Yup.
The people shouting for cars to be more expensive seem to forget (or not care, because it doesn't affect their perfect little world) about the many thousands of tradesmen and small businesses that rely on their vehicles for work.
Of course, higher motoring costs affect consumers also - you can't stick everything on trains.
Whilst I agree, getting unneccesary car use reduced is a good thing, the way it's implemented needs to be properly structured and judging by past events in all areas of day to day living, I don't trust the government to come up with a constructive and fair method
many thousands of tradesmen and small businesses that rely on their vehicles for work.
Of course, higher motoring costs affect consumers also – you can’t stick everything on trains.
Make allowances for those that need to carry materials.
It used to annoy the crap out of me when working in London. Had to leave at 5:15 to make it onto site for 6:30 because traffic was so bad along the A12/M25/A13. Mate and I are carrying our tools. Most other people are sat alone in their car to get to their job.
You'd probably find that if the roads were not so congested with cars that delivery costs would fall. Transporting by road wouldn't be fraught with traffic standstill twice a day and drivers would cover more ground in their allotted time.
Cars are more expensive, fuel costs are up, new cars cost a lot more than they did and the second hand market is nuts, insurance costs only go one way. Cars are not cheap. Credit is the only thing making them affordable for most.
As above sort public transport, start with rail and that includes the unions. It's been almost impossible to use the rail network with confidence for a long time. The strikes have made that a lot worse and its expensive and inconvient. We've done a few long trips over the last year by car we would have prefered to have used the train for but couldn't rely on them not being cancelled.
Make allowances for those that need to carry materials.
You'd hope, wouldn't you?
I don't trust that to happen though
@alpin "Make allowances for those that need to carry materials." no we don't, because everyone has an excuse why they are special, "need to carry tools", "I'm an important politician", "security", "Tarquin has a medical condition", "I've a cold and didn't want to spread it around" and that's before you get to the chancers who register themselves as a tradesman and put a toolbox in their car just so they can make the same claim. My granddad was a carpenter and he never had a car he still managed to get to work for 40 years, a combination of liftshare, company vans and public transport. It needs to be made easier for tradesmen to use public transport too. Some of it involves a wider change, how often do you employ a company for some work on your house and it turns up they travelled 30 40 50 even more miles to come? That needs to stop, especially common trades.
Make allowances for those that need to carry materials.
That's not dissimilar to the clarion cries from all the people opposed to any traffic restrictions of "but what about... tradespeople/the disabled/the elderly/those carrying fridges and and cellos and 65" TVs..."
Miraculously, they seem to lose all their care for those things as soon as they themselves have unrestricted driving privileges.
But there's an element in there of "how can anyone possibly carry anything at all without a car??!!!"
It has to start with good PT in my view.
@alpin “Make allowances for those that need to carry materials.” no we don’t, because everyone has an excuse why they are special, “need to carry tools”, “I’m an important politician”, “security”, “Tarquin has a medical condition”, “I’ve a cold and didn’t want to spread it around” and that’s before you get to the chancers who register themselves as a tradesman and put a toolbox in their car just so they can make the same claim. My granddad was a carpenter and he never had a car he still managed to get to work for 40 years, a combination of liftshare, company vans and public transport. It needs to be made easier for tradesmen to use public transport too. Some of it involves a wider change, how often do you employ a company for some work on your house and it turns up they travelled 30 40 50 even more miles to come? That needs to stop, especially common trades.
This is the f-you, I'm alright attitude I was talking about
People with complete ignorance as to what some people do for a living and why they travel
One of the biggest problems is the planning system. Local roads are controlled by councils, and all cycle lane decisions seem to come down the whims of a local councillor even if the council themselves are in favour, and most seem to be quite anti-cycling. Though they usually say something "I'm all for cycle lanes, but not here as it gets in the way of cars or car parking".
They put in a cycle route between shoreham and hove here, except a big chunk in the middle was missing, because a councillor (also a taxi driver) voted against it.
https://www.theargus.co.uk/news/18669000.plan-link-hove-shoreham-cycle-lanes-vetoed-leader/
The middle bit was the busiest most unpleasant section. The end bits were then used very little and got ripped out.
