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"Cycling is for everyone": Council leader responds to claim he "doesn't like cycling because it's too middle-class"

Work on big-money active travel schemes in Sheffield has been postponed until the end of 2023, but the council insists it "remains committed" to completing the proposals which were meant to be finished next month...

With one month until active travel projects in Sheffield were due to be completed and no sign of work even beginning until November 2023, some campaigners are concerned projects are being delayed for political reasons, with one Labour Party source saying the council leader does not like cycling because he thinks it is "middle-class".

However, speaking to road.cc council leader Terry Fox rubbished the claim, saying he has "always thought cycling is for everyone" and pointed to his voting record as proof of his belief in active travel schemes.

Despite the funding already being in place, five major 'Connecting Sheffield' projects have now been delayed by years and will not begin construction until the autumn at the earliest, raising concerns and prompting the council to insist it "remains committed" to the scheme.

However, one Labour source told Now Then that the leader of the council, currently a coalition of Labour, Liberal Democrat and Green representatives, Cllr Fox "doesn't like cycling because he thinks it is middle-class".

The council leader responded to the comment, telling road.cc being "accused by someone anonymous of something I cannot recall saying is upsetting" and "does sometimes get through this thick skin of mine".

"I have to say that I do have feelings and to be accused by someone anonymous of something I cant recall saying is upsetting and then to get all the correspondence of not very nice comments does sometimes get through this thick skin of mine," he said.

"As a miner for over 30 years who sometimes rode a bicycle to work and saw lots of my fellow comrades doing that with snap bag over one arm and towel under the other, riding to the pit for the start of their shift is a memory I will hold and cherish. My best mucker still rides avidly along with my son, they did a charity bike ride for the Lord Mayor's charity few years back.

"I also taught my children and grandchildren to ride and even bought their bikes, just last week buying my youngest grandchild his bike.

"I'm now disabled from my time in the mines, with my knees and respiratory condition but have always thought cycling is for everyone, as can be seen by my voting record on a number of schemes across the city."

The 'Connecting Sheffield' schemes will see active travel infrastructure built, including some temporary cycle lanes being made permanent and should have been completed by March 2023.

It had been feared the government could have withheld the funding, awarded to Sheffield City Council under its Transforming Cities Fund, due to the delay but the Department for Transport confirmed to Now Then that funding has been delivered and the deadline possibly abandoned due to nationwide supply shortages.

However, concerns about the promptness of the work remain, and nearby Leeds already started construction on similar projects, also to be funded by TCF money, back in August last year.

Sheffield received its funding at the same time as its Yorkshire counterparts but work will begin 15 months later at the earliest.

A spokesperson for CycleSheffield told road.cc: "We believe the planned schemes will be delivered, however, the long delays to these schemes during a period of high inflation means that what will be delivered will need to be scaled back or other cost-cutting measures applied. We will therefore not receive the same benefit and less active travel trips will be enabled as we would if the council had prioritised delivery of these schemes.

"We accept that Brexit, Covid and 12 years of austerity have reduced the council's ability to deliver large-scale infrastructure projects and increased costs, however, it is clear that Sheffield has been slower than other cities — for example Leeds — in delivering these kind of schemes. It is felt that this is due to a lack of enthusiasm for active travel amongst some senior politicians in Sheffield Council.

"I would also like to point out that about 50 per cent of the undelivered Transforming Cities Fund schemes are for public transport improvements and these delays are impacting upon bus and tram users as well as people who would like to walk and cycle."

Is cycling middle-class?

Commenting on the Labour source's comments about the council leader, Now Then highlighted 2021 statistics from the Department for Transport which showed more workers in routine and manual occupations travel by bike (2.7%) than those in managerial or professional positions (2%). Likewise, those in the middle income brackets, the results suggested, are also much more likely than those on lower incomes to travel by car.

In 2018, London's Walking and Cycling Commissioner Will Norman said that the English capital needed to shed its white, male, middle-class cyclist image and encourage women and people from ethnic minorities onto bikes.

Dan is the road.cc news editor and has spent the past four years writing stories and features, as well as (hopefully) keeping you entertained on the live blog. Having previously written about nearly every other sport under the sun for the Express, and the weird and wonderful world of non-league football for the Non-League Paper, Dan joined road.cc in 2020. Come the weekend you'll find him labouring up a hill, probably with a mouth full of jelly babies, or making a bonk-induced trip to a south of England petrol station... in search of more jelly babies.

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61 comments

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hawkinspeter replied to Rich_cb | 1 year ago
1 like
Rich_cb wrote:

It is for the majority of the population.

How much does it cost to have a baby in a non NHS hospital?

That gives the NHS a monopoly for 95%+ of births.

It's the same for almost all healthcare, most people simply cannot afford an alternative so the NHS has an effective monopoly for almost all health interventions for the majority of the population.

That's an indication that the NHS provides good value, not that it is a monopoly.

It's interesting to compare national health services in various countries with the for-profit health services (I'm thinking of the U.S. specifically) and it's clear that the free market is disfunctional when applied to basic human needs. As you mentioned earlier, privatisation of services such as water, telecoms, transport etc tends to lead to monopolies and thus the free market model breaks down.

