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Councillor campaigning against CS9 schooled on cycling by police

Why isn’t filtering considered close passing?

A Chiswick councillor campaigning against CS9 has been given an education by police via Twitter after taking issue with cyclists “whizzing” past cars in moving traffic.

Conservative councillor Joanna Biddolph, who represents Turnham Green ward, spoke to 10 traders running shops alongside Enfield’s Mini Holland scheme in a bid to establish that “badly thought-out dogma-driven cycle schemes on shopping streets are bad for business.”

Based on this, her fear is that CS9 will lead to Chiswick becoming “a ghost town.”

The report’s a fun read. She says that one cyclist who went the wrong way down a cycle lane “provided more evidence that cyclists will do whatever they wish even when they have what they say they want.”

She also says that what cyclists want in Chiswick, “is any cycling infrastructure for the sake of the free money that will pay for it, not cycling infrastructure that would work for local residents.”

When she tweeted a link to the report, a number of other users took issue with her conclusions, including Jeremy Vine.

Responding to one cyclist’s account of a recent close pass, Biddolph responded: “What's it called when someone on a bicycle whizzes past moving cars in moving traffic on a busy road, squeezing between the car and the pavement or the car and parked cars, almost touching the cars it was whizzing beside?”

Surrey Police responded:

 

 

But Biddolph continued, asking why this ‘undertaking’ wasn’t considered close passing: “How does it differ from close passing – other than that it's the person on the bicycle doing the close passing?

At this point, West Midlands Police took up the educational challenge.

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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34 comments

Avatar
alansmurphy | 5 years ago
0 likes

So the good (shit) councillor is reading, as surely to vein not to...

 

You are a twat!

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cycle.london | 5 years ago
3 likes

My response. .

Good morning, Councillor Biddolph,

Thank you very much for taking the time to respond - it is much appreciated.  As is your confirmation that you know how to use google.  :-P 

Can you now confirm for me that you do understand why a cyclist 'close passing' a motor vehicle is nowhere near as dangerous (i.e. not dangerous at all, unless you count scuffed paint as a threat to life and limb), as a motor vehicle being driven at speed close to a cyclist? 

I read your blog with interest, and I thank you for the link.   However, I struggle to see the relevance, since it doesn't deal with the issue which prompted me to write to you in the first place. 
In any case, I wish you a pleasant afternoon, and thank you again for responding. 

 

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cycle.london | 5 years ago
0 likes

So the good councillor was gracious enough to respond..

Many thanks for the offer.  There have been plenty of explanations.

You might like to read the blog I wrote after taking up a challenge, made by a Chiswick resident, to experience cycling infrastructure in Chiswick.  I hope reading about my views might be as as eye-opening for you as the ride was for me.  I also hope you'll agree that it isn't "the usual Tory gobsh*t.  (Apologies for the asterisk which is not added for prudishness but because I suspect the word without it will prevent the email from being sent through the council system and I don't want to deny you the chance of posting an update on the road.cc site.)

Here's the link to my blog: http://turnhamgreen.yourcllr.com/2017/10/02/cycling-through-chiswick-pro...

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hawkinspeter replied to cycle.london | 5 years ago
0 likes
cycle.london wrote:

So the good councillor was gracious enough to respond..

Many thanks for the offer.  There have been plenty of explanations.

You might like to read the blog I wrote after taking up a challenge, made by a Chiswick resident, to experience cycling infrastructure in Chiswick.  I hope reading about my views might be as as eye-opening for you as the ride was for me.  I also hope you'll agree that it isn't "the usual Tory gobsh*t.  (Apologies for the asterisk which is not added for prudishness but because I suspect the word without it will prevent the email from being sent through the council system and I don't want to deny you the chance of posting an update on the road.cc site.)

Here's the link to my blog: http://turnhamgreen.yourcllr.com/2017/10/02/cycling-through-chiswick-pro...

That site is broken - turnhamgreen.yourcllr.com seems to redirect to multipipe.co.uk unless I'm doing something dumb.

