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Van driver who crushed bike with toddler still in child seat receives community order

Bristol Magistrates' Court told that driver Robin Tippett drove off after hitting cyclist carrying his son in child seat because he feared losing his job if he was late...

A van driver in Bristol who fled the scene of a collision with a cyclist, driving over and crushing the bicycle which still had a toddler strapped into the child seat, has been handed a community order and banned from driving for nine months.

Robin Tippett, aged 22 and from Pucklechurch, pleaded guilty yesterday to failing to stop after an accident, failing to report an accident and driving without due care and attention in relation to the incident, which happened last September, reports the Bristol Post.

at Bristol Magistrates’ Court heard that Paul Squires had been waiting at a junction on Cossham Street, Mangotsfield with his two-and-a-half-year-old son Daniel when they were pushed forward by Tippett’s flatbed van, knocking them over.

In a statement read out to the court, Mr Squires said: “We fell to the right.

“The white van was alongside and the driver’s window was open. I saw a male and I made eye contact.

“I shouted: ‘What are you doing, what are you doing? I’ve got my son!’”

However, Tippett revved his engine and drove off, turning right and crushing the bicycle.

Fortunately, neither Mr Squires nor his son were hurt in the incident, although both their cycle helmets were damaged.

Police subsequently traced and arrested Tippett, who works for a scaffolding firm.

“The incident left me very angry. Hitting someone off their bike, then driving off,” Mr Squires continued.

“It was only good luck the equipment protected (my son), even though that is what it is designed for.

“I cannot forgive that, it is unacceptable. It is a thought I cannot get out of my head.”

He revealed that the episode had made him think about swapping a bike for a car as his means of getting around, saying: “I’m considering purchasing a second car due to his reckless inattention.”

In mitigation, solicitor advocate Mike Wynter said that Tippett is blind in his left eye but acknowledged that Mr Squires and his child were to his right.

“He knew the cyclist was there and he drove away, knowing he hit the cyclist.”

The court heard that Tippett had told a probation officer that he did not know there was a child on the bike and he had driven off because he was worried about losing his job if he was late.

Sentencing him, District Judge Lynne Matthews imposed a 12-month community order under which he will be required to perfortm 300 hours of unpaid work.

He was also banned him from driving for nine months, fined £500 and ordered to pay costs of £85 and an £85 victim surcharge

The judge told him: “You may lose your job. So be it. You are not safe driving.

“There would be a public outcry if your licence was not taken away from you.

“You were inches away from a death by dangerous driving.”

She added: “I sentence you for what happened, but I look at the risk that you pose.”

Mr Squires gave more details of the incident in a comment on the Bristol Post’s report of the case.

He wrote: “I was stationary at a T junction, looking to turn right. 

“I had waited for 10-15 seconds for a vehicle coming from the right to pass, when the van struck me from behind, pushing us forward into the road. 

“I assume he was not looking forward, or was looking left approaching a junction. 

“I was not overtaking anybody. He then turned right at the T junction to escape and his rear right wheel drove over the bike and my son's car seat. 

“There were four independent witnesses, he was stopped two minutes after the incident and told to return to the scene of the crime, and didn't. 

“I also understand he failed to attend his first six requests for interview, and didn't turn up to his original hearing last week, after which a warrant for his immediate arrest was issued.”

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.

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62 comments

Avatar
BIRMINGHAMisaDUMP | 6 years ago
1 like

If I see a scaff truck I am very cautious. They are driven by thugs. 

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don simon fbpe replied to BIRMINGHAMisaDUMP | 6 years ago
0 likes

Lukas wrote:

If I see a scaff truck I am very cautious. They are driven by thugs. 

I had a scaffold truck deliberately try to run me over in Ramsbottom. I know it was deliberate as the passenger was grinning like a dull twat, flicking the Vs at me.

If they had brains, they wouldn't be scaffolders.

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kil0ran | 6 years ago
1 like

Personally I'm not too bothered whether this behaviour results in jail time but what it should mean is a very long, properly enforced ban. Whereby the ban is a bit like a suspended sentence - if you're caught driving whilst banned then its say a mandatory 5 year sentence. So many incidents we hear about involve a disqualified driver, often in a vehicle with no MOT and insurance. 