I think competitive markets function best when there isn't a huge barrier to entry such as investing in infrastructure before services can be offered. Internet services in the UK are an example where the infrastructure (usually BT) can be resold by third parties, but even that suffers in comparison with the services provided in many other countries (notably not the U.S. - they tend to have regional monopolies).

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Rich_cb replied to hawkinspeter | 1 year ago
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It's not really any indicator of value as you don't have an option to take the money you've already spent elsewhere.

If you had the option to take an NHS voucher equivalent to the cost of NHS services to any provider that would be a test of value.

As an analogy, imagine you have a freak accident at home and your beloved bike is destroyed.

You ring the insurance company who inform you that the bike is completely covered but you'll have to wait 6 months for the brand new replacement.

They tell you that you can have the bike tomorrow but you have to pay an excess equivalent to the entire payout.

If you choose to wait does that prove the insurance was good value?

The US doesn't provide universal healthcare.

There are many, many countries, directly comparable to the UK, that do so and do so using for profit healthcare providers.

Those countries outperform the UK on almost any healthcare outcome you wish to measure.

The idea that for profit providers cannot provide "basic human needs" is demonstrably false.

Transport can easily be privatised in a way that engenders competition. The EU are doing so with their railways and producing good results. The UK actually ran the same scheme first but it hasn't really taken off widely and the old monopolies persist. (South Wales is about to finally get competition on the main line to London breaking that monopoly).

BT Openreach is another legacy (near) monopoly. It should be broken up.

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hawkinspeter replied to Rich_cb | 1 year ago
1 like

I don't think that healthcare should work in terms of money already spent - I consider it more as a tax that pays for the improved health of society. Thinking purely in terms of the individual leads to a U.S. style model which I find particularly distasteful.

I don't disagree about using profit based companies for certain services, but I think our government would act purely in bad faith at the moment, so would not place any trust in them copying best practices from other countries.

Having had some minor experiences of working with BT and knowing some people that have worked for them, I can recommend putting the execs in front of a firing squad.

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hawkinspeter replied to hawkinspeter | 1 year ago
4 likes

I think healthcare should be approached in a similar vein to public roads (in an attempt to bring this somewhat back into road.cc relevance). We could attempt to have roads all privately owned and you only pay for the roads that you use, but society doesn't work that way. At some point you may need to use roads that you've never previously paid for and then you'd be hit for all the maintenance charges you'd never contributed towards. Makes far more sense to consider them a public resource that everyone pays towards out of taxation according to their ability, rather than what they happen to need to use.

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Rich_cb replied to hawkinspeter | 1 year ago
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Then you get the 'Tragedy of the Commons'.

If everybody pays for what they use (including wear and tear caused) and prices vary by peak demand etc then you get more rational use.

Tying both threads together unless you allow people to spend their NHS funding as they see fit then you can't declare it good value.

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hawkinspeter replied to Rich_cb | 1 year ago
2 likes
Rich_cb wrote:

Then you get the 'Tragedy of the Commons'.

If everybody pays for what they use (including wear and tear caused) and prices vary by peak demand etc then you get more rational use.

Tying both threads together unless you allow people to spend their NHS funding as they see fit then you can't declare it good value.

It's less about value and more about the general health of people. However the UK seems to prioritise motor company profits over people's well-being so there's a lot of things we should be doing better.

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Rich_cb replied to hawkinspeter | 1 year ago
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The general health of people is better in those countries with both universal healthcare and meaningful competition in the provision of healthcare.

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hawkinspeter replied to Rich_cb | 1 year ago
3 likes
Rich_cb wrote:

The general health of people is better in those countries with both universal healthcare and meaningful competition in the provision of healthcare.

Let's get rid of our current selection of lying, asset-stripping clowns in charge and go for that then.

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chrisonabike replied to Rich_cb | 1 year ago
2 likes

"Monopolies are always bad for the customer."

...as can be cartels.  Further - our ferocious competitors "delivering efficiencies" can certainly be bad for everyone apart from their customers.  Or bad for some customers - e.g. bus companies running subsidised services to put rivals out of business then dropping their service to an area.

Define "good" I suppose.  Customers want cheap, convenient, available.  However often we also want "stable".  Bit like bike design, you may not get all of those.  De-regulated energy suppliers anyone?

Aside: I always feel "free market" is a less useful term than political "left / right".  Probably we should just specify the nature and degree of regulation.  In one common definition it mentions "unrestricted competition".  Not aware that such a state exists (even criminals are regulated in a sense).  If nothing else I'm not aware of a state where there are zero restrictions on e.g. importing employees from elsewhere if it was economic to do so!

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Rich_cb replied to chrisonabike | 1 year ago
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A cartel is just a form of monopoly.

It removes competition.

Competition benefits customers.

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hawkinspeter replied to Rich_cb | 1 year ago
3 likes
Rich_cb wrote:

Competition benefits customers.

Yes most of the time, though it does have the tendency to produce a race to the bottom. That could be blamed on the customers always going for the cheapest option though, but some markets don't allow people to make informed choices.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Market_for_Lemons

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chrisonabike replied to hawkinspeter | 1 year ago
1 like

Thanks - I did not know that!