Avatar
Hirsute replied to hawkinspeter | 5 years ago
0 likes
HawkinsPeter wrote:
cycle.london wrote:

So the good councillor was gracious enough to respond..

Many thanks for the offer.  There have been plenty of explanations.

You might like to read the blog I wrote after taking up a challenge, made by a Chiswick resident, to experience cycling infrastructure in Chiswick.  I hope reading about my views might be as as eye-opening for you as the ride was for me.  I also hope you'll agree that it isn't "the usual Tory gobsh*t.  (Apologies for the asterisk which is not added for prudishness but because I suspect the word without it will prevent the email from being sent through the council system and I don't want to deny you the chance of posting an update on the road.cc site.)

Here's the link to my blog: http://turnhamgreen.yourcllr.com/2017/10/02/cycling-through-chiswick-pro...

That site is broken - turnhamgreen.yourcllr.com seems to redirect to multipipe.co.uk unless I'm doing something dumb.

Works for me.
Browser hijacker by squirrel for you.

Avatar
hawkinspeter replied to Hirsute | 5 years ago
0 likes
hirsute wrote:
HawkinsPeter wrote:
cycle.london wrote:

So the good councillor was gracious enough to respond..

Many thanks for the offer.  There have been plenty of explanations.

You might like to read the blog I wrote after taking up a challenge, made by a Chiswick resident, to experience cycling infrastructure in Chiswick.  I hope reading about my views might be as as eye-opening for you as the ride was for me.  I also hope you'll agree that it isn't "the usual Tory gobsh*t.  (Apologies for the asterisk which is not added for prudishness but because I suspect the word without it will prevent the email from being sent through the council system and I don't want to deny you the chance of posting an update on the road.cc site.)

Here's the link to my blog: http://turnhamgreen.yourcllr.com/2017/10/02/cycling-through-chiswick-pro...

That site is broken - turnhamgreen.yourcllr.com seems to redirect to multipipe.co.uk unless I'm doing something dumb.

Works for me. Browser hijacker by squirrel for you.

Okay - that's odd.

Looks like they've got a mis-configured website as if you visit the HTTPS version, you get a mismatched certificate for multipipe.co.uk and the HTTPS site displays multipipe's website (but with the TurnhamGreen URL). Visiting the plain HTTP site works but is subject to MITM attacks etc.

TLDR; the HTTPS Everywhere extension pointed out that the Tories don't know what they're doing.

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kingleo | 5 years ago
0 likes

A person as a pedestrian is a law-abiding citizen, the same person driving a car is a law-abiding citizen, the same person riding a bicycle is a law-breaking lout.

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StuInNorway | 5 years ago
3 likes

We should send her out with "Cycle Gaz" for a lesson .  . https://youtu.be/VBPMWxkQnpk

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mattsccm | 5 years ago
0 likes

"homophobic shits"

Obviously as nasty as you then. How come you have a right to be foul yet others haven't? If they have no right to an opinion neither do you. Or should it be that both parties have that right?

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userfriendly replied to mattsccm | 5 years ago
0 likes
mattsccm wrote:

"homophobic shits"

Obviously as nasty as you then. How come you have a right to be foul yet others haven't? If they have no right to an opinion neither do you. Or should it be that both parties have that right?

Unlike your sexuality, your homophobia is a choice. You homophobic shit.

Avatar
Legs_Eleven_Wor... replied to userfriendly | 5 years ago
0 likes
userfriendly wrote:
mattsccm wrote:

"homophobic shits"

Obviously as nasty as you then. How come you have a right to be foul yet others haven't? If they have no right to an opinion neither do you. Or should it be that both parties have that right?

Unlike your sexuality, your homophobia is a choice. You homophobic shit.

Wot 'e said.  

Avatar
Legs_Eleven_Wor... replied to mattsccm | 5 years ago
0 likes
mattsccm wrote:

"homophobic shits"

Obviously as nasty as you then. How come you have a right to be foul yet others haven't? If they have no right to an opinion neither do you. Or should it be that both parties have that right?

