Support road.cc

Like this site? Help us to make it better.

Edinburgh cycling campaigner's call for 20mph speed limit to protect riders gets a sadly predictable response from newspaper's readers

Retired surgeon Professor Chris Oliver says transport strategy must put cycling, walking and public transport first

A prominent cycling campaigner in Scotland has called for speed limits for motor vehicles to be reduced in Edinburgh to help safeguard cyclists – but his appeal has been given short shrift by readers of the newspaper which published his appeal.

Professor Chris Oliver is a retired orthopaedic surgeon and former chair in Scotland of CTC (now Cycling UK), and has now taken up the role of communication officer at Spokes, the Lothian cycling campaign, which is one of  theUK’s largest regional cycling campaign organisations.

His open letter, published this morning by Edinburgh Evening News – a sister publication of The Scotsman – read:

As an Edinburgh trauma orthopaedic surgeon and keen cyclist, my day-job was always saddened when I personally saw a death in the emergency room or an injured cyclist in outpatients. Not just the death to deal with but the relatives to console as well. The reconstructive orthopaedic surgery would sometimes not restore full body function, time would be lost from work and sometimes chronic disability would occur.

As communication officer for Spokes – The Lothian Cycling Campaign – my email inbox constantly fills with angry messages about unnecessary death, pointless cyclists’ road traffic injuries and lenient sentencing from the courts. Frankly, it has put me off cycling in areas where there is poor or non-existent segregated cycling infrastructure. I have campaigned for 20mph, more active travel, presumed liability, fewer potholes, better bike storage and brought the plight of Edinburgh cyclists’ tram injuries to the attention of the courts. It must be remembered that the health benefits of cycling outweigh the risks by 20:1.

It is therefore very disappointing to see the significant rise in deaths and serious injuries per million kilometres cycled in the recent Cycling Scotland annual cycling monitoring report. It is noticeable that although these figures go back to 2010, this increase is entirely in the three years from 2015 to 2017. It is impossible to know exactly what has changed in the last three years to cause this, but use of mobile phones, both handheld and hands-free, must be a prime candidate. You simply cannot blame cyclists for not wearing helmets, not wearing high-viz or not obeying the Highway Code.

The figures in the report again re-affirm that high-speed roads are by far the most dangerous for using a bike, in terms of the risk of a serious injury. On 60mph roads, five per cent of cyclist casualties were deaths and 33 per cent serious injuries, whereas on 20mph roads there were no deaths at all, and only 20 per cent of casualties were classed as serious. This makes it even more disastrous for the Scottish Government to have voted out Mark Ruskell MSP’s Bill for a default urban 20mph limit across Scotland.

We applaud Police Scotland for the highly successful experiment of average speed cameras on Old Dalkeith Road, and their intention to assess a further 25 roads in the Capital for similar treatment. Police Scotland’s Operation Close Pass has reduced incidents, but these are still a problem and make many cyclists, particularly some women and children, fearful.

We would like to see the government investigating automatic detection equipment for mobile use in motor vehicles, since there seems no other solution to this growing menace to lives and limbs on our roads. Rules are also necessary for hands-free, since research shows these to be almost as serious a risk as handheld.

The needs of motorists are still the overwhelming priority for government public expenditure on transport. Although public transport investment has improved substantially, investment to provide safe and welcoming conditions for cycling and walking still trails woefully behind.

I believe that councils and government should have an overall transport strategy in which cyclists, pedestrians and public transport genuinely come first – and that includes both funding and roadspace. Cycling and walking will undoubtedly contribute to combating the climate chaos emergency.

We are sadly many years away from a comprehensive safe cycling and walking network in Scotland where our children can safely walk or cycle to school.

The newspaper, which said that the article had “attracted a massive response from readers,” published a follow-up piece this afternoon highlighting some of the comments it had received.

Most road.cc readers, we imagine, will be aware that any newspaper article about cycling will attract plenty of comments, many of them unsympathetic to cyclists, and with a couple of exceptions the ones the Edinburgh Evening News chose to include certainly reflect that.

Cyclists, we are told, should be fined for not wearing a helmet or hi-viz clothing, or for riding on the road instead of a cycle path. None of which, of course are illegal.

Contrast that with press coverage from pretty much any local paper about how speed cameras serve as a cash cow to extract money from law-abiding motorists. Oh wait … a fine for speeding follows on from the law being broken.

Professor Oliver’s call for a default 20 mile an hour speed limit also attracted ire from people insisting that cyclists regularly ride at that speed or above, on the pavement, or who run red lights, or otherwise ignore the Highway Code.