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teakay replied to kil0ran | 6 years ago
0 likes
kil0ran wrote:

Personally I'm not too bothered whether this behaviour results in jail time but what it should mean is a very long, properly enforced ban. Whereby the ban is a bit like a suspended sentence - if you're caught driving whilst banned then its say a mandatory 5 year sentence. So many incidents we hear about involve a disqualified driver, often in a vehicle with no MOT and insurance. 

Which always makes me laugh when the anti cycling brigade bring out the "bikes should have licence plates and be registered" argument.

We seem to have got to the stage that people feel they have the right to drive how they want at the speed thet want and all obstacles that prevent this need to be removed or punished. Then if there are consequences to this behaviour they don't want to face the music and drive off. We had another hit and run yesterday in Deal.

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clayfit | 6 years ago
2 likes

Jail would gain nothing here.  If the scrot was jailed, he’d lose job, house, family, and would end up being kept by my taxes and yours.  

The ban means he’ll never be a professional driver again, but he can still get another job.

I agree that the driving ban should have been longer, with the requirement to pass an extended test.

someone wise once said that an eye for and eye makes the whole world blind.

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Pudsey Pedaller replied to clayfit | 6 years ago
4 likes

clayfit wrote:

Jail would gain nothing here.  If the scrot was jailed, he’d lose job, house, family, and would end up being kept by my taxes and yours.  

The ban means he’ll never be a professional driver again, but he can still get another job.

I agree that the driving ban should have been longer, with the requirement to pass an extended test.

someone wise once said that an eye for and eye makes the whole world blind.

If it was just the initial collision, I'd likely agree that prison would be harsh and I'd probably consider the length of the ban to be sufficient.

If it was just the initial collision followed by leaving the scene, I might agree that prison would be harsh, though I would consider the length of the ban to be too lenient. 

If it was the collision, leaving the scene and refusing to return then I'd probably consider prison appropriate and the length of the ban to be far too lenient.

However, considering his subsequent failure to attend six requests to be interviewed and the original court hearing, then I believe a prison sentence and a lifetime ban to be wholly necessary.

 

This shouldn't be seen as an eye for an eye. For that, the driver would be made to ride a bicycle with a loved one strapped to the back while someone collides with him with a multi-tonne vehicle before driving off.

There are a number of reasons why a prison sentence should be given and in this case, I would think it might serve as a deterrent to others who might consider driving when unfit to do so, fleeing the scene of an incident, failing to return to the scene of an incident, failing to attend multiple interviews and failing to attend a court hearing.

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FluffyKittenofT... replied to clayfit | 6 years ago
2 likes

clayfit wrote:

Jail would gain nothing here.  If the scrot was jailed, he’d lose job, house, family, and would end up being kept by my taxes and yours.  

The ban means he’ll never be a professional driver again, but he can still get another job.

I agree that the driving ban should have been longer, with the requirement to pass an extended test.

someone wise once said that an eye for and eye makes the whole world blind.

 

Sending him to jail would send a message to all the other careless drivers out there, no?  And not sending him to jail sends the message that the state doesn't care about my wellbeing or that of any other cyclist.

 

So, I can't really agree with you.

 

This sort of liberal anti-prison stuff is one thing if it's about prison sentences in general (I'm actually happy we don't have the ultra-harsh sentences that the US does, for example,  what with that place increasingly resembling a prison system with a country appended to it), but when it's in the context of certain offences getting extra-light treatment compared to others, it carries a different message.

 

I also don't share your confidence that he'll 'never be a professional driver again'.  How do you figure that, given all the cases of professional drivers who have long lists of driving offences to their names yet still find employment as drivers?

 

e.g.

https://lcc.org.uk/articles/lorry-driver-serial-killer-of-london-cyclist...

http://road.cc/content/news/155627-freight-firm-bosses-banned-after-unli...

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alansmurphy replied to clayfit | 6 years ago
0 likes

clayfit wrote:

 

someone wise once said that an eye for and eye makes the whole world blind.

 

This guy quicker than most though, and if he has no eyes he will not be able to drive*

 

* probably, unless he has a great lawyer...

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Mrs Toast | 6 years ago
3 likes

I'm gobsmacked that doing a hit and run doesn't result in jail time.

 

I'm gobsmacked that doing a hit and run and repeatedly failing to show for a police interview doesn't result in jail time.

