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The new Snake Pass? Peak District’s Long Hill closed to traffic for five months; How will LTNs affect upcoming elections?; “There’s no time for them to stop”: Roche talks disc brakes; Buses in bike boxes; Riding in the rain + more on the live blog
SUMMARY

The new Snake Pass? Peak District’s Long Hill closed to traffic for five months
🚨 Can confirm: Long Hill is the new Snake Pass.
Here’s everything you need to know about Derbyshire’s next cycling revelation, as the A5004 is closed to through traffic (except bikes!) for up to five months 👉 https://t.co/h9MZki9AB0 pic.twitter.com/Sl4C83mR7j
— Peaks & Puddles 🚲 (@peaksandpuddles) April 26, 2022
Just as Snake Pass’ brief spell as a car-free cycling utopia begins to fade from the collective bike riding consciousness (ah, we had a good month, didn’t we?), another Peak District climb is set to take its place.
The A5004 Long Hill between Whaley Bridge and Buxton – named in 2010 as the seventh most dangerous road in Britain – is now closed to cars for up to five months, as major works are needed to repair a landslip.
> Snake Pass to reopen from tomorrow – with 20mph speed limit
In its usual state, according to Anthony from Peaks and Puddles, the 50mph A-road can be a sketchy experience for any cyclist, despite its use as a hill climb for local clubs (it even hosted the 2011 national hill climb championships).
But with barriers now blocking the 4.5 mile long, three-percent climb to motor vehicles – provided you take a detour around the landslip itself and keep an eye out for any drivers chancing their arm – cyclists can once again enjoy the serenity and safety of a Peak District road hitherto associated with speeding motorists, the sound of roaring engines, and general feelings of terror.
As Anthony, who rode the climb this week, says: “cycling heaven!”
Let’s just hope the council doesn’t get involved again…
Elon Musk: No more cycling jokes on Twitter, please
It’s a whole new world – or at least it’s a whole new addictive bird app on your phone…
So, what was one of Elon Musk’s first acts as he commenced his four-billion-dollar bid to restore ‘free speech’ to the vast hell site that is Twitter?
Well, he banned a cyclist for adopting the tech billionaire’s name and joking about buying Tour de France organisers ASO. Naturally enough.
Remember @LucGrefte?
He changed his Twitter to Elon Musk yesterday to make a joke about buying ASO, and is now suspended. 😂 pic.twitter.com/ZhZk85U0Qh
— Benji Naesen (@BenjiNaesen) April 26, 2022
That’ll show ‘em, Elon.
Satire truly is dead.
Or maybe’s he’s just a big RCS man and didn’t want to ruffle any feathers before the Giro…
McNulty’s mishap: American nearly misses start of Romandie prologue
Brandon McNulty had a bit of a nightmare as he nearly missed the start of today’s #TourDeRomandie prologue! pic.twitter.com/ABIqH1hgqH
— GCN Racing (@GcnRacing) April 26, 2022
Woops!
Brandon McNulty’s Tour de Romandie bid got off to a less than ideal start yesterday, as the American UAE Team Emirates rider rocked up at the start gate of the prologue with only seconds to spare…
The bemused look on the face of the Ineos Grenadiers’ Brandon Rivera – who demonstrated his perfect punctuality by being ready over a minute before his start time – as McNulty hurriedly prepared himself for his 5.1-kilometre effort is pretty priceless.
Perhaps we’re watching a trial run of UAE’s new pre-TT prep: Sprint to the start (that counts as a warmup, right?), hastily clip into the pedals, reset the computer, deep breath, job’s a good ‘un.
Or maybe not…
In any case, McNulty proved that his time trialling is better than his time keeping, as he finished 16th in the prologue, 17 seconds behind the flying winner Ethan Hayter.
The American later told VeloNews that he is still feeling the effects of the mass crash at Sunday’s Liège-Bastogne-Liège, which saw world champion Julian Alaphilippe puncture a lung and suffer multiple fractures, while McNulty himself lost huge chunks of skin in the shocking, 80kph pile-up.
