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Cyclist 'nearly decapitated' by pallet-spilling driver; Barriers removed on bike lane... because drivers kept crashing into them; Study coming on Kensington cycle lane; G launches cycling club; Derbyshire cops 'road tax' gaffe + more on the live blog

Jack Sexty will be manning your live blog today for old time's sake, bringing you plenty of cycling-related news while trying not to make too many spellin mistaykes along the way...

SUMMARY

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23 December 2020, 16:34
Derbyshire Police make 'road tax' gaffe

The problem arose when Pompey Cyclist asked the force to edit a section on their website that says the public can 'report a vehicle that doesn't have road tax'. They replied: "Good afternoon, Road Tax is still valid, even when cars have nil charge they are still required to apply for it." 

Some weren't very pleased with the reply - but we understand that Derbyshire Police are now going to rectify the error. 

23 December 2020, 15:44
Geraint Thomas has launched his own cycling club
Geraint Thomas at 2020 Giro d'Italia presentation (picture credit LaPresse, RCS Sport).JPG

G says "everyone is welcome" in his new club, called GTCC, and is asking for those interested to submit their ideas for what makes a great cycling club. A Tour de France winner ain't a bad start... you can find out more on the club's Facebook group here

23 December 2020, 12:29
Concrete barriers removed on Boston cycle lane... because drivers kept crashing into them

If you thought the reasons given for removing the some London cycle routes were bad, Boston in the US has gone one better by taking away protective cycle lane barriers because some drivers were apparently drifted towards and hitting them. 

The Boston Globe reports that the cycle lane, on a stretch of Massachusetts Avenue, had concrete slab barriers installed in November following the death of a cyclist who was killed by a tractor-trailer driver; however the barriers had led to a rise in car crashes according to the Boston Transportation Department. 

While many on social media expressed anger and bemusement at the decision, Becca Wolfson, executive director of the Boston Cyclists Union, commented: “We can’t focus on individual behaviour. It doesn’t mean it’s allowable behaviour, but it means the system has to change in a way that stops that behaviour."

Wolfson suggested that instead of the low-lying barriers, they should be quickly replaced with a "vertical element such as flex posts to better capture drivers' attention"... pretty much exactly like the wands ripped up on Kensington High Street earlier this month... 

23 December 2020, 13:49
Anger over sentence for man convicted of assaulting two cyclists in Richmond Park
richmond park no cycling - via royal parks police.PNG

Royal Parks Police tweeted that 60-year-old Stephen Diaz was yesterday found guilty of common assault against two cyclists in London's Richmond Park back in April. His received a conditional discharge and £600 costs at Wimbledon Magistrates Court yesterday, and numerous people have now expressed disappointment and anger at the sentence. 

Royal Parks Police explained why the trial was delayed but refused to comment on the sentence, adding: "The delay in the trial at court was due to the backlog at the courts because of COVID. The incident was as a result of a confrontation between two cyclists and two pedestrians on the road going from Sheen Cross to The Royal Ballet School.

"It would not be appropriate that we pass comment on the sentence handed down, it is a decision for the courts."

23 December 2020, 12:52
Festive 500 in a day - road.cc and off.road.cc Matt Page sets off on mammoth 500km challenge at midnight

Rather him than me, but our man will be setting off at midnight to attempt to polish off Rapha's festive distance challenge before Christmas day begins. Take a look at his bike and gear check above, read more about the challenge here and follow the live tracker tomorrow here

23 December 2020, 09:31
Mystery surrounds shocking viral video showing a driver 'almost decapitating' a cyclist then knocking over a pedestrian with loose pallets

The video, which first surfaced on Facebook and has now gone viral, shows the driver of a tow truck carrying a dangerously loaded pile of wooden pallets. With a plank of wood hanging off the left side, at 0:17 into the clip the plank comes inches away from hitting a cyclist. At 0:57 a piece of wood and a pallet falls off the van, knocking over a pedestrian, with the driver seemingly oblivious. 

Some people on social media criticised the cameraman for appearing to see the funny side and not attempting to stop the driver; however another clip shows the driver and passenger approach the driver of the truck further along the road.

With the driver's number plate clearly visible, we hear one of the men tell the truck driver that he "twatted" the pedestrian with the fallen wood. The truck driver appears to reply: "Oh right mate." 

It's not clear when the footage was filmed, who filmed it, or how serious the pedestrian's injuries were. We've contacted Greater Manchester Police for comment. 