 

I'm gobsmacked that doing a hit and run, repeatedly failing to show for a police interview and not turning up for your court hearing doesn't result in jail time.

 

I'm gobsmacked that doing a hit and run, repeatedly failing to show for a police interview and not turning up for your court hearing doesn't result in jail time.

 

I'm gobsmacked that you can do a hit and run, admit that you're blind in one eye, and not be forced to do an extended retest after being banned.

 

I'm gobsmacked that doing a hit and run doesn't even get you banned for a year.

 

But I guess that I'm not really gobsmacked, as it's depressingly familiar. Seriously, what the fuck is wrong with this country? Is it the laws and sentencing guidelines that are a problem, or the implementation of them?

 

I'd love to take my son to nursery by bike, but I see far too many appalling drivers in town every single day. They're jumping red lights, they're cutting other drivers up when it's not their right of way, and they're on their mobiles. Every. Single. Day.  

 

So instead, I drive less than two miles to keep my son safe, and keep cycling restricted to the offroad stuff.

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the nutcracker | 6 years ago
2 likes

My dad has just undergone an operation on one eye and his doctor says he is not allowed to drive while he is recovering even though his second eye is perfectly fine. One of the main questions to arise out of this whole case should surely be how is it that a man who only has one eye can legally drive for his job? Also, if you are afforded the crazy leniency to be able to drive with one eye (i take it it must be legal) then you would think it would be under the strict caveat that you should be banned for life if you have a f@ck up???? . The rules on vehicle drivers are absurd regarding public safety. Another classic, you have to self diagnose any ailments which may render you unsafe to drive...great system....100% failsafe......for an unfit driver to get on the road that is!!!

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djcritchley | 6 years ago
2 likes

Unfortunately the sentencing seems to be in accordance with the guidelines (Fail to stop/report road accident Cat 1 and Careless Driving Cat 2 ).  The difference between Dangerous and careless driving would have made little or no difference to the outcome due to the level of injury despite his complete disregard for somebody else's life.

"Apologetic Tippett told a probation officer he had not realised a child was on the bike, and he was worried about being late for work and losing his job." is not mitigation; I would like to see higher sentences for knowingly leaving the scene of an accident.

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hawkinspeter replied to djcritchley | 6 years ago
3 likes

djcritchley wrote:

Unfortunately the sentencing seems to be in accordance with the guidelines (Fail to stop/report road accident Cat 1 and Careless Driving Cat 2 ).  The difference between Dangerous and careless driving would have made little or no difference to the outcome due to the level of injury despite his complete disregard for somebody else's life.

"Apologetic Tippett told a probation officer he had not realised a child was on the bike, and he was worried about being late for work and losing his job." is not mitigation; I would like to see higher sentences for knowingly leaving the scene of an accident.

However, the judge used the language "dangerous driving" which is puzzling as to why it was just a careless driving charge.

Personally, I think that if you drive into someone and knock them over that you should stop and check that they are alright. To then drive off, crushing their bike in the process, is surely falling FAR below the standard expected by a competent and careful driver ("far" is the difference between careless and dangerous).

Also, other criteria for dangerous driving:

  • Failing to have a proper and safe regard for vulnerable road users such as cyclists, motorcyclists, horse riders, the elderly and pedestrians or when in the vicinity of a pedestrian crossing, hospital, school or residential home.
  • Driving when knowingly suffering from a medical or physical condition that significantly and dangerously impairs the offenders driving skills such as having an arm or leg in plaster, or impaired eyesight. It can include the failure to take prescribed medication;

 

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djcritchley replied to hawkinspeter | 6 years ago
1 like

hawkinspeter wrote:

Personally, I think that if you drive into someone and knock them over that you should stop and check that they are alright. To then drive off, crushing their bike in the process, is surely falling FAR below the standard expected by a competent and careful driver ("far" is the difference between careless and dangerous).

Also, other criteria for dangerous driving:

  • Failing to have a proper and safe regard for vulnerable road users such as cyclists, motorcyclists, horse riders, the elderly and pedestrians or when in the vicinity of a pedestrian crossing, hospital, school or residential home.
  • Driving when knowingly suffering from a medical or physical condition that significantly and dangerously impairs the offenders driving skills such as having an arm or leg in plaster, or impaired eyesight. It can include the failure to take prescribed medication;

I agree with your sentiments and would be happier if they took his licence away for min 12 months with a retest.