The road is now a traffic jam every morning.
They are now planning a tiny 5 mile section and fuss that's being made is absurd. People genuinely seem to think there's a conspiracy in *favour* of cycle lanes.
https://www.theargus.co.uk/news/23262579.cycle-lane-connect-brighton-hove-shoreham/
It takes years and years with endless consultations to get even shortest shared pavement route put in.
@TheArtistFormaerlyKnownAsSTR My point is that we shouldn't make allowances for people who need to travel for work, because if it's for work, they get paid for it and travel is a part, there's no problem in increasing the cost of travel for these people, because they will pass that cost on to their customers, by increasing the cost of travel, you ensure that I end up employing more local tradespeople where possible because the local tradespeople suddenly become cheaper, if there is no local alternative then I just end up paying more, and the true cost of all this transport is reflected in the end bill. At the moment the cost of that travel is either being paid by everyone in taxes,kicked down the road in terms of future generations having to clear up the mess or is already being paid at least partially by customers for having a tradesmen sitting in traffic. The cost to end users of reducing traffic an pollution won't just come in direct costs in running a car, it comes in paying for other people who's services they engage having to use cars. With any luck some of those costs may be mitigated by their being less traffic and so people who need to use them can get to their place of work quicker and therefore cheaper.
For example, Munich City has a scheme where tradesmen can register and they get to park wherever necessary for their job. Other individuals have to pay at the meter.
Something similar could be introduced for commuters travelling into congestion zones.
My granddad was a carpenter and he never had a car he still managed to get to work for 40 years, a combination of liftshare, company vans and public transport.
So he still relied on private cars, then? Did he have tools to carry?
And as much as I would have liked to travel by train to my jobs, there's little chance of me lugging a van load of tools by hand onto the 17:32 train at Liverpool Street....During rush hour. My chop saw alone weighs 30kg,then there's the stand and my drills, hand tools, materials, etc.
I used to envy the electricians who could turn up using public transport.
They sat on the train watching episodes of the Office of reading a paper.
To reduce car dependancy it needs significant investment to improve the cycling infrastructure and public transport provision.
This significant investment will require long-term commitment from the government. But the government are not bothered about long-term commitment as thats not what wins elections.
It really needs all political parties to have a commitment to long-term goals, so if there is a change in government, then the new party in charge will still continue with the commitment.
It shouldn't only be for cycling infrastructure and public transport improvement. If there was political party agreement to inprove the NHS, police, fire brigade, civil service, environment, education etc, then it would continually improve the country and we wouldn't be in the state we are in. But this thinking doesn't win elections, so we end up with short-term poorly delivered projects that aren't fit for purpose.
I used to envy the electricians who could turn up using public transport.
Then they get to site and find out that their tools have been nicked
@mahowlett - oh, if only it were that simplistic, but it really isn't. Comparisons to your grandad may work in some circumstances, but in the real modern world it's not always so straightforward.
I could tell you about what I (and many others in my line of work do), but that would seem rather 'woe is me'. So I'll use HS2 as an example. Do you think that the many thousands of specialist contractors utilised on that build, live on the doorstep, or that if they have to travel, they can just whack their prices up at the drop of a hat? Not happening
We need to start with the 'short journey' car users. The type that 'pop' to the shops that are within walking distance.
It needs to be unacceptable to drive your child to their school 'because it's safer'.
A local school near us has a row of faux 4x4 sitting outside every school term morning and afternoon.
A child is far safer walking or cycling to school, or the shops or to any other activities. They would concentrate better in the classroom, get much needed exercise and sleep better.
Firing up a stupidly sized car on our tiny packed roads for a short journey is madness.
Then they get to site and find out that their tools have been nicked
TBF, the site im thinking of they were doing the 2nd fix and snagging... A 12v Fischer Price drill and some screw drivers in a bag.
TBF, the site im thinking of they were doing the 2nd fix and snagging… A 12v Fischer Price drill and some screw drivers in a bag.
Lolz
I've had agency 'sparks' turn up on site with no tools.
"Where are your tools?
In my shed
Erm, so what did you think you were doing today?