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hawkinspeter replied to chrisonabike | 1 year ago
2 likes

chrisonatrike wrote:

Thanks - I did not know that!

You're welcome.

Information asymmetry is a big problem with the theory behind free markets as the people with more money can afford to have better access to information and thus skew the market in their favour.

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Rich_cb replied to hawkinspeter | 1 year ago
0 likes

That feedback loop is easily overcome by the informed seller offering the 'Peach' at peach prices with a guarantee rolled in.

The market then functions perfectly.

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hawkinspeter replied to Rich_cb | 1 year ago
2 likes
Rich_cb wrote:

That feedback loop is easily overcome by the informed seller offering the 'Peach' at peach prices with a guarantee rolled in.

The market then functions perfectly.

Nice idea in theory, but not what tends to happen

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Rich_cb replied to hawkinspeter | 1 year ago
0 likes

It does happen.

You can buy a used car with a decent warranty. It costs more but you know that it is in the seller's best interest to only sell better cars with a warranty.

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Rich_cb replied to marmotte27 | 1 year ago
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This is amusing but just not in the way that you think.

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marmotte27 replied to Rich_cb | 1 year ago
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.

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marmotte27 replied to Rich_cb | 1 year ago
3 likes
Rich_cb wrote:

This is amusing but just not in the way that you think.

Trying to appear condescendingly superiour but really just looking arrogant I'm afraid. Which is another undisputable quality of the political right.

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chrisonabike replied to marmotte27 | 1 year ago
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I thought that was your cue to finish the joke, or appear superior yourself with a neat bit of argumentation?

Back in the day it was "always let your opponent get into the gutter first - and you still don't have to follow them".

I guess times have changed though?

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Rich_cb replied to marmotte27 | 1 year ago
0 likes

Again. You're on a roll.

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hawkinspeter | 1 year ago
7 likes

This just strikes me as a divisive attitude. Cycle infrastructure benefits everyone and is the best value return on investment, so it makes me think that politicians that don't want to implement it are working for the oil/motor industry and not the people they're supposed to represent.

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chrisonabike replied to hawkinspeter | 1 year ago
4 likes

To a first approximation our government / local authorities etc. are working for:

- The fuel/power industry - because there will be a revolution if the lights go out / gas stops, and everything else will stop e.g. water.
- The transport industry - ditto but with avocados, cars, wine, plastic rubbish from China ... actually everything we consume, 90%+ coming in metal boxes on / in bulk in the holds of on very big ships.
- The health industry - because if people start dying because all the medicines, products and machines run out that'll make others a bit grumpy.

These are fundamental to our current mode of existence.

Also - the motor vehicle industry - because people use those to get to jobs / do the deliveries / pick up things from the first 3.

There are other big "basic services" lobbies as well of course (banking, communications...).  However if you've an issue which conflicts with any of those above you'll have a battle getting it moving with the politicians.  Unless - like the motor industry - it concentrates large sums of money effectively.  Apparently cycling - unlike driving - generates a net economic benefit to all but isn't so good at the financial gravity.  Which is another reason why I personally value it.

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Stevearafprice | 1 year ago
9 likes

I am a working class peasant and ride a bike! wtf?     Walsall Council leader Mike Bird [ Con ] said he believed that cyclists are dinosaurs and are inferior to motorists in evolutionary terms.  He said this at a council meeting,, I almost brought up my lunch .

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wycombewheeler replied to Stevearafprice | 1 year ago
3 likes

Stevearafprice wrote:

I am a working class peasant and ride a bike! wtf?     Walsall Council leader Mike Bird [ Con ] said he believed that cyclists are dinosaurs and are inferior to motorists in evolutionary terms.  He said this at a council meeting,, I almost brought up my lunch .

cycles are dinosaurs?

oh, my mistake.

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chrisonabike replied to wycombewheeler | 1 year ago
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AidanR | 1 year ago
15 likes

Does he therefore believe that driving is fundamentally working class? Because I hate to break it to him, but a disproportionate number of his working class constituents don't own cars.

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chrisonabike replied to AidanR | 1 year ago
8 likes

Presumably the key audience is seen as car-dependent working-class people. And I'm sure they get good mileage out of "Lord Snooty owns a Bentley but doesn't want *you* to get in his way in the roads!"

Same way cycling can be spun as bad by both sides - "it's for the avocado set" / "it's just yobs and hippies on bikes - those unwilling to better themselves lawfully".

Fact is that the car sellers have both ends of the market in thrall. It's just a bit easier if you're richer, as always.

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hutchdaddy | 1 year ago
8 likes

Terry Fox "doesn't like cycling because he thinks it is middle-class".
Well that is as ridiculous as me saying that "Golfing is only played by twats who have no dress sense of their own". At least I recognise that I really don't understand golf and know that I'm just being a bit of a prejudiced twat

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eburtthebike | 1 year ago
13 likes

The usual problem with these schemes; they are subject to the whims of local politicians who are frequently misinformed, prejudiced and have little idea of the benefits of active travel.  We can only hope that these obstructionists lose their seats soon.

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