The sentencing guidelines mean that he would more likely have his licence suspended for careless driving.

Presumably his monocular condition was know to the DVLA otherwise the sentencing would have been more severe.

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Shades | 6 years ago
2 likes

The worst thing is there are plenty more where he came from.

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BikeBud | 6 years ago
3 likes

Sentencing him, District Judge Lynne Matthews imposed a 12-month community order under which he will be required to perfortm 300 hours of unpaid work.

He was also banned him from driving for nine months, fined £500 and ordered to pay costs of £85 and an £85 victim surcharge

The judge told him: “You may lose your job. So be it. You are not safe driving.

“There would be a public outcry if your licence was not taken away from you.

“You were inches away from a death by dangerous driving.”

She added: “I sentence you for what happened, but I look at the risk that you pose.”

 

 

The sentence doesn't seem to match the words used.  The incident and the guy's behaviour beggards belief.  He should not be driving.  

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rkemb | 6 years ago
3 likes

Quote:

The court heard that Tippett had told a probation officer that he did not know there was a child on the bike and he had driven off because he was worried about losing his job if he was late.

He thinks it would have been perfectly fine if there handn't been a child?

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700c | 6 years ago
1 like

In this case the judge's comments and her approach seemed ok. The sentence is light but presumably within the woefully inadequate guidelines that can be applied . It makes me furious though that this sort of offence cannot be more severly punished though.

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ROOTminus1 | 6 years ago
2 likes

The seemingly endless torrent of this type of story is making me consider becoming a Magistrate.

By virtue of necessity, cyclists are fast becoming subject matter experts on road safety laws and the impact of behaviour below the standard required to drive. I recall a recent article on this site where the magistrates were unaware of rule 163 and the Legal Advisor wouldn't have mentioned it if the victim hadn't quoted it in his video evidence.

If we're more knowledgeable than those in the positions of power, surely doing our civic duty is the least we could do. I just wonder if my sense of actual justice is too radical to be accepted by the legal establishment?

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TedBarnes | 6 years ago
7 likes

Others (and myself) have said this many times, but the fundamental problem is that driving is clearly seen as a right to be taken away, and not a privilege that needs to be earned and kept. 

This is a view shared by most of the public, the judiciary, legislation and e.g. sentencing guidelines.

I get that prison sentences have to be covered by the criminal law and the criminal standard. What I have never understood is why the privilege of having a license to drive is not dealt with purely by the civil law. In Civil law, presumed liability is fine. It's balance of probabilities, not beyond reasonable doubt. Trying to be as objective as possible, I just don't see why life time driving bans are not a common thing given some of the very deliberate and recklessly dangerous things done by many. Proved on balance of probabilities that you chose to use a car as a weapon - lifetime ban, no questions asked. 

There seems to be a collective blind spot when it comes to road injuries and deaths. How many deaths from tipper trucks in London (to pick just one example), and yet nothing has changed. No change to working practices focused on speed or number of deliveries per hour. No requirement for an escort for what are demonstrably dangerous vehicles in very busy urban areas. No routine involvement of HSE as well as the police for what are clearly work related incidents. Nothing done to remove the blind spots with use of cheap technology (how many HGVs have you seen with stickers that tell cyclists not to pass on the left yet also say they have a dash cam... ). Heaven forbid anyone actually discuss banning the bloody things and finding some other way of getting stuff from A to B.  

I naively hope that driverless technology may lead to a sudden wake up call that 000's of deaths a year is actually an appalling waste of life

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Cugel replied to TedBarnes | 6 years ago
1 like

gw42 wrote:

Others (and myself) have said this many times, but the fundamental problem is that driving is clearly seen as a right to be taken away, and not a privilege that needs to be earned and kept. 

This is a view shared by most of the public, the judiciary, legislation and e.g. sentencing guidelines.

I get that prison sentences have to be covered by the criminal law and the criminal standard. What I have never understood is why the privilege of having a license to drive is not dealt with purely by the civil law. In Civil law, presumed liability is fine. It's balance of probabilities, not beyond reasonable doubt. Trying to be as objective as possible, I just don't see why life time driving bans are not a common thing given some of the very deliberate and recklessly dangerous things done by many. Proved on balance of probabilities that you chose to use a car as a weapon - lifetime ban, no questions asked. 

