Not a lot if Sustrans gets involved, but whatever. As token gestures go, this one probably looks good on paper, but it'll be interesting to see what benefit actually accrues where, when and to whom ...Ooh!
I wonder what they will do with it?
Absolutely spot on there GaRRyShame about the 60 million a year annual budget that they not that long ago removed from cycling so in reality this is a 26 million cut !!!!
Nice to know I'm not the only one here with utter contempt for those wonderful folks at Sustrans... and good old Sustrans will be in there, cap in hand.
OMG thanks for opening my eyes, although I had always been a bit critical of sustrans as they didnt seem to be actually getting down to the nitty gritty and doing something, my idea had always been that they were there to encourage traffic free routes but in actual fact they just seemed to be encouraging me, via their cycle maps, onto various A and B roads which I felt I was quite capable of finding myself.Precious little in the way of actual cycling infrastructure, that's what we will get.
Almost all of that money will be channeled into the dozens of "charities" (Quangos) both local and national, set up to boost the uptake of cycling as an alternative form of transport.
These various bodies, who know sod all about cycling, will then appoint consultants to carry out feasability studies, wildlife impact studies, financial benefits (worked out on a beer mat), and good old Sustrans will be in there, cap in hand. Ask any cyclist in Bristol where the £12m grant to create Britains first cycling city went. ( Sustrans were in there like shot )
Just the same here in Swindon with the awarding of a £4.3m grant to upgrade the cycling infrastructure. You-know-who now have a rent-free office in the town. Cartographers were commissioned to draw up a new cycle map (there's nothing wrong with the existing one) and some nice new signs were put up. the "Western Flyer" express cycle route was started and promptly stalled due to "unexpected problems".
Another example of smoke-an'-mirrors pie-in-the-sky projects, "The Cricklade Country Way". Nice website set up, but not updated since 2011. The last £10k grant to that project was spent on no less than fourteen wildlife impact studies, and not a single barrow load of scalpins got laid.
We are very lucky in Swindon to have a vast network of safe cycling routes, routes that are rapidly falling into a state disrepair. Overhanging hedges reducing existing shared paths by 60% in places. Just cut the flippin' hedges.....all right!!
Anyhoo, back to my number one hated quango. (scroll up to read the article)
SUSTRANS SUSSED
Similar problems in MK where we are blessed with over 270 Km of Redways, I along with some other cyclists here sometimes carry a pair of secateurs to snip off particularly annoying bits of vegetation and wear a helmet to prevent being bonked by branches.We are very lucky in Swindon to have a vast network of safe cycling routes, routes that are rapidly falling into a state disrepair. Overhanging hedges reducing existing shared paths by 60% in places. Just cut the flippin' hedges.....all right!!
Bonked by branches eh ?......nasty.....Similar problems in MK where we are blessed with over 270 Km of Redways, I along with some other cyclists here sometimes carry a pair of secateurs to snip off particularly annoying bits of vegetation and wear a helmet to prevent being bonked by branches.
The worst problem though is the breaking up of the tarmac surface, this happens over a number of years as tree roots grow under the Redways. In some areas it is so rough that I take to the roads.
Of course, the cost of maintaining this is network is enormous and someone has to pay for it.
Either you have to be joking or you've found some patches without bikes!i don't see significantly more cyclists on the streets of london than i used to 20 years ago
or i don't see an increase, i didn't say there were none - there were quite a few people aside from me that used to commute, but compared to copenhagen, munich, stockholm, amsterdam, (in fact any non southern europe major capital) it was and still is tiny.Either you have to be joking or you've found some patches without bikes!
thats a fair point, and a quick google search proves you're right and i'm wrong (doncha hate it when that happens ) its interesting that my perspective is obviously wrong, most of my work is around the city, so maybe the % hasn't increased so much there, but i sit correctedIn fact I find the official story that London cycling has doubled ten years an underestimate, in many areas it's gone from near zero only ten years ago to vast hordes of cyclists today. The large increase in bike sales outlets and/or outlet size over your twenty years underlines that.