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Bristol City Council Attempts to Ban Public From Cycle City Meeting Tonight

category bristol | transport | news report author Wednesday October 08, 2008 09:19author by Josh Hart - The Publicauthor email velorution at yahoo dot com Report this post to the editors

Public Invited to Mass Cycle Ride Demonstration to Meeting starting at 5:30 from Fountains in City Centre

Bristol City Council today attempted to put the lid on a growing crisis of disillusionment with its handling of the Cycling City project by indicating to the Evening Post that the public would not be welcome at a meeting to be held this evening in Horfield to review the secretive contents of the Cycling City plan. Members of the public, for whom this is the first opportunity to examine where £23 million in taxpayer funding is to be spent, are outraged. Cyclists are inviting the public to bring their bikes and attend an emergency mass cycle ride to the "closed" meeting in protest, meeting at the sails by the fountains in the City Centre at 5:30pm, and riding to Horfield.

Bristol City Council Runs Roughshod Over Public Feedback on Cycle Plan
Bristol City Council Runs Roughshod Over Public Feedback on Cycle Plan

Sources indicate that the Evening Post rejected an investigative article about the growing concern from cycling groups in Bristol about the plan, instead running with a fluffy piece about Councillor Terry Cook's idea to have patrols on bikes.

See: http://www.thisisbristol.co.uk/news/Traffic-wardens-pro....html

In response to queries, a spokesman for Bristol City Council said: "The meeting, which has been arranged by the Cycling City team following on from an earlier meeting on the 12th September, is not a public event as such. Invites have gone out to all those people who are on our database of cycling groups, such as bike forums, and the people at the previous meeting. Tomorrow's meeting is intended to report on what is in the work programme and to clarify the role of the wider stakeholder group.

The Council are clearly terrified of accepting adequate public feedback, and are scared to the point of paralysis to do anything that would actually make Bristol a true Cycling City, such as restrictions on car traffic in the City Centre, creating a continuous network of cycleways, and taking proper action to deal with the growing transport crisis in our city.

Specifically:

* Over 100,000 people in Bristol live in areas where the government says nitrogen dioxide levels from tailpipe emissions are harmful to health

* Over 500 people are killed or injured on Bristol's roads every year

* For every child killed or injured by car in Clifton, over 25 are killed or injured by car in Easton/ Lawrence Hill

* Bristol has the most congested traffic of any city in the UK- with an average traffic speed of 16mph (easily reached on a bicycle)

When will the City Council act with the necessary urgency to address this crisis?

Related Link: http://onthelevelblog.com
author by nickleberrypublication date Wed Oct 08, 2008 11:02Report this post to the editors

You can give the council feedback on their cycling plans by going here:
http://bristolstreets.co.uk/

It's a bit of a tricky looking website but the idea is simple enough (I think). Of course the big question is really, are the council going to do anything with all the feedback...?!

author by Refusenikpublication date Wed Oct 08, 2008 14:55Report this post to the editors

"For every child killed or injured by car in Clifton, over 25 are killed or injured by car in Easton/ Lawrence Hill"

And this is despite the fact that Lawrence Hill/Barton Hill has the lowest car-ownership in Bristol!

author by Psycalistpublication date Thu Oct 09, 2008 09:45Report this post to the editors

Well I went to the meeting and came away thoughly uninspired.

They are proposing to spend about 41% of the budget on infrastructure but there is no real clarity about what they are planning to do.

The PR presentation was depressing. A tired powepoint presentation some regurgurated blurb about making cycling asperational and some awful logos.

Terry Cook who is 'leading' this (for want of a better word) said that he would be prepared to ban cars from the centre as part of a ten year plan. Apparently this morning he was backtrcking on the BBC.

Here is the evil pest report of the meeting
http://www.thisisbristol.co.uk/news/Let-s-make-Bristol-....html

author by Source pleasepublication date Thu Oct 09, 2008 12:42Report this post to the editors

Could you provide a source link/story and context for the photograph used please?
Thanks

author by AuntyInapublication date Thu Oct 09, 2008 19:39Report this post to the editors

Josh

I heard your broadcast on Community Radio a couple of weeks back and I applaud your work and your willingness to ask direct questions about some of the damaging actions of Bristol City Council. Would there be any merit in having some kind of on-line petition for openness from the council regarding how the £23 milllion is to be spent? It could be similar to the one about the cycle path and would be passed on by many of the same people. Just a thought. Keep up the good work.

How can I pressurise the council myself on this matter?

 
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