......

I naively hope that driverless technology may lead to a sudden wake up call that 000's of deaths a year is actually an appalling waste of life

There is a serious problem with motorised transport in our culture. Fundamentally, the car et al are highly addictive with the common side-effect of bringing out the hidden psychopath lurking in many people's primitive brain.

The law reflects this addiction insofar as it is written by the addicts - and by those who profit from the addiction, one way and another. It's as though heroin addiction was marketed and encouraged, with those damaged by the drug or the associated crimes necessary to get the wherewithal to pay for it let-off because the judge and jury are dealers or petty-criminal addicts too.

*****

But the vigilantes commonly posting here are fools if they think prison sentences or public floggings will solve the problem. Personally I would far rather the moron in this case do 300 hours of community work (or several years) preferably in the hospitals and other facilities frequented by the mained victims of traffic "accidents". Prisons cost enormous amounts of money and spew out people even more psychopathic than when they went in.

Permanent driving bans also seem appropriate - assuming they can be enforced. Many will simply drive illegally, which also means uninsured, doing no favour to their next victim.

At bottom, this problem will never be solved until the motor car is rendered as a much improved technology. Self-driving cars may or may not help. Personally I would like to see them somehow disappear altogether. No chance of that unless fly-free telekinesis pods can be invented soon.

CUgel

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alansmurphy replied to Cugel | 6 years ago
2 likes

Cugel wrote:

But the vigilantes commonly posting here are fools if they think prison sentences or public floggings will solve the problem. Personally I would far rather the moron in this case do 300 hours of community work (or several years) preferably in the hospitals and other facilities frequented by the mained victims of traffic "accidents". Prisons cost enormous amounts of money and spew out people even more psychopathic than when they went in.

 

CUgel

 

Cugel, I do enjoy reading your calm and reasoned posts but disagree with the presumption of vigilantes. Maybe we shouldn't be reading about more and more cases of such endangerment on the roads, maybe after we experience it first hand most mornings, reading yet another story where a personas life is risked by an incompetent selfish moron does us no good. However, we are not out there smashing up random cars so not exactly taking the law into our own hands.

 

The issue with suggesting prison is wrong is that by proxy this kind of behaviour has become increasingly acceptable. I'm sure there's dozens of us here that have been put at risk only for the moron to suggest it's our fault due to our position, not wearing the right clothing or generally being in the moron's way. If as a nation, we had not bothered applying laws for sexual abuse with prison sentences then the world today would be a lot more scary!

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Cugel replied to alansmurphy | 6 years ago
3 likes

alansmurphy wrote:

Cugel wrote:

But the vigilantes commonly posting here are fools if they think prison sentences or public floggings will solve the problem. Personally I would far rather the moron in this case do 300 hours of community work (or several years) preferably in the hospitals and other facilities frequented by the mained victims of traffic "accidents". Prisons cost enormous amounts of money and spew out people even more psychopathic than when they went in.

 

CUgel

 

Cugel, I do enjoy reading your calm and reasoned posts but disagree with the presumption of vigilantes. Maybe we shouldn't be reading about more and more cases of such endangerment on the roads, maybe after we experience it first hand most mornings, reading yet another story where a personas life is risked by an incompetent selfish moron does us no good. However, we are not out there smashing up random cars so not exactly taking the law into our own hands.

 

The issue with suggesting prison is wrong is that by proxy this kind of behaviour has become increasingly acceptable. I'm sure there's dozens of us here that have been put at risk only for the moron to suggest it's our fault due to our position, not wearing the right clothing or generally being in the moron's way. If as a nation, we had not bothered applying laws for sexual abuse with prison sentences then the world today would be a lot more scary!

As is the case for probably every cyclist, I have been driven at by dangerous and uncaring morons to within an inch of my life. The natural response at the time is to want to murder them in return. But the sensible-us knows that this is going to solve nothing but rather merely compound the weight of human stupidity and nastiness in the world. Perhaps it will even get you killed as the car-weaponised fellow outguns your mere expletives.

After the incident is well over, one can take a less emotional view. Punishment of the tit-for-tat sort doesn't work, despite what Michael Howard ("Pwison werks") thought. It merely hardens attitides and escalates the aggresion. It churns out the seriously disaffected who will punish you, me and everyone (at random) for putting them in the cell with Bubba.

