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London flooded with police in road safety crackdown

Drivers and cyclists stopped for range of offences

Central London was today flooded with police in the Met has described as a major road safety operation involving 2,500 officers this week, aimed at making busy London junctions safer.

Around 650 officers were deployed at 60 major junctions in London today. The police presence is planned to increase to 2,500 officers in 166 locations during the week, and may carry on until Christmas.

There have been widespread reports of drivers being ticketed for stopping in advanced stop line ‘bike boxes’ and of cyclists being fined for running red lights and riding on pavements.

Superintendent Rob Revill of the Safer Transport Command, said: "Our aim is to reduce the appalling number of people who die or are injured on London's roads each year. Every road death is a needless tragedy that wreaks devastation for the victim's friends and family. Every serious injury is life-changing and distressing.

"We are doing this by enforcing traffic legislation robustly and at every opportunity. Traffic and Safer Transport officers will be out in force, and even officers who don't specialise in traffic policing will be watching and dealing accordingly with anyone they see breaking the law.

The police initiative, dubbed Operation Safeway, comes after the deaths of six cyclists in London in a two-week period earlier this month. Brian Holt, 62 was hit by a lorry on November 5, and hours later Francis Golding, 69 was struck by a coach; Mr Golding later died of his injuries.

On November 12 Roger De Klerk, 43 was hit by a bus in Croydon, and there were two fatal collisions the following day. Venera Minakhmetova, 24 was hit by a lorry at the notorious Bow roundabout, and hours after the roundabout had been the scene of a protest against the recent deaths in London, Khalid al-Hashimi, 21, was hit by a bus near the other end of Cycle Superhighway 2 in Whitechapel. On November 18 Richard Muzira, 60 became the sixth cyclist to die so far this month when he was hit by a lorry.

Tales from the road

Riders’ accounts of encounters with officers on patrol this morning have been a mixed bag, with reports of officers not quite seeming to know the rules around advanced stop lines, for example.

On The Guardian’s website, CallMeWhatever posted: “Lots of police on CS7 between Colliers Wood and Clapham Common this morning. I'm not sure if they were all there for bike watching though, or if something else was going on in the area. Some of them seemed to be using the cycle lane as parking spaces for their motorbikes, hence forcing all the cyclists out into the middle of the road.”

The Evening Standard spoke to 57-year-old Ben Watson who was stopped while taking his children to school by cargo bike this morning.

“This policeman called me over and said ‘is that bike legal?’ I thought ‘well you’re the policeman surely you should be telling me whether its legal or not’”, said Mr Watson.

“I think it seems a bit unfair as this operation is making out cyclists are the problem when it is actually cars that are the problem.

“I know where I’m going. I’ve been taking the kids to school on this route for four years, I know what I’m doing.”

On the Guardian, betweenarock12 said: “As I saw this morning, handing out fines to cyclists for stopping over the line or jumping lights versus them handing out polite leaflets to car and lorry drivers stopping over the line and stopping in the advance cyclist areas hardly sends the right message for the need for everyone to take responsibility for road safety.

That police seem to be targeting cyclists rather than even-handedly enforcing the law was a common complaint. On the Guardian’s site, andythatcham said: “Interesting chat with a police officer on my ride in this morning. 20 of them in Brixton watching cyclists on road junctions. As the PC said to me 'we're watching you lot'. Attitude and resourcing suggests Met (and Boris) blame cyclists for recent deaths.”

But it hasn’t been entirely a crackdown on cyclists. There have been many reports that just the presence of officers at junctions has prevents drivers from encroaching on bike boxes and jumping red lights, and Guardian commenter ID8688170 found officers helpful when he reported a white van that had crossed two lanes without signalling and almost hit another rider.

He said: “There was a police motorbike about 100 metres further down the road so I stopped and pointed out the van. The policeman was great about it and promptly chased after him and pulled him over to have a word. Sadly he hadn't seen it so couldn't do a lot but his attitude was great and he genuinely did his best and seemed thankful that I'd pointed it out to him.

“Hope fellow cyclists appreciate that most of the police are trying their best to help improve safety, they aren't out to get us. If you're polite I think they will take comments on board.”

John has been writing about bikes and cycling for over 30 years since discovering that people were mug enough to pay him for it rather than expecting him to do an honest day's work.

He was heavily involved in the mountain bike boom of the late 1980s as a racer, team manager and race promoter, and that led to writing for Mountain Biking UK magazine shortly after its inception. He got the gig by phoning up the editor and telling him the magazine was rubbish and he could do better. Rather than telling him to get lost, MBUK editor Tym Manley called John’s bluff and the rest is history.