Throwback… eh, Wednesday: Delgado-no at the 1989 Tour
Of course, no mention of a rider nearly missing the start of a time trial would be complete without a nostalgic throwback to the epic 1989 Tour de France and defending champion Pedro Delgado’s nightmare prologue.
Delgado, who won the 1988 Tour amidst the farce of his positive-but-not-a-positive doping test, lost track of time as he warmed up for the 1989 race’s prologue in the backstreets of Luxembourg, only making it to the start ramp (a converted campervan, oddly enough) a whole two minutes and 40 seconds after his allocated time.
If that wasn’t enough, the Spaniard’s desire to make amends in the following day’s team time trial only served to blow his legs apart, as he struggled to keep the wheels of his Reynolds (the team now known as Movistar, for all the kids out there) teammates after an over-exuberant start – in the end losing another 2:48 to Laurent Fignon’s Super-U team.
Delgado – who, in a swashbuckling attacking display over the next three weeks, ended up third in Paris – eventually finished 3:34 behind winner Greg LeMond. Ouch.
While the 1989 Tour is best remembered for the time trialling drama on the Champs-Élysées, the greatest grande boucle of all time (anyone who disagrees is just wrong, frankly) began with another bit of chrono madness.
The Ineos Grenadier – Built for cyclists?
ready for the mountains of Romandie @INEOSGrenadiers pic.twitter.com/uOporC26jC
— philippa york (@pippa_york) April 26, 2022
Ah, the Ineos Grenadiers – always in tune with the average cyclist on the street (desperately trying to avoid monstrosities such as whatever that is)…
What do you mean, greenwashing?!
The experience most cyclists have with vehicles like this is horrific, especially in cities. Let’s not celebrate the development of another carbon-spewing monster-truck. Most cycling fans love the planet friendly profile of cycling, this is Greenwashing
— Bigdai🍷🍺🚲🏴🤘 (@Bigdai100) April 27, 2022
Cycling a very environmental activity. Pro cycle racing a very non environmental activity with all the following cars and motorbikes.
— Paul Jefferies (@jefferies918) April 27, 2022
Gas guzzling nonsense. Terrible choice of car.
Who signs this PR off?— julian stansall do gooder (@julianstansall) April 27, 2022
How will Low Traffic Neighbourhoods affect upcoming local elections?
Over the last few years, the implementation of active travel schemes and Low Traffic Neighbourhoods (LTNs) – designed to block rat-running drivers, reduce pollution and make roads safer for cyclists and pedestrians – has emerged as arguably one of the most controversial and divisive issues in local politics.
For example, earlier this month we reported that Joanna Biddolph, a Conservative councillor for London’s Turnham Green ward, leaked confidential information about measures to protect the security of councillors during an anti-LTN demonstration.
Biddolph is one of the Chiswick’s leading opponents of new bike lanes and traffic restrictions, many of which were introduced during the initial stages of the Covid pandemic, and has accused the Labour-controlled council of turning the area into “Belfast during the Troubles”.
The leader of the Conservative group in Hounslow, Gerald McGregor, was also labelled a “bombastic dinosaur” by Labour after he compared the impact of Chiswick’s LTNs to apartheid-era South Africa.
In Hackney, where just 30 percent of households own a car, a councillor even received death threats because of his support for LTNs in the area.
> Councillor leaked confidential security information during row over Low Traffic Neighbourhoods
So it’s no surprise, then, that political commentators reckon that the future of LTNs and active travel initiatives could have a decisive impact on the outcome of the upcoming local elections in London.
“Battles about this predominantly pitch Conservatives against a pro-coalition of Labour, Greens and sometimes Lib Dems,” Nick Bowes, the chief executive of the Centre for London think tank, told the BBC.
“Very localised surprises might happen.”
Of course, many politicians at council level take advantage of local tension over LTNs to win votes, while some are wary of voter retaliation if they press ahead with the schemes.