23 December 2020, 12:01
Just how blocked is Kensington High Street's inside lane? Coventry's bicycle mayor to publish results showing how often the former segregated cycle lane is blocked by vehicles

Adam Tranter says he has used Google’s AI platform "to monitor what % of time the space, previously occupied by a cycle lane carrying thousands of people per day, is blocked by parked vehicles" on the former segregated cycle route on Kensington High Street. He has invited his Twitter followers to guess the percentage, with guesses ranging from 66% (Jeremy Vine's bet) through to 95%. 

The sad sight of this well-used former segregated cycle lane being blocked by vehicles for large portions of the day has become the subject of a tongue-in-cheek Twitter account, originally called 'Is the white BMW in the RBKC cycle lane still there?', but now named in tribute to a white van that regularly blocks the route instead. The account admin says they are "looking forward" to the results of the study, and is still posting daily updates.  

23 December 2020, 11:44
The Transcontinental Race set to go ahead in 2021 with revised route
Fiona Kolbinger Transcontinental day 1_Credit AngusSung.co_.uk for Transcontinental.cc

A race manual for the eighth edition of the self-supported epic now exists, detailing route changes and some alterations to the way the event is run to ensure it is Covid-secure. 

The TCR organisers say in the manual: "It remains difficult to predict exactly what the summer of 2021 may look like; given the recent fluctuations in cases of COVID-19 and lockdowns in some countries over the past months. It is clear
that a complete ‘return to normal’ is not imminent and we shall all have to continue to manage the health and safety of ourselves, our loved ones and the most vulnerable in our society as best we can.

We must attempt to balance our personal freedom with mitigating the spread of the virus and protecting the most vulnerable in our communities. The news regarding vaccines is encouraging and, as difficult as it is to predict, we may expect leisure travel to be possible in July 2021 with requirements to quarantine, vaccine and/or present negative COVID-19 test results at borders/prior to travel.

"It is important that TCRNo8 riders consider the probability of time constraints and additional expense incurred by travel during COVID-19 when making any travel arrangements."

It's thought that the finish will be in Thessaloniki instead of Burgas, and the predicted start date is 27th July 2021, departing from Brest. If all goes to planned, the 2021 winner should roll in almost exactly two years after Fiona Kolbinger arrived at the finish line, having dominated the race which was also her first ever ultra-distance cycling event. 

23 December 2020, 10:24
Just a dude, choppin' wood with his 'e-tree trimmer'
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

A post shared by Justin Loretz (@mtbgenie)

With the wood that's up for the chop secured on a pallet far more carefully than a certain truck driver's in the shocking video below, this cunning fella has repurposed his Husqvarna e-bike and turned it into a useable saw (the original footage appeared on the Swedish brand's Instagram story). Bet you never saw that coming... 

23 December 2020, 09:29
"Why don't you use the cycle lane?" Because there's a lorry parked in it

Another day, another blocked bike lane... and another reason to link to this feature

23 December 2020, 09:19
Covid-19 has "got" Luke Rowe

The Ineos rider joins the unfortunate (and quite long) list of pro cyclists who have caught coronavirus in 2020, with Rowe appearing to confirm via the tweet above that he has tested positive. 

One of the first to test positive was Fernando Gaviria at the UAE Tour back in February, and the Colombian then caught it again in October. He'll be relieved to find out that the entire UAE Team Emirates squad are likely be the first on the World Tour to be vaccinated against the disease, with the team's owner Mauro Gianetti telling Gazzetta dello Sport earlier this month: "In January we want to vaccinate the entire team, the riders and all staff members."

Arriving at road.cc in 2017 via 220 Triathlon Magazine, Jack dipped his toe in most jobs on the site and over at eBikeTips before being named the new editor of road.cc in 2020, much to his surprise. His cycling life began during his students days, when he cobbled together a few hundred quid off the back of a hard winter selling hats (long story) and bought his first road bike - a Trek 1.1 that was quickly relegated to winter steed, before it was sadly pinched a few years later. Creatively replacing it with a Trek 1.2, Jack mostly rides this bike around local cycle paths nowadays, but when he wants to get the racer out and be competitive his preferred events are time trials, sportives, triathlons and pogo sticking - the latter being another long story.  

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71 comments

Avatar
Rich_cb replied to hawkinspeter | 3 years ago
1 like

The problem with your argument is that VED is not related to pollution.

CO2 production is a product of vehicle efficiency and mileage.