Dunno"
This despite being told exactly what they were doing in telephone interviews
or make cars less attractive? It needs to be a combination of carrot and stick. Car drivers paying for their parking on public land would be a useful step.
There's two problems here.
First, it needs enforcing. We can't / don't enforce the infrastructure we already have, let alone making "parking on public land" chargeable nationally. It might work in city centres but, well, you should come here one lunchtime and tally up the amount of I'll Only Be a Minute-ers on the double yellows outside the chippy.
Second, again, fine in city centres but it'll be the death knell for already dying Northern town centres. I've spoken about this before but the hassle of putting a bit of cardboard in your window on a free disc-based parking scheme was enough to empty Accrington town centre, let alone charging for parking there.
Arguably on the latter, the answer might be to make people want to come to the centre for reasons other than charity shops and betting shops, like say an attractive recreational area. But that would require more budget than Hyndburn Borough Council likely has to spare.
Every car must have a government supplied black box/meter like a water or electricity supply.
What would you do about people driving over on the €⭐ from mainland Europe?
It needs to be unacceptable to drive your child to their school ‘because it’s safer’.
A local school near us has a row of faux 4×4 sitting outside every school term morning and afternoon.
I used to drive past a school on my commute. I generally missed the scrum due to timing (I was on flexible hours) but occasionally I forgot and got it wrong. 'Chaos' didn't even begin to describe it. I've never seen such a concentrated display of self-righteous privilege, zero ****s given about anyone bar themselves and their cotton wool cargo. They made the local minicab drivers look like the embodiment of courtesy.
Again though, part of this is an infrastructure problem. There needs to be a parents' car park separate from the school and an exclusion zone around the school itself. Maybe those automatic bollards like they have on bus lanes in Manchester, give a transponder to the residents who live inside them.
We need to start with the ‘short journey’ car users. The type that ‘pop’ to the shops that are within walking distance.
Electric cars is actually going to make this much worse
They are *much* easier to drive in a 'quick nip' fashion
Unlimitedly torquey, go-kart in their one pedal ability, completely silent, small nippy things, super-light steering. I can honestly see people who move to electric from ICE, who would usually walk a few mins to the post office (for example), now just hop in their EV because it's effectively an 'instant car' - no more starting up a chug chug chug engine, using a heavy gearbox, making noise, etc. It's now just open, sit, zip off. Great, but also not at all good.....
Once again I am reminded how lucky I am to live in Cardiff as school run bedlam is much rarer (bar a few places). My kids' primary school was probably 80% walking traffic, and the high school is still not bad. There are a few cars but on the odd occasion I have to do a car drop-off it's really not bad at all. No issues parking and the school traffic is only a small portion of the overall traffic on the road.
Is this because the people of Cardiff are naturally virtuous? No, it's because both areas were built and planned in the 60s and 70s so that the schools served the communities they were in properly. The only school on our side that has traffic problems is a lovely big new site that is set slightly apart from the surrounding houses. That place has a big queue of cars every morning.
I think I have seen the ultimate 'car brain' this morning - nearly outside a secondary school, alongside a university. A group of 5 school children cross a one-way side road. The car in front of me turning left into the side road and basically drove at them, stopping less than half a meter from them with a sudden application of brake.
The driver then moved off and pulled in to a parking place within a few car lengths. I pulled alongside and suggested that his move was dangerous and aggressive - while noting a car seat in the back of his car.
.
He told me that the children should not be walking to school, as it was dangerous and what did they expect? Followed by a stream of insults...
While I’d not disagree with the overall study, comparing car fumes to cigarette smoke is pretty stupid. Most folk would agree that the former has some utility whereas the latter does not.
I think that's exactly the point the survey makes, people are far too quick to absolve cars of their faults because they're cars. To the extent that the general rule of thumb for H&S is you're 10x more likely to die whilst commuting by car than is deemed an acceptable level of risk working on something like an oil refinery.
And for nuclear it's 100x, yet we* don't placard the M6 to prevent cars being used until all the safety issues have been resolved.
*apart form insulate Britain and just stop oil
If you want people to use cars less, you have to offer a more attractive alternative. Good luck with that.