> Conservative mayoral candidate for Hackney vows to ditch Low Traffic Neighbourhoods
But Simon Munk from the London Cycling Campaign says that opposition to LTNs on the basis that they will accrue votes from angry motorists is “short-termist”.
Munk also believes that it’s only a “lack of political will” which prevents LTNs from having a greater impact in the battle against climate change.
What do you think? Will LTNs play a key role in deciding the outcome of next week’s local elections?
“Do you have a driving licence?”: Buses in bike boxes, Belfast edition
School bus driver thinks he’s driving a train disguised as a bicycle. He only drove in it to get past me he said and maybe he should just hit me instead. pic.twitter.com/jizBSyPiYi
— Cyclegranny 🚴♀️ (@anneramsey740) April 26, 2022
“How do you expect people to ride in the rain?”
I’ve now logged the weather on over 1000 commutes by bike in Worcester. My categories are dry, damp (it might have rained a bit but no need to change clothes) or soaked (towel and change of clothes needed). Conclusion: rain is not the barrier to cycling some people think it is. pic.twitter.com/hZmL6QaHLQ
— SHIFT (@goSHIFTscheme) April 27, 2022
Here’s a handy – and thoroughly researched – graph you can keep in your back pocket for the next time you need a counterpoint to the tired old “but what about when it rains?” trope.
Disclaimer – may not be applicable in every part of the UK…
Three female riders selected to join Dame Sarah Storey at Škoda DSI Cycling Academy
Three young female cyclists have been selected to join the Škoda DSI Cycling Academy, where they will be mentored by Dame Sarah Storey, Britain’s most decorated Paralympian.
Now in its fourth year, the academy aims to maximise young female potential in the sport by mentoring and developing the skills of “passionate” amateur riders.
The year-long programme is designed to complement each rider’s existing club or team activity, providing them with the opportunity to experience the life of a professional rider with on and off bike experiences.
22-year-old Alex Morrice, a Physics and Chemistry student, 19-year-old Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation student Katie-Ann Elliston, and 23-year-old Maia Forde, who works as a mental health and wellbeing practitioner, were selected from 90 applicants after a day of tests at the Lee Valley Velodrome last month.
The tests included a series of Wattbike challenges, followed by laps of the outdoor closed circuit to assess bike handling skills and straight-line speed.
The three new riders will join three existing Academy riders, Maddi Aldam-Gates, Gwyneth Parry and Olivia French, who were selected for the programme last year.


“I was so impressed with the level of all the riders taking part, their commitment, and the way they gelled together as a group,” said Storey, the Academy’s Principal.
“The tests were a six second peak power test, a three-minute maximal test then a 12-minute aerobic test, followed by two laps on the outdoor track. The riders all performed very well and gave absolutely everything – that there were so many riders slumped over their bikes at the end is testament to that!
“Congratulations to all the riders that took part in the testing day but ultimately three riders stood out for me and I’m excited to be working closely with Maia, Alex and Katie-Ann this year through the Academy programme.”
Storey’s invaluable mentorship will include bespoke training, racing and career advice, as well as additional media and social media training and a sport psychology programme developed exclusively for the Academy.
The riders will also take on exciting Academy ride experiences during the Women’s Tour, Tour de France and Tour of Britain.
Pushing the watts… and the pram
Po dłuższej przerwie wracam na rower 😉🍼
Rozpoczynamy przygotowania do drugiej części sezonu 😎👊🏻#UAETeamEmirates #WeAreUAE pic.twitter.com/jB9lOzy9Ph— Rafał Majka (@majkaformal) April 27, 2022
I wonder if Rafał Majka has been swapping tips for how best to combine parenting duties and training with Rigoberto Urán, after the Colombian’s heavily criticised – but still pretty cool – interpretation of Daddy Day Care…
Tour de Romandie: Dylan Teuns snatches dramatic win from Rohan Dennis, as Ethan Hayter crashes out of leader’s jersey
Dylan Teuns continued his impressive spring with an exhilarating victory on the first road stage of the Tour de Romandie, dramatically overhauling new race leader Rohan Dennis during the final ten metres to the top of the uphill drag into Romont, as prologue winner Ethan Hayter hit the deck with fifteen kilometres to go.
