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“We need an outbreak of common sense”: Controversial cycling trial on pedestrian shopping street approved amid claims “every single resident does not want this scheme” – but disabled cyclists say trial “necessary step” to make town more accessible

“If we don’t hold a trial, we might miss the significant benefits it would bring,” said one cycling campaigner following the decision to lift a 30-year cycling ban, “strongly” opposed by 77 per cent of locals in a consultation

For the first time in 30 years, cyclists will be permitted to ride on a town centre shopping street, after councillors approved a controversial 18-month cycling trial which they say will “enhance active travel” by making the street “more accessible” to cyclists and improving the choice of local routes for people on bikes.

However, the Experimental Traffic Regulation Order (ETRO), which will lead to the cycling ban finally being lifted on Sheep Street in Bicester, has been the subject of a long-running saga, with some locals, politicians, and business owners claiming that “every single resident does not want this scheme”, and that it will lead to “jumped-up, arrogant” cyclists causing “carnage” and posing a risk to pedestrians.

But after months of debate – which saw initial plans for a trial put on hold earlier this year, and replaced with a public consultation – the ETRO was approved at an Oxfordshire County Council meeting yesterday by Andrew Gant, the local authority’s cabinet member for transport management, the Oxford Mail reports.

The trial will permit two-way cycling for 18 months through Sheep Street, which despite the 30-year cycling ban bizarrely forms part of the National Cycling Network, at all times of the day.

Sheep Street, Bicester, Oxfordshire (Google Maps)

> Allowing “speeding” cyclists to ride on “struggling” high street would lead to “carnage” and “frighten” elderly, say traders opposed to lifting cycling ban in pedestrianised shopping area

However, after approving the trial, Gant asked council officers to seek permission to make Fridays, when the weekly Bicester Market is held on the street, an exception to the trial’s parameters.

Following the results of the public consultation, which found that 77 per cent of the 1,267 respondents “strongly” opposed the trial, Gant said he would also add safeguards “in order to address concerns expressed”, such as regular monitoring and reporting of any incidents that take place involving pedestrians and cyclists on the street.

The transport chief also requested more detail on what signage will be installed to indicate that the trial is taking place, in order to “understand what people will see and what guidance they will be given”.

Nevertheless, Gant insisted that the cycling trial would be appropriate for Bicester, which he said is currently undergoing a “period of change, more than most possibly”.

Before the trial was approved, a number of councillors raised the concerns alluded to by Gant during the meeting, focusing on the safety of pedestrians, the apparent lack of enforcement of the current cycling restrictions, and the lack of parking facilities for bikes on Sheep Street.

Sheep Street, Bicester (Google Maps)

> Hopes cycling's "great boost to struggling high street" will not be lost as plan to let cyclists ride pedestrianised key shopping street not approved, goes to consultation instead

“I cannot remember any item causing such concern amongst residents as this one,” said Conservative county councillor Michael Waine

"Every single resident, shop keeper, and market stall holder I’ve spoken to in Bicester on Sheep Street does not want this scheme,” added Waine’s Tory colleague Sam Holland.

“This is unsafe and we need an outbreak of common sense to stop this scheme going ahead. Please, listen to the people of Bicester, do not approve this scheme today.”

Another Conservative councillor, Donna Ford, also said: “The consultation is abundantly clear that the residents of Bicester do not want this proposal. 77 per cent had strong concerns – this is a huge amount.

“I urge you to listen to residents and not approve this recommendation. We should be respecting their choice.”

HGV on Sheep Street in Bicester (Catherine Hickman, Bicester Bike Users Group)

> Cyclists to be allowed to ride on popular shopping street pedestrianised for 30 years as police say it will "split opinion"... and Conservative councillor concerned about "abuse by vehicles"

However, despite the Conservative councillors’ claims that the trial is essentially universally opposed in Bicester, there were also plenty of voices of support during yesterday’s meeting.

Noting that cycles can be used for mobility purposes, disabled Bicester resident Kevin Hickman told the council that because cycling is easier for him than walking, and less difficult than driving, the trial will make the town’s shopping street much more accessible.

Hickman described the trial as a “necessary step”, but also pointed out that he is “not sure” the public consultation process “as it currently stands is the best way to engage with people on topics like this, and I wonder if there are better ways in future”.

Paul Troop, the secretary of Bike Users Oxford, also said he believes the trial will bring benefits to the town, such as supporting mental wellbeing and physical fitness, and attracting more potential customers to the town centre.

