- Joined
- 27 Jan 2008
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- Location
- Llanfair Caereinion, Nr Welshpool
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A new study by The Bikeability Trust and Living Streets demanded a nationwide ban on pavement parking, mandatory cycle training in the national curriculum, and a default 20mph speed limit in urban areas.
We have seen in Wales where push-bikes are overtaking cars, as the 20 MPH does not apply to push-bikes, and the national cycle race had to select a new route, as the support cars could not keep up with the push-bikes.
And I see in my own estate where to use the EV charging point, the car needs to be parked on the foot path.
I see the word "pavement" as a problem, as clearly the road is also paved, in fact around here it is often the foot path which is not paved, so a law stopping pavement parking would be silly, due to the English language not that I am totally against stopping parking on a foot path, but first define what is a foot path.
I would want to ban parking next to drop kerbs, as I know the problem when in a wheel chair or mobility scooter when you find one has to back up many yards to get off the walkway, and I know it is very tempting to drive down the road at 4 MPH as one does not know if one can leave the walkway.
I have also seen the stupid signage, where the walkway is designated as a combined walkway and cycle route, with no cancel signage, and then a notice in English only saying "No cycling on the pavement" there was only a need for end of cycle way sign. And since not in Welsh, it had no law behind it.
There are things which will make it safer for cyclists and pedestrians', like banning Aramco barriers unless there is a walkway behind them, being knocked into a hedge is bad, being trapped between a vehicle and Aramco barrier is much worse. The same applies to railings on corners, and speed humps which take the vehicle surface to same level as walking surface.
Where I lived in North Wales in Shotton, I could ride to Chester on my bike, one two routes without riding on the road, here in Mid Wales going from Llanfair to Welshpool be it riding a bike or walking, one risks ones life, I can only go to Welshpool in the summer, as train does not run in the winter. And can't take bike on a bus, and things are too far apart to walk around Welshpool.
The problem is, people who want new rules are blinked, they only see what they have where they live, and those rules are likely unworkable in other areas of the UK. As to mandatory cycle training, since in the country one relies on a car how about mandatory car training, should children be taught to drive, in the same way as taught maths etc? Then the bad habits of dad, would not be passed to his children.