By means of ‘balance’ the newspaper did however manage to unearth one comment from a reader who took up road cycling two years ago and called for decent segregated infrastructure, pointing out:  “Anything that can separate cyclists from cars is a good thing for both – less frustration, less danger. But most of the cycle paths are terrible, and some just end abruptly for no reason, like one on the Glasgow Road that just gives up.”

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.

Add new comment

10 comments

Avatar
TriTaxMan | 4 years ago
0 likes

I personally would love to see speed cameras everywhere.

With the advent of modern technology lots of vehicles now have adjustable speed limiters fitted, so there is absoultely no excuse for exceeding the speed limit.  Or using the old "if its a speed limit of XX mph I will be so distracted watching my speedo that I wont see the other road users and crash into them".

The biggest thing is.... having a posted 20mph limit makes very little difference to speeds.  IIRC there was a recent study which indicates that something like 85% of drivers break the speed limit in 20mph zones and some 50% break the limit in 30mph zones.

Everything goes back to the fact that too many people are in too much of a rush to get nowhere

Avatar
Rik Mayals unde... | 4 years ago
0 likes

I can't begin to remember how many times I have been told by drivers to wear hi-viz. Once, I remonstrated with a woman for having a telephone conversation whilst driving, with the phone stuck to her ear. Her defence was to attack me for not wearing hi-viz. ( Even though I was at the time wearing my Proviz 360 jacket, possibly the most visible jacket on the market). They don't seem to realise that it is not me who needs to make myself visible, it is the drivers who need to make sure they are concentrating and can see other road users. 

It is the old saying, cyclists use the roads by right, motorists use the road by permission. When I have used that phrase in the past I am met with a confused look and usually an "eh?"

 

Sadly this warped view will never change, whilst I have noticed in recent months more people giving me plenty of space when I am cycling on the road, there still many who do not pay attention, and pass far too close. I believe firmly that most close passes are not intentional, but are as a result of people not paying attention to what is on the road in front of them, busy concentrating on the phone in their lap, the Apple Carplay or the miriad of button on the touch screen in front of them. The usual "Sorry I didn't see you," usually means "I wasn't paying attention to the road ahead."

Avatar
yupiteru | 4 years ago
2 likes

Sadly  90% of the population of the UK are areseholes. 

Many years ago I thought about becoming an MP but when I realised the type of people I would have to persuade to vote for me, there was no way it was going to happen.

Nothing is going to change in a hurry unfortunately, all you can do is try and 'engineer' your existence so that you can claim to be in the 'Human being' 10% zone and leave the arseholes to fight among themselves.

Avatar
brooksby | 4 years ago
4 likes

I've just read the linked follow-up article and I call BINGO

Avatar
RobD | 4 years ago
3 likes

While the types of comments aren't unexpected, they still make me sad, especially when the comments about speed cameras etc come up. I have no problem with speed cameras, put more of them up if it helps, although I think it's the average speed ones that are more effective. Drivers have gotten too used to being able to speed without consequence, even people I work with who are very sensible and pragmatic in most other aspects of life claim that 'they only speed when they deem it acceptable to do so' as if they suddenly have better judment and the ability to predict what's round the next bend than people who make the laws.

Avatar
quiff replied to RobD | 4 years ago
0 likes

RobD wrote:

I have no problem with speed cameras, put more of them up if it helps, although I think it's the average speed ones that are more effective.

I agree that they seem more effective, but I'm still amazed at how many people in a signposted average speed check zone brake to the speed limit just before each camera, then accelerate again.   

Avatar
Rik Mayals unde... replied to quiff | 4 years ago
1 like

quiff wrote:

RobD wrote:

I have no problem with speed cameras, put more of them up if it helps, although I think it's the average speed ones that are more effective.

I agree that they seem more effective, but I'm still amazed at how many people in a signposted average speed check zone brake to the speed limit just before each camera, then accelerate again.   

Agree 100%, average speed cameras are the way forward.

Avatar
Zigster | 4 years ago
5 likes

"Otherwise law abiding" always gets me. The people saying it never seem to understand what a stupid comment it is.

Avatar
brooksby replied to Zigster | 4 years ago
1 like

Zigster wrote:

"Otherwise law abiding" always gets me. The people saying it never seem to understand what a stupid comment it is.

"Yes, I murdered him, but I'm otherwise law-abiding, officer!"

Avatar
burtthebike | 4 years ago
2 likes

There goes the Scots reputation for being rather more pragmatic than the average Englishman.

Latest Comments