Revenge is for red-eyed Hollywood filum actors, who may do Very Bad Things to the villains with no unintended consequences,as they have a neat script where the goodies win and the baddies disappear. In real life, when "two tribes go to war" the score is often zero-zero.

Why doesn't the justice system seek rehabilitation, especially the kind that changes the attitudes of self-centred little skinbags by showing them the consequences of their actions (the victims) then doing service to make some degree of restitution to those victims, as far as possible?

Cugel

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brooksby replied to TedBarnes | 6 years ago
2 likes

gw42 wrote:

Others (and myself) have said this many times, but the fundamental problem is that driving is clearly seen as a right to be taken away, and not a privilege that needs to be earned and kept

This is a view shared by most of the public, the judiciary, legislation and e.g. sentencing guidelines.

This.

That attitude has created a country where its actually quite difficult to carry on your life as you always did if for some reason you are unable to drive (everything is "out of town", for a start, and most people live a very long way from their place of work).  But a large part of the problem is the psychological aspect - "OMG I *need* my car!"

But let's take this bloke as an example - he drives from Mangotsfield to Avonmouth every morning, and then back again every evening.  Presumably he goes to jobs during the day.

Lets assume he doesn't want to ride a bike (added - got distracted when typing !) because there are all these scarry scaffolders running people over left right and centre...

He could get a Day Rider bus ticket, a bus goes straight from Mangotsfield into the Centre, and then another one goes straight out from the Centre to Avonmouth.  Probably an hour, hour and a half, tops, on the bus: I bet he can't drive it in much less than that...

Maybe he drives out to jobs during the day - but, he's not going to be scaffolding on his own, is he?  Presumably one of his colleagues could drive the van and then he'd be along for the ride.

Will be a change to his daily routine, but its certainly not the end of the world.

And there's waay less chance of him running someone over yes

 

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ROOTminus1 replied to brooksby | 6 years ago
0 likes

brooksby wrote:

But let's take this bloke as an example - he drives from Mangotsfield to Avonmouth every morning, and then back again every evening.  Presumably he goes to jobs during the day.

Lets assume he doesn't want to ride because there are all these scarry scaffolders running people over left right and centre...

He could get a Day Rider bus ticket, a bus goes straight from Mangotsfield into the Centre, and then another one goes straight out from the Centre to Avonmouth.  Probably an hour, hour and a half, tops, on the bus: I bet he can't drive it in much less than that...

Maybe he drives out to jobs during the day - but, he's not going to be scaffolding on his own, is he?  Presumably one of his colleagues could drive the van and then he'd be along for the ride.

Will be a change to his daily routine, but its certainly not the end of the world.

And there's waay less chance of him running someone over yes

 

Or <deity-of-choice> forbid, he picks up a bike to make his commute.

Avatar
KINGHORN replied to brooksby | 6 years ago
3 likes

brooksby wrote:

gw42 wrote:

Others (and myself) have said this many times, but the fundamental problem is that driving is clearly seen as a right to be taken away, and not a privilege that needs to be earned and kept

This is a view shared by most of the public, the judiciary, legislation and e.g. sentencing guidelines.

This.

That attitude has created a country where its actually quite difficult to carry on your life as you always did if for some reason you are unable to drive (everything is "out of town", for a start, and most people live a very long way from their place of work).  But a large part of the problem is the psychological aspect - "OMG I *need* my car!"

But let's take this bloke as an example - he drives from Mangotsfield to Avonmouth every morning, and then back again every evening.  Presumably he goes to jobs during the day.

Lets assume he doesn't want to ride a bike (added - got distracted when typing !) because there are all these scarry scaffolders running people over left right and centre...

He could get a Day Rider bus ticket, a bus goes straight from Mangotsfield into the Centre, and then another one goes straight out from the Centre to Avonmouth.  Probably an hour, hour and a half, tops, on the bus: I bet he can't drive it in much less than that...

Maybe he drives out to jobs during the day - but, he's not going to be scaffolding on his own, is he?  Presumably one of his colleagues could drive the van and then he'd be along for the ride.

Will be a change to his daily routine, but its certainly not the end of the world.

And there's waay less chance of him running someone over yes

 

 

personally, I think work vans and lorries should not be used for getting to and from work. These must be kept at the emplyors location, unless self employed of course!