Dennis sprinted off Brandon McNulty’s wheel at the bottom of the kilometre-long final climb and looked set to take the win, quickly putting daylight into the American and the rest of the fractured peloton, but it was Bahrain-Victorious’ Flèche Wallonne winner Teuns who had enough punch left in his legs to pip the fading Australian at the line.
The green leader’s jersey will act as something of a consolation for Jumbo-Visma’s enigmatic Australian, however, as its previous incumbent Ethan Hayter was involved in a nasty looking mass crash with fifteen kilometres to go.


The incident, which occurred towards the back of the peloton, also affected James Knox, Rigoberto Uran and Ion Izagirre.
Ineos Grenadiers later confirmed that Hayter is fine and was able to finish the stage alongside his teammates.
“When there’s 50 guys behind you, there’s no time for them to stop”: Nicolas Roche defends Romain Bardet’s argument that risk-taking and disc brakes have led to more crashes
Following another major pile-up with fifteen kilometres to go at the Tour de Romandie today, which saw Ethan Hayter lose the green leader’s jersey, ex-Sky and BMC rider Nicolas Roche defended his former teammate Romain Bardet’s assertion that increased risk-taking in the bunch, combined with new widespread technology such as disc brakes, has led to more high-speed crashes in pro cycling.
Yesterday we reported on the blog that DSM rider Bardet called for a change in behaviour within the peloton after Sunday’s horror crash at Liège-Bastogne-Liège which saw world champion Julian Alaphilippe puncture a lung and suffer multiple fractures.


Speaking as part of his commentary duties for Eurosport-GCN at the Tour de Romandie, Roche echoed the Frenchman’s thoughts on the peloton’s tendency to take unnecessary risks, which he says has grown over the past decade.
The Irishman argued that while at the start of his career teams such as Lance Armstrong’s Discovery Channel would have used sections of the race route to take a figurative break, teams are now willing to take advantage of every part of the course.
“Sometimes crashes early in a race are caused by the road furniture, a car that’s not parked, a pothole, a dangerous descent – but clearly today’s crash was caused by the riders themselves,” Roche said.
“A little like what happened at Liège, it’s unfortunately at this point, not becoming a trend, but you see more and more of these high-speed crashes, at moments when there’s no danger point.
“Lately if you’ve been following some of the debates on social media, Bardet made a few comments about what was going on at Liège, and he described the attitudes and risk-taking of some riders to be in position as a little bit too extreme and aggressive.
“I think he’s right. Today a lot of the crashes are not caused only due to road safety, but by riders taking that bit too much risk.”
> Are disc brakes to blame for Liège-Bastogne-Liège horror crash?
Roche also agreed with Bardet’s comments about the reduced reaction time caused by the widespread introduction of disc brakes in the peloton in recent years.
He continued: “If you think about why they’re also piling up – between the high-speed bikes, everything is aero, you ride closer, positioning is more and more important, the level of people capable of putting you into position is also greater, so there are more riders fighting for the same spot.
“And with higher braking power, less reflex time when you’re on the wheel. Before if you locked up the back wheel, you were skidding all over the place, elbow to elbow – and you might have a few guys crash here and there.
“Where now you have these big pile ups, because you absolutely have no time. When you lock up on the disc brake bike, you stop – for good and bad.
“When there’s 50 guys behind you, there’s no time for them to stop either.”
“Always some rando giving advice to the pros”
Newly-retired Dan Martin receives buyer’s advice from some bloke off Twitter. Probably spouting nonsense:
SRM
— Tadej Pogačar (@TamauPogi) April 27, 2022
Still didnt get it back after Flanders crash 😅
— Tadej Pogačar (@TamauPogi) April 27, 2022
Sure, always some rando giving advice to pros.