Since then he has worked on MTB Pro magazine and was editor of Maximum Mountain Bike and Australian Mountain Bike magazines, before switching to the web in 2000 to work for CyclingNews.com. Along with road.cc founder Tony Farrelly, John was on the launch team for BikeRadar.com and subsequently became editor in chief of Future Publishing’s group of cycling magazines and websites, including Cycling Plus, MBUK, What Mountain Bike and Procycling.

John has also written for Cyclist magazine, edited the BikeMagic website and was founding editor of TotalWomensCycling.com before handing over to someone far more representative of the site's main audience.

He joined road.cc in 2013. He lives in Cambridge where the lack of hills is more than made up for by the headwinds.

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39 comments

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alexb | 10 years ago
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Not impressed by what I saw this morning. PCSOs at Albert Bridge completely ignored an HGV that jumped the lights right in front of them. However, it was clear that drivers were behaving a bit better at that junction.

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Vikeonabike | 10 years ago
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The press (including cycling press) are really beginning to piss me off. They have no real interest in improving cycling safety but purely in inflaming the war between cyclists and motorists. Biased reporting or twisting something into being something it isn't.
Everyone agrees that cycling on Britains roads is dangerous. As cyclists we can't even agree how to be responsible for our own safety (The "I shouldn't have to wear a helmet / Hivis they should see me anyway debate). Everyone wants someone else to blame and someone else to take responsibility.
And for FFS stop blaming the POLICE for everything!
 102
PS Road CC missed this from the piece taken from the standards article
Last Monday, the Met carried out spot-checks on cyclists and HGVs in Vauxhall.

In four hours, the officers stopped 70 lorries and issued 15 fixed penalty notices for offences such as the vehicles not being fit for the road.

Avatar
Simon_MacMichael replied to Vikeonabike | 10 years ago
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Vikeonabike wrote:

PS Road CC missed this from the piece taken from the standards article
Last Monday, the Met carried out spot-checks on cyclists and HGVs in Vauxhall.

In four hours, the officers stopped 70 lorries and issued 15 fixed penalty notices for offences such as the vehicles not being fit for the road.

We reported it last week. It's the first link under 'Related Stories' to the right of the beginning of this article: http://road.cc/content/news/99261-police-safety-operation-targets-dozens...

Avatar
Vikeonabike replied to Simon_MacMichael | 10 years ago
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In that case I stand corrected and offer my humblest apologies  40 ..

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nowasps replied to Vikeonabike | 10 years ago
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Vikeonabike wrote:

Everyone agrees that cycling on Britains roads is dangerous.

They don't, you know.

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dave atkinson replied to Vikeonabike | 10 years ago
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Vikeonabike wrote:

PS Road CC missed this from the piece taken from the standards article
Last Monday, the Met carried out spot-checks on cyclists and HGVs in Vauxhall.

In four hours, the officers stopped 70 lorries and issued 15 fixed penalty notices for offences such as the vehicles not being fit for the road.

no we didn't, we reported on it at the time.

http://road.cc/content/news/99261-police-safety-operation-targets-dozens...

Avatar
jasecd | 10 years ago
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I find police attitudes tend to mirror that of the general public - a sizeable minority couldn't give a shit about cyclists and think of them as second class road users.

I wonder what the officer who left hooked me (and then threatened to arrest me when I remonstrated with him) thinks about todays duties?

Avatar
Username replied to jasecd | 10 years ago
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jasecd wrote:

I find police attitudes tend to mirror that of the general public - a sizeable minority couldn't give a shit about cyclists and think of them as second class road users.

I wonder what the officer who left hooked me (and then threatened to arrest me when I remonstrated with him) thinks about todays duties?

05:45 this morning, going for an early morning ride, stopped at a red light two abreast with a fellow rider, a car came up behind us and started rev'ing his engine. He was obviously annoyed that two cyclists had stopped at a light forcing him to wait.

When the lights changed we moved off and kept a strong primary because we were taking a right turn up ahead. The car behind us gunned his engine and aggressively UNDERTOOK us. I was about to shout out when I noticed it was a cop car.

Charming.

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hampstead_bandit replied to Username | 10 years ago
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@username

if this happens again get the number plate and contact the local nick, ask to make a complaint to professional standards about the officers conduct. every time a vehicle is taken out on duty, they log the officer's collar number against the vehicle id.

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