You can be as 'foul' as you want, matey.

If you shout homophobic abuse at someone within earshot of me, I'm not only going to film them kicking the fucking living daylights out of you, I might lend them a hand.  

Avatar
Simon E | 5 years ago
5 likes
Quote:

Joanna Biddolph, who represents Turnham Green ward, spoke to 10 traders running shops alongside Enfield’s Mini Holland scheme in a bid to establish that “badly thought-out dogma-driven cycle schemes on shopping streets are bad for business.”

Based on this, her fear is that CS9 will lead to Chiswick becoming “a ghost town.”

If you look at FACTS instead of conjecture and bias based on fallacy, I think most places are better off with decent infrastructure for cyclists and pedestrians. It has repeatedly been shown that it actually INCREASES trade. Only last week Carlton Reid wrote about how closing central Madrid to cars resulted in a 9.5% increase in retail spending. His Forbes article also states that, according to a report in El Pais, emissions of nitrogen oxide fell by 38% in Madrid’s center the first month the program was implemented, while CO2 emissions dropped by 14.2%.

Does this pathetic excuse for a councillor not want to reduce pollution, congestion, speeding or road collisions in her ward? Has she tried asking her constituents what they'd like?

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HarrogateSpa | 5 years ago
0 likes

That's the wrong argument IMHO, campaign to remove motorvehicles from the existing infrastructure

In theory, it would be great to ride on road without any cars.

It's hard enough to persuade local authorities to build decent cycle infra. In my opinion, it's totally impossible to get them to ban cars from roads. I want to campaign for outcomes that have some hope of happening.

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Mungecrundle | 5 years ago
5 likes

You could build the best cycling infrastructure in the world and someone on a bicycle will still find a way to not use it properly, or be where they are not supposed to be. But that is no reason not to invest in the safety, convenience and other benefits that cycling, walking and other non motor car centric forms of local urban transport can bring.

If she wants to start down the route of using perceived antisocial and dangerous behaviour by a small minority of specific road user types to restrict investing in their road infrastructure requirements, then I hope for the sake of anyone driving a car through her constituency that she remains ignorant of the deaths, injuries and disease due to pollution that those road users cause.

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cycle.london | 5 years ago
8 likes

I have this evening sent a VERY polite e-mail to Councillor Biddolph, asking if she would like me to explain the physics of it to her. 

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burtthebike replied to cycle.london | 5 years ago
3 likes
cycle.london wrote:

I have this evening sent a VERY polite e-mail to Councillor Biddolph, asking if she would like me to explain the physics of it to her. 

I hope you're a constituent, otherwise it's unlikely you'll get an answer.  Even if you are, and you do, don't expect it to make sense; she's both a tory and a driver, and not a cyclist, ergo, completely unqualified to say anything on the subject at all, but we already knew that.

Avatar
cycle.london replied to burtthebike | 5 years ago
2 likes
burtthebike wrote:
cycle.london wrote:

I have this evening sent a VERY polite e-mail to Councillor Biddolph, asking if she would like me to explain the physics of it to her. 

I hope you're a constituent, otherwise it's unlikely you'll get an answer.  Even if you are, and you do, don't expect it to make sense; she's both a tory and a driver, and not a cyclist, ergo, completely unqualified to say anything on the subject at all, but we already knew that.

Oh, I know that there is unlikely to be a response, and that if there is one, it will be the usual Tory gobshit. 

I shall report here, of course. 

Avatar
BehindTheBikesheds replied to cycle.london | 5 years ago
0 likes
cycle.london wrote:
burtthebike wrote:
cycle.london wrote:

I have this evening sent a VERY polite e-mail to Councillor Biddolph, asking if she would like me to explain the physics of it to her. 

I hope you're a constituent, otherwise it's unlikely you'll get an answer.  Even if you are, and you do, don't expect it to make sense; she's both a tory and a driver, and not a cyclist, ergo, completely unqualified to say anything on the subject at all, but we already knew that.

