating that their priority for highways is to keep traffic moving (!) and how else can they be described (that's just three, you could find more if you trawl through their site).

Gazza_d you describe them as "very hard working volunteers" and I'm sure they are but while they go to the council with pie int he sky ideas that involve a reduction in service to the majority of road users, with an attitude that the councils engineers are idiots (when they have to live and work in the real world) and that if the council does what they want every thing will be perfect, they will not be taken seriously and frankly what they are asking for is not he best but some adulterated dutch is perfect idea which could only work with large scale, hideously expensive and unjustifiable alterations tho the road network. As for flouncing out of the cycle forum because they couldn't get their own way ...

As I said, that's my opinion and why you'll never catch me at one of their meetings.

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Initialised | 9 years ago
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The problem with restricting access to Acorn Road is that it is the most natural East-West route through Jesmond so it gets used as a rat run when the A189 or A1058 clog up. A really bold step would be to ban cars during peak hours (7:30-9:30 and 15:00 to 18:30) using rising bollards like Cambridge and Gateshead use for bus lane access control. Over time drivers will learn that they can't cut through Jesmond on the school run or when other routes are clogged.

This way people can still access the specialist shops by car off-peak and because the road is still a road so you reduce the pedestrian problem that cyclists face on shared routes and allow safe passage on the shortest through route at peak times. Everyone's a winner except for the rat-running drivers and of course Greggs missing out on the morning rush.

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jollygoodvelo | 9 years ago
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So much for that research from New York that showed trade increased on pedestrianised/cyclised streets, eh? Never mind what those Americans say, Jesmond knows best.

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HKCambridge | 9 years ago
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Why shouldn't people outside the consultation area reply? Although they're less likely to hear about it, most of our local council consultations make you say where you're responding from, so although everyone has a say, you can then split it down by location.

People driving from outside of Cambridge got a say in whether they could do 30mph down my residential street (they were overwhelming outnumbered by locals who wanted 20mph).

If anything, surely people from outside the area are generally more likely to want car infrastructure? I mean, the locals can walk and cycle, right? And I'm sure these are stunning, specialist shops which have a large catchment area of clients who absolutely must travel from further away to shop there?

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wstephenson | 9 years ago
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That's hilarious, I lived in Jesmond about 10 years ago and was car doored literally outside the Greggs in that photo. The driver's door window caught me in the adam's apple and I could hardly breathe for several minutes.

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narcissus | 9 years ago
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wow, hope the Government can do more convenient for cycling.

not lip,actual do it.

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spen | 9 years ago
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Having followed the Newcycling.org website for about a year I feel sorry for anyone in the council who has to deal with them. They have totally unrealistic ideas of what can be achieved and want the majority to be disadvantaged and inconvenienced for their benefit. In short they are the kind of campaign that gives cyclists a bad name.

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jacknorell replied to spen | 9 years ago
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spen wrote:

Having followed the Newcycling.org website for about a year I feel sorry for anyone in the council who has to deal with them. They have totally unrealistic ideas of what can be achieved and want the majority to be disadvantaged and inconvenienced for their benefit. In short they are the kind of campaign that gives cyclists a bad name.

So, now that you've slung some dirt their way, could you enlighten us as to what they're (unreasonably) demanding that makes all cyclists look bad?

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joemmo replied to jacknorell | 9 years ago
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jacknorell wrote:
spen wrote:

Having followed the Newcycling.org website for about a year I feel sorry for anyone in the council who has to deal with them. They have totally unrealistic ideas of what can be achieved and want the majority to be disadvantaged and inconvenienced for their benefit. In short they are the kind of campaign that gives cyclists a bad name.

So, now that you've slung some dirt their way, could you enlighten us as to what they're (unreasonably) demanding that makes all cyclists look bad?

Spen - I think your comments are a little unfair but I would agree that Newcycling need to work on their 'public voice' a little, particularly on Twitter where they have a habit of berating the council in a pretty patronising tone. The attention on Acorn Road is also a bit symptomatic of an uneven focus. It's in a wealthy area with a lot of vocal self-interested groups battling for attention but there's a whole city to sort out. I do support their aims but yes, they need to be a bit less confrontational.

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gazza_d replied to spen | 9 years ago
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spen wrote:

Having followed the Newcycling.org website for about a year I feel sorry for anyone in the council who has to deal with them. They have totally unrealistic ideas of what can be achieved and want the majority to be disadvantaged and inconvenienced for their benefit. In short they are the kind of campaign that gives cyclists a bad name.

You are absolutely and completely wrong there. That is a disgusting comment to make about some very hard working volunteers. Have you ever tried working with any council about cycling? It is like a combination of nailing jelly to a tree, and getting blood from a stone.

Newcycling have aspirations, and a vision of what needs to be. Invariably all councils fall short of what is asked for. So you always have to ask for the best otherwise you end up with crap which people like you whine is unusable.

Although very little is on the ground, as a direct result of Newcycling's efforts, the council in Newcastle has finally developed some very good plans. They atill have some rubbish and are too motorcentric.

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Paul M | 9 years ago
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When we had a consultation in my town over proposals to prohibit or limit car parking in town centre streets and in roads around the railway sttaion, there was quite a lot of creative responding by the opposers of the scheme.

For example, objectors wrote in separately road by road, making multiple objections, so that it appeared that there were twice as many objections as supporters, when in fact there were almost twice as many supporters as objectors.

Many of the objections were almost identical - not only the wording but the grounds for objection being irrelevant to the discussion because they stated that a multistorey car park would be the solution, when that has been comprehensively rejected as unaffordable.

I don't recall any of our local councillors or their officers making these features apparent. I had to dig this out for myself.

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Snake8355 | 9 years ago
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I know the area. It's a bit of a nightmare to drive, as you have car parking either side of the road and only room for one car to pass in either direction. As such it's very slow traffic and really no problem for cyclists.
Reading between the lines. It's a bit of obfuscation by the councillor. I'd say he actually wants the status quo and is keen to use any means he can to get it. In this case by stirring up some anti cycling sentiment.
The best option is to leave the actual road alone and just make it one way.
My fear is that the city's councillors have several million quid from the cycling fund burning a hole in their collective pocket and will use it to pedestrianise a street and then call it a cycle route.
They've already used some to widen one cycle route (possibly ok ) and buy some outdoor exercise equipment! Because we all love to get off our bikes mid ride and use some handy fitness equipment, don't we?

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Paul_C | 9 years ago
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hmmm, pedestrianised... maybe the council could allow some markets to be set up on Fridays and Saturdays... local crafts and produce maybe?

Like what happens in Gloucester on the pedestrianised Gate Streets? Also local cafes could be allowed to set tables and chairs out front as well?

The center of Gloucester is a very nice place to be these days, unlike back in the seventies beforehand when it was nose to tail crawling traffic through the very center...

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Initialised replied to Paul_C | 9 years ago
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Paul_C wrote:

hmmm, pedestrianised... maybe the council could allow some markets to be set up on Fridays and Saturdays... local crafts and produce maybe?

Jesmond already has a craft market on a pedestrianised bridge at the bottom of Jesmond Dene.

Back on topic, so what if people from Whitley Bay are voting on it, chances are they are cyclists who ride to Jesmond or through it into town to work or shop and should definitely be entitled to vote on the issue. During peak commuter times the other options are frankly dangerous.

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Grizzerly | 9 years ago
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Wow! Maybe Tyneside cyclists fancy riding to the shops in safety, even if they have to ride a little further. Some of them might even live together in the same house!

No, not possible, it must be a conspiracy.

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