15% of journeys less than a mile are done by car.
and about 75% of journeys between 1 and 5 miles are by car.
How much more attractive than "basically free" and "will actually improve your health and quality of life" do you need to make walking?
What would you do about people driving over on the €⭐ from mainland Europe?
The same as they do for Brits (or any other nationality that isn't their own), plenty of countries have various tags and systems you have to buy or sign upto before you're allowed on their roads.
I think that’s exactly the pint the survey makes, people are far too quick to absolve cars of their faults because they’re cars.
Yep. Our obsession with cars has a lot of parallels with the Americans and guns (and we know that relationship is crazy)
Is this because the people of Cardiff are naturally virtuous? No, it’s because both areas were built and planned in the 60s and 70s so that the schools served the communities they were in properly. The only school on our side that has traffic problems is a lovely big new site that is set slightly apart from the surrounding houses. That place has a big queue of cars every morning.
+1
Stevenage is like this
The best cycle network (literally - look it up) in the country. Completely segregated car+-width cycle network around the entire town (city). Under or alongside every single major road.
And funnily enough, a large majority of the kids to all the schools walk in, or ride a bike in. Or a bus if from another town. I went to one of the schools - I was from another town so got he bus. But there were *very* minimal car drop offs. HEAVES of kids walking out at the end of the day. The school were also very hot on making sure the coaches were up to scratch and affordable because the school had a large catchment area.
15% of journeys less than a mile are done by car.
and about 75% of journeys between 1 and 5 miles are by car.
When people own cars, it's going to be difficult to encourage them to not use them, which is what all those short journeys are about. For example, from my house into town is about an hour each way by bus, or about 15 mins by car - and I live on a bus route. Once you've bought and insured it, it's too easy to just pop in.
What we need is to make it viable for people not to own them in the first place. I think the main reason we have car brain is that we feel we need to buy one as soon as we can and then once it's there it gets used for everything.
How much more attractive than “basically free” and “will actually improve your health and quality of life” do you need to make walking?
Obviously it's not attractive enough, because people aren't doing it. Maybe something to do with the fact that it's physical work?
For example, from my house into town is about an hour each way by bus, or about 15 mins by car – and I live on a bus route. Once you’ve bought and insured it, it’s too easy to just pop in.
And by bike? 😉
And by bike?
For me, about 30 mins if I get a move on about 6.5 miles. For my wife and kids - who knows, but I don't thin it'd go very well. Partly because of the distance but partly because of the shit roads and they aren't even all that bad as urban roads go. But they are in no way suitable for kids and unfit middle aged people.
For me, about 30 mins if I get a move on about 6.5 miles. For my wife and kids – who knows, but I don’t thin it’d go very well. Partly because of the distance but partly because of the shit roads and they aren’t even all that bad as urban roads go. But they are in no way suitable for kids and unfit middle aged people.
Thus proving that if you banned cars:
The roads would be suitable for public use
Your whole family would be fitter
We wouldn't have another thread about your cars breaking down
Umm..
Actually banning cars immediately would be really nice, we could tootle gently down the flat smooth dual carriageway into town, that would be awesome. But I don't think my wife would make it to work. Then again, without cars we could take the M4 which would be good, if I could grab a tandem before they all sold out I could probably help get her there. Kids could cycle to school without cars on the roads, they know the way.
More seriously, the kids could cycle to school now but the route would take them through rough areas, and I don't fancy sending two young girls through those places on nickable bikes. And there's a direct bus.
(tongue in cheek, we all really love another molgrips car saga)
Ban cars for a month and see what happens and then learn from that. I was hoping that we would get something positive out of the pandemic but a LOT of companies are now insisting people are back in the office more days than not so traffic is back to pre-pandemic levels where I live. So many people worked so happily at home for two years yet that doesn't seem to factor into it.
So many people worked so happily at home for two years yet that doesn’t seem to factor into it.