“If we don’t hold a trial, we might miss the significant benefits would bring to Bicester,” he said.

Bicycle at Sheep Street in Bicester (Catherine Hickman, Bicester Bike Users Group)

> Residents claim “jumped-up, arrogant” cyclists will cause “carnage at the expense of pedestrians” 

While there have been some clear misgivings from the council’s consultation process, the trial’s approval yesterday means that the local authority will now begin another six-month consultation to seek locals’ views on the practical effects of cycling on Sheep Street.

At the end of the consultation in May 2025, a decision will then be taken, resulting in either the ETRO continuing for the full 18-month trial period with its current rules, or being called off and the historic cycling ban being immediately reinstated.

The council says the goal of lifting the ban is to “enhance active travel in Bicester by making Sheep Street more accessible to cyclists”, and that it aims to “provide significant benefits for cyclists by improving the choice of routes across Bicester”.

After obtaining a PhD, lecturing, and hosting a history podcast at Queen’s University Belfast, Ryan joined road.cc in December 2021 and since then has kept the site’s readers and listeners informed and enthralled (well at least occasionally) on news, the live blog, and the road.cc Podcast. After boarding a wrong bus at the world championships and ruining a good pair of jeans at the cyclocross, he now serves as road.cc’s senior news writer. Before his foray into cycling journalism, he wallowed in the equally pitiless world of academia, where he wrote a book about Victorian politics and droned on about cycling and bikes to classes of bored students (while taking every chance he could get to talk about cycling in print or on the radio). He can be found riding his bike very slowly around the narrow, scenic country lanes of Co. Down.

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22 comments

Avatar
Geoff H | 1 month ago
3 likes

“jumped-up, arrogant” cyclists motorists causing “carnage” and posing a risk to pedestrians everyone else. Fixed it ..........

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newbankgyratory | 1 month ago
3 likes

The issue is elderly people worried/worked-up about being knocked over by cycling louts.

There is a solution - put up frail pedestrians signage. How this will help:

  • Elderly/frail/worried people can see that someone has thought about them
  • Cycling louts can observe the signage and react appropriately
  • Councillors can illustrate that they have listened and reacted

Win, win all around

PS Ripped off: https://www.gov.uk/guidance/the-highway-code/traffic-signs

 

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chrisonabike replied to newbankgyratory | 1 month ago
1 like

I've always wondered - why does the one-armed person in the cloak have their hand in the one-armed person with the cane?

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Rendel Harris replied to chrisonabike | 1 month ago
3 likes

It's a warning that pickpockets are targetting elderly Morphs.

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eburtthebike | 1 month ago
3 likes

“This is unsafe and we need an outbreak of common sense...."

From a tory!

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hawkinspeter replied to eburtthebike | 1 month ago
4 likes

eburtthebike wrote:

“This is unsafe and we need an outbreak of common sense...."

From a tory!

The kind of common sense that associates global financial crises and recession with a need to cut back on libraries and allow unlimited banker bonuses.

Avatar
zweiblumen | 1 month ago
3 likes

The decisive point here is that cyclists already use this route and no enforcement action is taken. I don't see how the residents will be imperilled by the addition of law-abiding cyclists to a route that's already used by the very cyclists that the ban is intended to dissuade.

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anke2 | 1 month ago
3 likes

Great trial. The problem is that everyone on a bicycle will have to behave well. (An idiot-rate of 10%, like with motor traffic, will hardly be accepted here...  2 With one in a hundred behaving dangerously, the "jumped up, arrogant, dangerous" cyclist nonsense might stick sufficiently to cancel the trial.

Thus, it would be important to keep track of the number of cyclists, the number of complaints - and the number of actual accidents, to keep the opposition in check.

Oh, and I hope they provide reasonable parking. Having to desperately look for something to chain a bike to sucks - in particular if the only opportunities would block someone else's path.

Avatar
chrisonabike replied to anke2 | 1 month ago
3 likes
anke2 wrote:

Thus, it would be important to keep track of the number of cyclists, the number of complaints - and the number of actual accidents, to keep the opposition in check.

Unfortunately the key voices on the opposition don't tend to come from a place amenable to logical persuasion. "My friend told me..." or "you can't drive there but they're letting *cyclists* through?!" or "I saw someone doing x (once)" are more than sufficient counter-arguments.