Oh, I know that there is unlikely to be a response, and that if there is one, it will be the usual Tory gobshit. 

I shall report here, of course. 

But you must admit that what you're campaigning for isn't working right? We are not going to get Dutch type infra anytime in the next 50 years, it simply isn't going to happen because you and others are campaigning for the wrong thing and the cycling groups shrug their shoulders and say well it's better than nothing (see the backing by Sustrans, CTC et al for the Bedford turbo rbt!!)

Even in Manchester the new cycle lane that is fanfared by Sir Chris of Merseyside is simply not good enough for mass cycling, it's not good enough for all levels of people on bikes to mix freely and without worry there's enough space, it's not connected and as per the Cardiff infra it dog legs/doesn't take the most direct route, which is why stuff like Caxton's Stevenage cycle lanes failed ... because the roads for motors was wide, direct and easy to get about on.

Even in NL they are roughly 50% less modal share of cycling than the UK in the late 40s, even in NL they have lovely wide roads for motors that take the direct route far more than the cycle lanes, particularly in the towns and cities.

Up to you but having used the cycle infra in London it was awful and I simply went back onto the roads as it was less constrictive, less hazards (ergo safer) and more direct. Whilst for some they would use it, it's not mass cycling friendly, it's not great for families with young children to mix with faster speed cyclists as it's far too narrow.

The road in the pic I attached means it's wide enough for absolutely everyone, wide enough for all types and all speeds, it's the shortest route (most often) and os absolutey connected to everywhere, frankly it's a no brainer which way to back and yet cycling groups insist on segregated lanes which as I said, is the wrong argument/direction to encourage true mass cycling in this country.

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spragger | 5 years ago
0 likes

Of late we are ill served by politicians and representative democracy

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spragger | 5 years ago
3 likes

Of late we are ill served by politicians and representative democracy

Avatar
crazy-legs | 5 years ago
11 likes

What never fails to amaze me here is that the answer to all of these issues - cycling on the pavement, filtering, undertaking, not using cycle lanes, jumping red lights - is to campaign and push for *proper cycling infrastructure*.

Not some half-arsed bit of paint on the road that disappears 20m later but proper segregated lanes as per The Embankment or Blackfriars. That removes at a stroke people feeling they need to ride on the pavement to avoid the traffic, it means they don't feel the need to jump a red light to escape an HGV that's pulled up right next to them, they won't be filtering past your precious car, they won't be "holding you up"...

Honestly, I despair of our political classes - if it's not the total fucking shambles of Brexit, it's dogmatic prehistoric views, an ideology stuck in about the 1950's and an inability to show any hint of progressive world views.

Avatar
Legs_Eleven_Wor... replied to crazy-legs | 5 years ago
6 likes
crazy-legs wrote:

What never fails to amaze me here is that the answer to all of these issues - cycling on the pavement, filtering, undertaking, not using cycle lanes, jumping red lights - is to campaign and push for *proper cycling infrastructure*.

Not some half-arsed bit of paint on the road that disappears 20m later but proper segregated lanes as per The Embankment or Blackfriars. That removes at a stroke people feeling they need to ride on the pavement to avoid the traffic, it means they don't feel the need to jump a red light to escape an HGV that's pulled up right next to them, they won't be filtering past your precious car, they won't be "holding you up"...

Honestly, I despair of our political classes - if it's not the total fucking shambles of Brexit, it's dogmatic prehistoric views, an ideology stuck in about the 1950's and an inability to show any hint of progressive world views.

The question of 'infrastructure' for cyclists always reminds me of the US military when being gay was not allowed, do you remember that?   Essentially, the question seemed to be 'why won't you allow gays to serve in the armed forces?'

And the answer was that well, some people don't like it, so we're going to ban it. 

Basically, because some people in the military are homophobic shits, we're going to penalise the innocent people they hate, and reward the bigots by keeping these otherwise lawful, entirely decent and patriotic people away from them.

