Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.
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23 comments
@zanf: some people will always see the glass as half-empty. So be it.
I think this is a common-sense decision from Boris. Free choice, and accepting that enforcement would deter both committed and casual cyclists.
That said, I choose to minimise risk and wear a helmet. But that's just my choice!
Life is about choices. I choose to protect my head by wearing a helmet. I personally think the benefits of wearing a helmet outweigh the risks and I consider my skull an important part of my body that deserves some respect.
It's disappointing that though Boris seems to be aware of the overweening faith some people place in bike helmets, he didn't seem sure of the situation in Australia. Surely he must communicate at least some of the time with Gilligan?
They didn't just try - they succeeded, back in the early '90s.
He made it sound like people 'were' taking the bikes beforehand. But Australia's bike share schemes weren't launched until 2010 by which time, after 20 years of propaganda and fines, bike helmets had become regarded by almost everyone there as essential. Since their launch the bike hire schemes have never been a roaring success and the opinion is that (infrastructure apart), that's down to the mandatory helmet laws.
I wish he'd had the confidence in his beliefs to be more convincing about that without almost contradicting himself. Even if the medical evidence is 'mixed', the medical profession in the UK is very much behind the view that regular cycling has many overall benefits both at the individual and population level.
I suppose it was one argument Boris didn't want to have on a popular chat show, especially with grade A numpty James Corden ('I don't use Barclay's hire bikes because I want to wear a helmet').
I'm sure Chris Boardman wouldn't have made the same mistake but been more convincing and forceful in his assertions.
PR ploy or not, he's made a statement that in this case makes sense. In supporting it, doesnt not mean you agree with his political views, just his comments helmets.
This appears to be a well-ballanced decision from Boris but, actually, how could such a helmet rule possibly be enforced?
There's no legal requirement to wear a lid, so what grounds would the police have to stop a bare-headed hire-bike rider? And would they have the inclination to in the first place? I doubt it.
We would effectivly be talking about a breach of the Ts&Cs of a hire contract i.e. not a police matter anyway. I guess they would have to use private enforement officers of some sort. Even if they wanted to do such a thing it just wouldn't be cost-effective.
Oh goody, another helmet debate. Well done Boris for speaking some sense. They shouldn't be compulsory.
Now, please, everyone make your own educated choices: I will choose to wear one.
I always wear a helmet. Period.
However, I can only agree with Boris in this case (no matter what his chequered past is, as zanf has highlighted, but let's not stray off topic as he has done so expertly).
I don't think that helmets will work for the average Boris-biker. The usual injuries seem to be crushed under an HGV where a helmet won't help. In my (inexpert) opinion a helmet law will only make the streets more dangerous. The only way to make cycling safer is to instill a cycling culture and get people out there on bikes.
Any obstacle to getting people onto bikes must be avoided.
If they had decided the opposite, how would they have enforced the rule? What's to stop people hiring the bikes and dressing just exactly however they please?
Latest research is telling us they only ever made any difference to skull injuries and scalp lacerations. No significant difference to brain injury. The idea that they save you from brain injury was a mainstay of the pro-helmet camp. http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00068-014-0453-0
I have never understood why people who hold major sway in such things, in that they don't want helmets shoved upon cyclists, have to sound almost apologetic when saying the status quo will remain. They have the end-users best interests at heart, they have untold pieces of researching backing up their stance, and yet they have to speak, 'hesitatingly,' if they are being rebellious. Who are they scared of offending? Just a thought
James Corden played the foil, suggesting that helmets should be compulsory, but I'm not sure whether he meant it or not, because he played into Boris' hands so well.
What's going on, five (including me) for, and non against for Boris, up to now that is!
Because people have short memories and easily forget that this is the same guy who resisted physically segregated cycleways for his entire first term as mayor. The same guy who said that most cyclists killed or injured were responsible for it themselves, all the while quoting some bullshit figure he wouldn't substantiate, nor apologise for when shown to be erroneous. The same guy who ranted on about possibly outlawing wearing headphones while cycling after a cluster of 6 cyclist deaths in two weeks, despite no-none of those cyclists being shown to have been wearing headphones. The same guy who has done nothing to reduce pollution in the capital but quite a not to avoid doing anything about it.
The guy is a media savvy scumbag who knows how to play the crowd, and played the crowd he has.
Welcome to his PR campaign to be elected as MP for Uxbridge before ascending to leader of the Tory party, and you are all falling for it.
A bit naive this. I also have reservations about segregating cyclists. There's a whole debate about the philosophy of segregation in terms of access to roads. It works for some in some places but it's not an unalloyed good due to the fact that policy makers can easily put in some dodgy cycle path at the same time a denying cyclists access to the roads.
I get that you don't like Boris' overall politics but the fact is that he is a cyclist and cycles regularly in London. Having a different point of view about the efficacy of segregation is not really a right or a left wing position. But if it were that would make Boris the W. E. B. Du Bois in the debate and you the Booker T Washington character.
If you think like Booker T that cycle provision will be "different but equal" so long as we accept the primacy of motorised transport then you'll love all that segregation stuff. If like many of us you think cyclists rightfully belong on the roads and are deserving of respect by other road users then Mr DuBois is your man. That whole separate but equal thing didn't turn out to well.
I'm taking the progressive approach.
You're seriously comparing segregated cycling provisions to emancipation from slavery?
Fuck me, talk about tenuous.
"Seperate but equal" was the unpleasant justification for Apartheid in South Africa. Of course the facilities for the non whites were anything but equal. Just as cycle facilities are a poor substitute for free use of the road. It might be another case if farcilities were not such an insult.
As for your invitation, no thanks.
Yes, because The Netherlands and Denmark are just *full* of slavery like oppression and apartheid of cyclists.
The only invitation was for you to stop talking shite.
The segregated cycle paths where I live are unrideable due to the huge number of pedestrians (aka drivers on foot - using them to avoid paying for the park and ride) and dog walkers with their out of control super poopers. Don't even get me started on the 2 abreast morbidly obese formation push chair cycle path blockers.
Boris for president!!
Boris, WELL SAID!
Well, this is rare news! A politician who doesn't assume that increased regulation is the answer to everything. I'd wish there would be some policy makers like that around where I live.
Well said Boris. One of the few public figures who's come out and said this...
We want to normalise cycling, not make it out to be some kind of extreme sport and the hire bikes have gone a long way to doing this... so we don't want to disincentivise people from using them
Someone gets it at last!
Boris has had it for a long time. Ken Livingston famously couldn't actually ride a bike so his opinions on cycle safety are somewhat limited. I am not particularly supportive of Boris's politics but he does ride a bike regularly in London. That doesn't mean I'll always agree with him on cycling issues indeed this we bsite is testament to the fact that cyclists hold a whole range of opinions and policy preferences, but it does mean that I have some respect for his opinion.
It baffles me how they will run a compulsory helmet thing anyway. Helmets are only very lited in their effectivness and that's when they are intact and fitted properly. And I'm not sure I want to wear a helmet that some sweaty bloke with psoriasis just left on the bike.