— Quent Compson’s Swim Coach (@QuentSwim) April 27, 2022
If you thought your Wednesday was bad…
Think you’re having a bad day? Think again. Eduard Prades thought he’d won stage one of the #TourOfHellas today, and had hit the floor before being told he was 2nd…🥲 pic.twitter.com/6nO2azTaEh
— GCN Racing (@GcnRacing) April 27, 2022
Spare a thought for Eduard Prades.
Not only did his bike give way as he celebrated at the end of the first stage of the Tour of the Hellas, dumping him unceremoniously onto the road, but it turned out it was all in vain anyway.
Prades had in fact (unbeknownst to him, of course) finished second on the day, nearly two minutes behind the actual winner, New Zealander Aaron Gate.
I hope your middle of the week is going better than poor old Eduard’s…
27 April 2022, 08:44
Not a great look for Wahoo, this...
Wahoo buys RGT Cycling virtual training platform... and lays off 50 staff
"The strategic changes were made to support the growth and development of Wahoo," brand says
27 April 2022, 08:44
Yet more disc brake shenanigans…
Chris Froome’s mechanic agrees with his boss: “I’m not a huge fan of disc brakes”
Gary Blem says disc brake performance isn’t yet where it needs to be, manufacturers forced the tech onto the peloton, and believes that Froome will reach the top again
27 April 2022, 08:44
An update to yesterday's blog story:
"I have no doubt his intention was to kill me": Aggressive kerb-mounting driver tries to ram cyclist off bike after being caught using phone
Police fail to catch motorist... but tell rider to not film phone-using drivers and "always ride as close to the kerb as possible"
27 April 2022, 08:44
27 April 2022, 08:44
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@mitsky Its another one of those things that makes no sense isn't it. Someone was saying in another thread that we need a harder driving test. I don't think we do. Everyone who has passed in the last 20 years has done a test that is more than happy to fail you for behaviour that 90% of drivers exhibit every time they get behind the wheel. The test is fine. The fact that getting your license seems to be considered some weird proof that you will continue to drive safely is the issue. The fact that when you prove that you cannot drive safely its not immediately revoked is the issue.
@Rendel Harris The issue with GPS chips, as everyone who has one of those black boxes will attest to, is that they are crap. They interpret heavy braking as poor driving rather than someone else forcing it. They see rapid acceleration where there is none. All we need is a much higher chance of people being caught and punished for their everyday shit driving. I'm sure as a cyclist that every single time you go out on your bike you will have a dozen or more times when you think "that would have been a nasty accident if someone was coming the other direction". Eventually, when bad behaviour suffers no consequences it becomes completely normalised. Then we struggle to treat it as anything but a normal, unavoidable accident when that bad behaviour does incur consequences.
Drivers regularly pull out in front of me and cause me to slam on the brakes or avoid them. Very often they have seen me and just assume I'm not going very fast or they assume I will slow down/stop (which I do). Too many drivers don't look for cyclists, hate giving way to them or expect the cyclist to be moving slowly and just pull out.
@Rendel Harris By the time someone is looking at prison time its too late. As has been proven time and time again, the severity of punishment is a poor deterrent to bad behaviour if people don't think its going to happen to them or they don't think they will be caught. Now I do think that there should be far more severe and immediate punishments for bad driving when drivers are caught but this would need to be coupled with a massive push to actually act on information/proof of bad driving. As anyone that submits footage to the police knows, its a crapshoot and certain police forces are anti-cyclist. This would try to essentially put people off misbehaving whilst driving before they cause an accident rather than getting the tired old excuse of "it was a single dangerous incident, they definitely don't do this all the time and their luck finally ran out". Perhaps it should go even further and if you have a history of speeding and you hurt someone speeding, that is looked upon in a very dim light.