As VED does not take mileage into consideration it cannot be based on CO2 production.

A car parked on a street all year produces no CO2 yet pays full VED.

An identical car that does 20,000 Kms in 6 months and is then SORNed for the remaining 6 produces large amounts of CO2 yet pays half the amount of VED.

There is no relationship between amount of CO2 produced and VED paid. There is a direct relationship between amount of time legally allowed to use the public road network and the amount of VED paid.

VED is a fee to use the roads. That doesn't mean that cyclists don't pay towards the road network. It just means we don't pay a fee to access the road network.

Avatar
hawkinspeter replied to Rich_cb | 3 years ago
3 likes

VED is quite clearly based on CO2 production, so your argument is invalid.

From https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/vehicle-excise-duty/vehicle-excise-duty

Quote:

The current VED structure based on CO2 bands was introduced in 2001 when average UK new car emissions were 178 gCO2/km. The Band A threshold of 100 gCO2/km below which cars pay no VED was introduced in 2003 when average new car emissions were 173 gCO2/km. Since then, to meet EU emissions targets average new car emissions have fallen to 125 gCO2/km. This means that an increasingly large number of ordinary cars now fall into the zero- or lower-rated VED bands, creating a sustainability challenge and weakening the environmental signal in VED. This is set to continue as manufacturers meet further EU targets of 95 gCO2/km set for 2020. Additionally, the system results in significant unfairness as owners of newer cars pay little or no VED while owners of older cars generally pay higher rates.

The reformed VED system retains and strengthens the CO2-based FYRs to incentivise uptake of the very cleanest cars whilst moving to a flat SR in order to make the tax fairer, simpler and sustainable. To ensure those who can afford the most expensive cars make a fair contribution, a supplement of £310 will be applied to the SR of cars with a list price (not including VED) over £40,000, for the first 5 years in which a SR is paid.

Avatar
DrJDog replied to hawkinspeter | 3 years ago
1 like

hawkinspeter wrote:

VED is quite clearly based on CO2 production, so your argument is invalid.

Absolute rot. It's based on the CO2 production of a tested sample of the car over 100km, not the CO2 production of your car in use.

I drive 2000 miles a year in my car, and pay £330 a year.

A driver in a 2.0 Ford Mondeo turbo diesel driving 40,000 miles a year pays £30.

Who is clearly producing more CO2? And I pay 10 times more in VED? Crazy system.

Avatar
hawkinspeter replied to DrJDog | 3 years ago
0 likes

DrJDog wrote:

hawkinspeter wrote:

VED is quite clearly based on CO2 production, so your argument is invalid.

Absolute rot. It's based on the CO2 production of a tested sample of the car over 100km, not the CO2 production of your car in use.

I drive 2000 miles a year in my car, and pay £330 a year.

A driver in a 2.0 Ford Mondeo turbo diesel driving 40,000 miles a year pays £30.

Who is clearly producing more CO2? And I pay 10 times more in VED? Crazy system.

I didn't state that it was based on the use of the car, but merely that it is based on CO2 production (which you yourself state).

Why are people chasing their own tails over this?

Avatar
Hirsute replied to hawkinspeter | 3 years ago
1 like

hawkinspeter wrote:

Why are people chasing their own tails over this?

I feel some image is missing here...

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hawkinspeter replied to Hirsute | 3 years ago
3 likes

hirsute wrote:

hawkinspeter wrote:

Why are people chasing their own tails over this?

I feel some image is missing here...

Sorry - I was off making a coffee before perusing my collection of suitable photos.

Avatar
Captain Badger replied to hawkinspeter | 3 years ago
2 likes

hawkinspeter wrote:

DrJDog wrote:

hawkinspeter wrote:

VED is quite clearly based on CO2 production, so your argument is invalid.

Absolute rot. It's based on the CO2 production of a tested sample of the car over 100km, not the CO2 production of your car in use.

I drive 2000 miles a year in my car, and pay £330 a year.

A driver in a 2.0 Ford Mondeo turbo diesel driving 40,000 miles a year pays £30.

Who is clearly producing more CO2? And I pay 10 times more in VED? Crazy system.

I didn't state that it was based on the use of the car, but merely that it is based on CO2 production (which you yourself state).

Why are people chasing their own tails over this?

Our friends don't like to be wrong, and will argue night is day for it to be otherwise. They are entrenched and can't ask for a ladder - they keep on digging.