Down our street is a joke sometimes, with all sorts of lorries and vans taking up parking and blocking the roads!

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Bluebug replied to brooksby | 6 years ago
0 likes
brooksby wrote:

gw42 wrote:

Others (and myself) have said this many times, but the fundamental problem is that driving is clearly seen as a right to be taken away, and not a privilege that needs to be earned and kept

This is a view shared by most of the public, the judiciary, legislation and e.g. sentencing guidelines.

This.

That attitude has created a country where its actually quite difficult to carry on your life as you always did if for some reason you are unable to drive (everything is "out of town", for a start, and most people live a very long way from their place of work).  But a large part of the problem is the psychological aspect - "OMG I *need* my car!"

But let's take this bloke as an example - he drives from Mangotsfield to Avonmouth every morning, and then back again every evening.  Presumably he goes to jobs during the day.

Lets assume he doesn't want to ride a bike (added - got distracted when typing !) because there are all these scarry scaffolders running people over left right and centre...

He could get a Day Rider bus ticket, a bus goes straight from Mangotsfield into the Centre, and then another one goes straight out from the Centre to Avonmouth.  Probably an hour, hour and a half, tops, on the bus: I bet he can't drive it in much less than that...

Maybe he drives out to jobs during the day - but, he's not going to be scaffolding on his own, is he?  Presumably one of his colleagues could drive the van and then he'd be along for the ride.

Will be a change to his daily routine, but its certainly not the end of the world.

And there's waay less chance of him running someone over yes

 

Buses are generally slower than you own vehicle and this includes cycling, due to the amount of times they stop plus the route they take.

I would suggest the guy gets a bike while banned. Just a shame the ban wasn't longer...

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IanW1968 | 6 years ago
1 like

Woke up, reasonable mood, read this and spent the next 15 mins researching how to get out of this shithole country. 

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Christopher TR1 | 6 years ago
10 likes

So driving appears to be such a human right that even a HALF-BLIND, mentally incapable moron who has proved himself to be an extreme danger to other road users and to small children..... will be allowed back on the road by Christmas, with the blessing of the "justice" system?!

I nearly choked on my porridge!

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LastBoyScout | 6 years ago
3 likes

I get close passed regularly when cycling. I don't like it, but it's an unfortunate fact of cycling.

However, I've also been close passed, and even left hooked, when out with my daughter, which is completely unacceptable. It's a rear-mounted seat, so it's not as if she can't be seen from behind.

I'm sure they're trying to tell me I should be using the hopeless shared-use path, but I don't want to have to stop every 10 seconds to cross a side-road or bugger about passing pedestrians, dog walkers and runners.

If we hadn't been on the way to swimming lessons, I would have chased the left-hook driver, as he turned down a slow road that I would have had a good chance of catching him on. Equally, I wouldn't have wanted my daughter to have seen what happened when I caught him. Certainly wished I'd had the camera on that morning.

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kil0ran replied to LastBoyScout | 6 years ago
3 likes

LastBoyScout wrote:

I get close passed regularly when cycling. I don't like it, but it's an unfortunate fact of cycling.

However, I've also been close passed, and even left hooked, when out with my daughter, which is completely unacceptable. It's a rear-mounted seat, so it's not as if she can't be seen from behind.

I'm sure they're trying to tell me I should be using the hopeless shared-use path, but I don't want to have to stop every 10 seconds to cross a side-road or bugger about passing pedestrians, dog walkers and runners.

If we hadn't been on the way to swimming lessons, I would have chased the left-hook driver, as he turned down a slow road that I would have had a good chance of catching him on. Equally, I wouldn't have wanted my daughter to have seen what happened when I caught him. Certainly wished I'd had the camera on that morning.

I got close passed and brake tested by a bloke in a 4x4 over Christmas when I had my 8yo son on the tagalong. Ended up scraping down the side of his motor as we tumbled gracefully onto the verge. Had my son not been there I would have lamped the bloke and probably worse (he admitted it was deliberate because "you were in the middle of the road mate" - yeah, because it was a single track high hedged country road and we were heading downhill)

As it was I had to tend to my distraught son and as much as I wanted to D-lock the fuck out of him and his Range Rover he got away with it. If I ever see him on his own it will be a different story.

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