Can we talk about “Washing up liquid contains a lot of salt – not a great idea to use a corrosive substance on a bicycle”? This is an urban myth. I have washed all of our many bikes using Fairy liquid or Ecover for decades. I’ve never found any evidence of corrosion, paint, laquer or decal wear, or any sign of anything. I regularly service forks and bearings, swapping a lot of gear, and everything has always been fine. Here’s far too much info below - long story short, Fairy liquid in 5L of hot water has a borderline-homeopathic amount of salt, it’s fine to use on a bike. ============ The honest answer is that neither Fairy nor Ecover publicly disclose the actual sodium chloride concentration in the consumer products I could find. The safety data sheets list hazardous ingredients above reporting thresholds, but sodium chloride is not reported for either product. However, we can put some realistic bounds on it. Fairy Original The SDS lists: Sodium laureth sulfate: 20-30% Lauramine oxide: 5-10% Alcohol: 1-5% No sodium chloride is declared. 15 In detergent formulations, sodium chloride is commonly used as a viscosity modifier (thickener) and is typically present at around 0.5-3%, sometimes lower. The absence of declaration suggests it is either not present or present at a low concentration that does not require reporting. This range is an informed formulation estimate, not a value stated by Fairy. Ecover The Ecover ingredient information lists: Sodium lauryl sulfate Lauryl glucoside Cocamidopropyl betaine Alcohol Lactic acid Sodium octyl sulphate Again, no sodium chloride is listed. Ecover's formulations tend to rely more heavily on plant-derived surfactants and may use little or no salt for thickening, but I could not find a published concentration. 63 What does this mean for bike washing? Let's assume a worst-case 3% salt content in Fairy. If you add: 10 mL Fairy to a 5-litre bucket Then salt introduced would be approximately: 10 mL × 3% ≈ 0.3 g salt Distributed through 5 L water ≈ 60 mg/L salt For comparison: Typical seawater: ~35,000 mg/L Lightly salted winter road spray: often hundreds to thousands of mg/L The wash bucket above: ~60 mg/L So even under a pessimistic assumption, the salt concentration is hundreds to thousands of times lower than the salt exposure your bike gets from winter roads. From a corrosion perspective, the quantity of salt introduced by washing-up liquid is essentially negligible compared with: Riding on salted roads Coastal spray Leaving winter grime on the bike Therefore my practical conclusion remains: ✅ Fairy or Ecover in a wash bucket is extremely unlikely to contribute any measurable corrosion risk. ✅ The important thing is rinsing and drying afterwards. ✅ Winter road salt is the real enemy, not washing-up liquid.
Another example of a driver's actions that would have been a straight fail in a driving test but is barely likely to lead to a disqualification... I'm wondering if having a driving licence is like a "Get out of jail free" card...
Yes indeed. I have a version of the R8100 and you definitively need ceramic for the socket.
@perce I'm not sure I agree with that. I think thats just confirming that he is take fully responsibility and recognises that the cyclist could have done nothing to mitigate it.
If we don't fight it now, we'll all end up forced to wear baggy shorts!
@Rendel Harris Agree, I am baffled that the 84 year old who is now banned from driving for year can then start driving again without a retest. We should be re-tested regularly.
21 thoughts on “The new Snake Pass? Peak District’s Long Hill closed to traffic for five months; How will LTNs affect upcoming elections?; “There’s no time for them to stop”: Roche talks disc brakes; Buses in bike boxes; Riding in the rain + more on the live blog”
I wonder if Elon will be
I wonder if Elon will be expiditing my twitter appeal for calling Cristo a cretin; sixteen months and counting, or “as soon as possible” in twitter-speak. So long ago, I can’t actually remember why I said it, obviously something insulting to cyclists, but what?
Musk has form for blocking
Musk has form for blocking pretty much anyone who criticises him on Twitter (or elsewhere).
I’m not convinced he is as much a “Free speech absolutist” as his publicity claims; “Freedom of the particular speech of which I, Musk, approve”, I suspect is more his style.
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Unlike, oh I dunno, Twatter as it is a pres.?
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You another of those who are all in favour of free speach, but only if people hold the ‘correct’ opinions?