It's coming from a place of fear - of "criminals on bikes" or "silent speeding danger". Or losing one's rights (priveledges) / position in society. Or just "change".

Plus normal political opportunism - where there are complaints, there's a campaign opportunity.

How to bypass that is tricky. Perhaps earplugs, some good political skills (and credits) and time? If the scheme (and those who deployed it) can last say a year or so the volume should go right down. (Only back to the normal level of "we could put parking there / that could be a road" though...)

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bensynnock | 1 month ago
3 likes

I was thinking about the words used by the opposers here, 'jumped-up' and 'arrogant', and wondering what behaviour on that part of cyclists demonstrates these traits? When I cycle through the pedestrian area here in Southampton, where cycling is permitted, what is it that I'm doing that is jumped-up or arrogant?

I can think of things that drivers do that would qualify, such as the driver who is turning right out of a t junction and blocks the near lane while waiting for a gap on the far lane.

Any ideas?

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eburtthebike replied to bensynnock | 1 month ago
3 likes

bensynnock wrote:

I was thinking about the words used by the opposers here, 'jumped-up' and 'arrogant', and wondering what behaviour on that part of cyclists demonstrates these traits? When I cycle through the pedestrian area here in Southampton, where cycling is permitted, what is it that I'm doing that is jumped-up or arrogant?

I believe the psychologists call it tranferrance, where you project your own attitudes on to others.

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Clem Fandango | 1 month ago
6 likes

It used to (literally) be a cattle market.... How on earth did anyone survive???

https://heritagesearch.oxfordshire.gov.uk/images/POX0626282

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kingleo replied to Clem Fandango | 1 month ago
6 likes

Cyclists have been riding in Bister for about 150 years, and now all of a sudden they are a great danger to pedestrians.

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dubwise | 1 month ago
3 likes

Anyone else getting fed up with the constant "controversial cycling this, controversial cycling that" narrative?

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Clem Fandango replied to dubwise | 1 month ago
4 likes

Yep.  Squeaky wheel Conservative types & NIMBYs objecting like clockwork because "genuine concerns" (ie misinformed / biased opinion)  does not make something "controversial".  

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brooksby | 1 month ago
15 likes

Quick show of hands: how many people think that if the council was to start allowing motor vehicles through there then these people wouldn't see a problem?

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Pedal those squares replied to brooksby | 1 month ago
6 likes

The people complaining will be the same people who complained about the road getting closed to traffic!

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Cugel replied to brooksby | 1 month ago
4 likes

brooksby wrote:

Quick show of hands: how many people think that if the council was to start allowing motor vehicles through there then these people wouldn't see a problem?

Many seem to feel that its a priviledge to be run over, hooted at or otherwise belittled by an up-class drivist in a shiny tin machine with a user-throne and go-faster stripes. The more clarssy the tin merkin, the greater the priv. A quick leap, shuffle or trot away from the intended path of the tinpotted drivist is the only decent response.

It seems to be the equivalent of the olde fashioned forelock tug, as a snootish fellow claimed right of passage through or over your lowerclarss person, with an encouraging swish of his wee cane and a small admonition of displeasure at the delay whilst you stumble aside muttering apologies.

I blame that Prince Philip.

 

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ChasP replied to Cugel | 1 month ago
3 likes

I blame Thatcher, although a quick google to find the quote about being a loser if you use a bus suggests it wasn't her originally.

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Rendel Harris replied to ChasP | 1 month ago
1 like

ChasP wrote:

I blame Thatcher, although a quick google to find the quote about being a loser if you use a bus suggests it wasn't her originally.

Wasn't her quote something like "Any man who takes the bus after the age of twenty-five [maybe thirty?] is a failure?

ETA Looked it up, seems to be generally accepted that she said something like it although no hard evidence; this version from the Guardian seems to ring true, in terms of the way she used to speak: "If a man finds himself a passenger on a bus having attained the age of 26, he can count himself a failure in life."

Avatar
bensynnock replied to brooksby | 1 month ago
4 likes

There clearly are motor vehicles on the street, as you can see in the pictures.

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brooksby replied to bensynnock | 1 month ago
1 like

bensynnock wrote:

There clearly are motor vehicles on the street, as you can see in the pictures.

I think that they are 'access' or 'deliveries only'.  Seems weird that these people appear to think that cyclists are a death-causing menace whereas having HGVs edging through are totally fine.  Which was my point.

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