I think a lot of those cars you see now are driven by people who simply didn't work at all during the pandemic and had to be paid to stay at home. Which is clearly not sustainable.
we live about 3/4 mile from the village infants school, which has about 300 pupils in it. I'd say two journeys (either droppoff or pickup) a week are by car, and its not because we need a car to get there, its because the next thing on the agenda (eg swimming lesson at the local pool which is 5 miles away, has no public transport and is fairly hostile on foot) needs a car for access. And I say that as a cargo-bikist - my wife isn't going to pedal a 60kg bike with 2 20kg kids on it around.
it only takes 1 journey per week per kid to absolutely snarl up the roads near the school, as, unsurprisingly happens.
"For example, from my house into town is about an hour each way by bus, or about 15 mins by car – and I live on a bus route. Once you’ve bought and insured it, it’s too easy to just pop in."
And by bike? 😉
Can only answer for myself here - but that would be 20 minutes in, 1 hour walk back and the need to purchase another bike. So quite an expensive and time consuming proposition.
The same as they do for Brits (or any other nationality that isn’t their own), plenty of countries have various tags and systems you have to buy or sign upto before you’re allowed on their roads.
Such as?
A mandatory tracking and billing system installed into a car as proposed here is a little different from slapping a (UK) sticker on your bumper and a hi-vis in the glovebox.
Such as?
Swiss Vignette?
Also, that would be what, a thousandth of the cars on the road even if you included lorries? If the objective was just road pricing then you could just read the odometer at the port. You could even make the 'black box' look like the cheap discounted option by applying the peak rush hour rate to the odometer reading or buy the black box and get a 'discount'. It's somewhere between a non-issue (even the Daily Express hasn't claimed that immigrants cars are polluting our air), and an easily solved one.
Such as?
When travelling across Africa it is pretty common to pick up and fit new number plates at the border when you switch countries. That would be enough for an ANPR system or you could add a little tech
That would be enough for an ANPR system or you could add a little tech
given the vast majority of cars coming into the country are from europe and have perfectly legible plates, it'd be pretty easy to build an anpr system that can read them all and figure out from markings which country the car is from, tally up the costs and assign them a bill payable at exit from the country. I can only think of non-roman-alphabet characters being an issue, and tbh the number of cars with those is miniscule
I'd want something a little harder to duplicate than a number plate. Currently the best thing to do with your car if you start getting speeding and parking fines that aren't yours is to block the exit to the gendarmerie with your car so it's towed away and impounded and you can thereby prove it's not you or your car breaking the law.
All of that ^^ is relying on tech which is expensive to install, maintain, monitor and process and which requires intervention at national, potentially international, level.
Far and away the cheapest, simplest option is just to make short journeys in particular really bloody difficult. Low Traffic Neighbourhoods, School Streets etc generally don't impact too much on long journeys but they do make it more difficult to drive your little darling the 500m to the school gates or to "just nip" to the shop at the end of the road.
I agree that EVs are potentially going to make things far worse since they're exempt from VED, CAZ/ULEZ charges, and there's the idea that as they're emissions free it's fine to just drive them that 500m or so. Therefore it needs to be made impractical to do those kind of short journeys.
From my perspective if you make it more and more difficult and expensive to drive into the city centre then I just wont bother going. I have not intention of using the buses and thats the only alternative. It will just mean that I do more and more shopping on line and footfall into the city centres will continue to decline.
As for electric cars the less said the better. My wife spends her whole life helping academics do primary research into how to make electric cars viable. The concensus is that the current approach will not work and will be obsolete within 5 years. Until they come up with a better way of storing the energy than glorified mobile phone batteries stuck together there is no way I, or any of the academics will be buying one.
As for electric cars the less said the better.
As you go on to slag off electric cars with no substance beyond a concensus of your wife's mates can we have your views on ICEs for balance please, chrismac?
they’re exempt from VED
Don't hold your breath too long. As soon as those suckers are mainstream they'll be taxed to the nines.
All of that ^^ is relying on tech which is expensive to install, maintain, monitor and process and which requires intervention at national, potentially international, level.
Have you seen the cost of a car?
The average* is apparently £3.5k a year. And that doesn't include the additional societal costs of road building/maintenance, healthcare, flooding, etc.
* https://www.nimblefins.co.uk/cheap-car-insurance/average-cost-run-car-uk