Am I the only one who thinks that this policy was seriously fucking backwards?  That the proper policy would have been to say, 'Some people are gay.  Get the fuck over it'?

And so we come to cycling infrastructure.   The majority of British drivers consider cyclists to be 'road lice', and whilst not all of that majority are willing to kill or seriously injure a cyclist on purpose, enough of them are, and the 'justice' (*hollow laugh*) system is willing to look the other way when they do so.  Of the remainder, they lack either the intelligence or the foresight to alter their behaviour in a way that will make the roads safer for the most vulnerable road user, because they don't give a flying fuck, and let's face it: getting Kylie to her gymkhana or Harry to his maths tutor is a lot less important than the life or personal safety of the 'freeloaders' that are cyclists, anyway.

And what do we do?  'Please, Mr Government .. if .. if ... if we ask nicely, will you .. will you ... will you please take us away from these drivers?'

And the drivers snarl, 'Yeah, get them fackin' cyclists off my fackin' road, innit?'

The response of a properly-constituted government not made up of psychopaths in hock to the oil industry would be to say very calmly to the driving 'community' in this country that cyclists have a right to be on the road.  That they will use the same roads as car drivers.   And that if a driver kills or seriously injures a cyclist (or a pedestrian) - even if it is 'an accident' (there is no such fucking thing), ' ... then you are going to prison for a long time.  If it transpires that the act was deliberate, then you will never, ever know freedom'.

We should not be begging for the crumbs of 'infrastructure'.  We should be fucking demanding equal treatment and equal protection under the law.   And we should be saying to the British state: either you protect us, or we will protect ourselves, and our justice will be a damn fucking sight less clement than yours.

Avatar
Htc replied to Legs_Eleven_Worcester | 5 years ago
4 likes
Legs_Eleven_Worcester wrote:
crazy-legs wrote:

What never fails to amaze me here is that the answer to all of these issues - cycling on the pavement, filtering, undertaking, not using cycle lanes, jumping red lights - is to campaign and push for *proper cycling infrastructure*.

Not some half-arsed bit of paint on the road that disappears 20m later but proper segregated lanes as per The Embankment or Blackfriars. That removes at a stroke people feeling they need to ride on the pavement to avoid the traffic, it means they don't feel the need to jump a red light to escape an HGV that's pulled up right next to them, they won't be filtering past your precious car, they won't be "holding you up"...

Honestly, I despair of our political classes - if it's not the total fucking shambles of Brexit, it's dogmatic prehistoric views, an ideology stuck in about the 1950's and an inability to show any hint of progressive world views.

The question of 'infrastructure' for cyclists always reminds me of the US military when being gay was not allowed, do you remember that?   Essentially, the question seemed to be 'why won't you allow gays to serve in the armed forces?'

And the answer was that well, some people don't like it, so we're going to ban it. 

Basically, because some people in the military are homophobic shits, we're going to penalise the innocent people they hate, and reward the bigots by keeping these otherwise lawful, entirely decent and patriotic people away from them.

Am I the only one who thinks that this policy was seriously fucking backwards?  That the proper policy would have been to say, 'Some people are gay.  Get the fuck over it'?

And so we come to cycling infrastructure.   The majority of British drivers consider cyclists to be 'road lice', and whilst not all of that majority are willing to kill or seriously injure a cyclist on purpose, enough of them are, and the 'justice' (*hollow laugh*) system is willing to look the other way when they do so.  Of the remainder, they lack either the intelligence or the foresight to alter their behaviour in a way that will make the roads safer for the most vulnerable road user, because they don't give a flying fuck, and let's face it: getting Kylie to her gymkhana or Harry to his maths tutor is a lot less important than the life or personal safety of the 'freeloaders' that are cyclists, anyway.

And what do we do?  'Please, Mr Government .. if .. if ... if we ask nicely, will you .. will you ... will you please take us away from these drivers?'

And the drivers snarl, 'Yeah, get them fackin' cyclists off my fackin' road, innit?'