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Flintshire Boy wrote:
Just wondering, do you only post when drunk? The fact that you appear to be incapable of spelling “speech” correctly seems a bit of a giveaway, and your opinions certainly mirror those of the bore at the end of the bar who’s had one too many.
Or in other words…
Or in other words…
I like the random punctuation
I like the random punctuation and the “huurrggh funny when you are 11” fake swearing the poster does. I think he still thinks typing 55378008 in a calculator is the height of wit with his peers.
Happens all the time and it’s
Happens all the time and it’s not only Elon Musk that is guilty of it. So often we hear – “I am all for free speech but….” = time for me to move along swiftly.
eburtthebike wrote:
You mean you don’t have $44bn down the back of the sofa, to buy them and make them do what you want? 😉
brooksby wrote:
— brooksbyI’ll just go and check.
Tesla went down $126 billion,
Tesla went down $126 billion, Elon lost about $21 billion of that.
I doubt if that was part of the plan.
Maybe, when he actually owns
Maybe, when he actually owns the thing, which is probably going to take 6months to go through US SEC regulatory approval first. Twitter today is the exact same company running the same service it was last week, it hasnt changed.
So blaming Musk directly for twitter suspending accounts today, and you might want to check Twitters T&Cs & bitcoin scams on social media, for why renaming your account Elon Musk and using his profile picture on twitter causes accounts to get suspended, is a bit of a reach, as they say.
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Yeah, yeah, yeah.
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Please DO NOT BOTHER people with – whatsaname – facts.
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They get in the way of these leftist rants.
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Is that a Boris “The Truth”
Is that a Boris “The Truth” Johnson quote? Or from the works of the leftist Donald Trump who was so concerned about truth decay he peppered his pronouncements with “Fact.” like a TV gangsta dropping the f-word?
We are talking about Twitter
We are talking about Twitter and your favourite Orange Pile, so would you know a fact?
More fake news on twitter –
More fake news on twitter – as if any of those cyclists would be waiting at a red light !
Ever since road.cc brought
Ever since road.cc brought Drum and Bass on a Bike to my notice I can’t see a big crowd of cyclists in a city without hearing something like “where’s the horn? Oi oi!” in my head.
When they frame LTNs in
When they frame LTNs in articles in such a way I often wonder whether the ‘L’ shouldn’t just stand for London, not Low.
As was discussed on the forum last week, local elections, and not everyone outside of the political hotbed of London is having them, often have low turnouts which can in some cases makes them more unpredictable & not follow national trends and hot topic local issues can swing results one way or the other, but it’s a very localised phenomenon and cant really be generalised as this topic definitely will impact local elections postively or negatively and certainly not be expanded as a general aspect UK wide.
Awavey wrote:
To be fair, the article is headlined “Will Low Traffic Neighbourhoods drive London’s elections?”
In the Beebs article yes, not
In the Beebs article yes, not really noticeable in the live blog…
But then we’d have to have had LTNs installed outside of London for them to be controversial, and infact why isnt it a bigger election issue as to what happened to 175million pounds of tranche 2 active travel funding to deliver that ? let alone what on earth is happening now in this financial year.
Its nearly 2 years now since tranche 1 funding led to alot of those London LTNS existence and a bunch of pop up lanes popping up. Since then I suspect a fair amount has been unwound anyway outside of London, as all those temporary traffic orders should now have expired or been made permanent.
But wheres the progress of completed schemes being delivered ? Where are the updates ? Where are the next priority schemes?
All that stuff was supposed to be a first step towards implementing the gear change towards active travel and it feels like absolutely nothing is happening now.
Yes – the blog item is rather
Yes – the blog item is rather woolier – it does specify ‘elections in London’ in the middle of it, but it’s somewhat vaguer at either end.
Saying that, LTNs (and associated vitriol) aren’t entirely a London-only phenomenon – there’s been a few appearances of ones in other places on these pages. Just a day or two ago there was a story about one in Oxford (though, granted, there are only City Council elections there this time around).
Was anyone else expecting a
Was anyone else expecting a left hook from the twat in the minibus?