The response of a properly-constituted government not made up of psychopaths in hock to the oil industry would be to say very calmly to the driving 'community' in this country that cyclists have a right to be on the road.  That they will use the same roads as car drivers.   And that if a driver kills or seriously injures a cyclist (or a pedestrian) - even if it is 'an accident' (there is no such fucking thing), ' ... then you are going to prison for a long time.  If it transpires that the act was deliberate, then you will never, ever know freedom'.

We should not be begging for the crumbs of 'infrastructure'.  We should be fucking demanding equal treatment and equal protection under the law.   And we should be saying to the British state: either you protect us, or we will protect ourselves, and our justice will be a damn fucking sight less clement than yours.

 

100% agree. Segregation is not the right approach. A change in attitude towards cycling is what’s really required to improve safety and increase the use of cycling as a basic form of transport.

Avatar
BehindTheBikesheds replied to crazy-legs | 5 years ago
4 likes
crazy-legs wrote:

What never fails to amaze me here is that the answer to all of these issues - cycling on the pavement, filtering, undertaking, not using cycle lanes, jumping red lights - is to campaign and push for *proper cycling infrastructure*.

Not some half-arsed bit of paint on the road that disappears 20m later but proper segregated lanes as per The Embankment or Blackfriars. That removes at a stroke people feeling they need to ride on the pavement to avoid the traffic, it means they don't feel the need to jump a red light to escape an HGV that's pulled up right next to them, they won't be filtering past your precious car, they won't be "holding you up"...

Honestly, I despair of our political classes - if it's not the total fucking shambles of Brexit, it's dogmatic prehistoric views, an ideology stuck in about the 1950's and an inability to show any hint of progressive world views.

That's the wrong argument IMHO, campaign to remove motorvehicles from the existing infrastructure, pretty much to a mile UK cycle specific infra is crap and not fit for mass cycling of all levels. It's narrow, winding and circuitous, crosses major motor roads often with no priority and usually stops without connecting up to anywhere useful. You only need look at what the guy being prosecuted by the MET to see how even in London the infra is crap and univiting.

This small time thinking will never, ever work to get people out of their cars, this is what happens when you give over the whole of the roads back to the people without their killing machines.

THIS is what we should be aiming for!

Avatar
burtthebike | 5 years ago
8 likes

What's it called when a selfish, entitled, car-driving councillor opposes sensible cycle provision, which is undoubtedly in the council's policies, and is supported by the majority of her constituents?

Answers on a postcard to Cllr Joanna Biddolph, Chiswick Council.

Avatar
Legs_Eleven_Wor... replied to burtthebike | 5 years ago
2 likes
burtthebike wrote:

What's it called when a selfish, entitled, car-driving councillor opposes sensible cycle provision, which is undoubtedly in the council's policies, and is supported by the majority of her constituents?

'Being a tory'.

burtthebike wrote:

Answers on a postcard to Cllr Joanna Biddolph, Chiswick Council.

What?  Question a female public figure?

You 'vile troll', you! 

Avatar
burtthebike replied to Legs_Eleven_Worcester | 5 years ago
1 like
Legs_Eleven_Worcester wrote:
burtthebike wrote:

What's it called when a selfish, entitled, car-driving councillor opposes sensible cycle provision, which is undoubtedly in the council's policies, and is supported by the majority of her constituents?

'Being a tory'.

burtthebike wrote:

Answers on a postcard to Cllr Joanna Biddolph, Chiswick Council.

What?  Question a female public figure?

You 'vile troll', you! 

Thank you.  I'm adding 'vile troll' to my list of accomplishments, doubling them at one fell swoop.

Avatar
Deeferdonk | 5 years ago
18 likes

Why is dropping a tonne of bricks next to someone any different from them walking close to a brick wall?

Avatar
hawkinspeter replied to Deeferdonk | 5 years ago
5 likes
Deeferdonk wrote:

Why is dropping a tonne of bricks next to someone any different from them walking close to a brick wall?

Oh, I know this one. Is it something to do with a raven and writing desk?

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