Note it started out on whther road tax and VED are the same - now it's down to the efficacy of the tax system (without accepting they were wrong on the initial point)  

Avatar
Rich_cb replied to hawkinspeter | 3 years ago
0 likes

How much CO2 does my example parked car produce?

It's based on efficiency.

Which on its own gives us absolutely no idea about CO2 production.

Avatar
hawkinspeter replied to Rich_cb | 3 years ago
3 likes

You're now arguing with the implementation of VED which I agree is flawed - scrap it and put more tax on the fuel.

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Rich_cb replied to hawkinspeter | 3 years ago
0 likes

I agree it's flawed but that doesn't invalidate my point or validate yours.

CO2 production is, by definition, the product of vehicle efficiency and distance travelled.

As a consequence it is impossible for current VED rates to be based on CO2 production. VED are based on the rate that CO2 is produced not the actual amount of CO2 produced.

It's an important distinction as it disproves the argument that VED is a tax on pollution.

Paying VED allows you to use the public road network, the amount of CO2 you actually produce whilst doing so has precisely no impact on the rate of VED you pay.

The amount of time you wish to access the road network is, however, directly proportional to the amount of VED you pay.

Avatar
hawkinspeter replied to Rich_cb | 3 years ago
1 like

Rich_cb wrote:

As VED does not take mileage into consideration it cannot be based on CO2 production.

That statement of yours is incorrect which invalidates your argument.

My point was that VED is intended to take pollution into account and the relevant page on gov.uk supports that statement.

Rich_cb wrote:

The amount of time you wish to access the road network is, however, directly proportional to the amount of VED you pay.

Have you started early on the Xmas sherry?

Merry Xmas to you, anyhow.

Avatar
Rich_cb replied to hawkinspeter | 3 years ago
0 likes

Explain how that statement is wrong?

Does VED take mileage in to account?

Avatar
hawkinspeter replied to Rich_cb | 3 years ago
0 likes

Rich_cb wrote:

Explain how that statement is wrong? Does VED take mileage in to account?

You've got that backwards - you made the claim (about VED being directly proportional to time spent on public roads) so you should provide evidence to back that claim up.

Anyhow, I don't think this discussion is enlightening anyone at this point, so I'm unlikely to respond (unless I start on the sherry).

Merry Xmas to you all!

Avatar
Rich_cb replied to hawkinspeter | 3 years ago
0 likes

VED is proportional to the time that you want access to the public roads.

If you park your car on a road for 6 months you have to pay 6 months worth of VED. If you park your car in a garage for the same period you have to pay zero VED.

You only have to pay VED if you want to use the road. The amount you pay per year is directly related to the amount of time you want access to the roads.

If you require access to the roads for the full 12 months you will pay twice as much as if you require access for 6 months.

There is no relationship between amount of VED paid and actual CO2 produced.

A car driven on the road for 6 months and garaged for the following 6 months would be charged half the rate of a car parked on the road for 12 months despite the fact the car parked in the road would produce no CO2 at all.

Merry Christmas to you too!

Avatar
Captain Badger replied to Rich_cb | 3 years ago
0 likes

Rich_cb wrote:

How much CO2 does my example parked car produce? It's based on efficiency. Which on its own gives us absolutely no idea about CO2 production.

You tell us. 

How much road does it use?

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OldRidgeback replied to Rich_cb | 3 years ago
3 likes

Road maintenance and construction is paid for by general taxation, which every wage earner pays. 

In any case, I've got a car and two motorbikes. Does that mean I've got three times as much right to ride any of my bicycles than a car driver with just one vehicle?

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Rich_cb replied to OldRidgeback | 3 years ago
0 likes

You've misunderstood my argument.

I have not argued that paying VED grants you any special privileges.

I've merely stated that VED is a fee payable by certain vehicles to use the road network.

In that respect it is identical to road tax and for most motorists there is no discernible difference other than semantics.

Avatar
Captain Badger replied to Rich_cb | 3 years ago
1 like

Rich_cb wrote:

I've merely stated that VED is a fee payable by certain vehicles to use the road network.

 

The car doesn't pay, the keeper does. But only to keep a polluting vehicle for use on the public highway. Use certain vehicles and you get reduced fee or an exemption. However, road users (eg everyone who uses the road) are only subject to any duty if opting to use one of these polluting vehicles

Therefore not a road tax, but a pollution tax.....

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bikeman01 replied to OldRidgeback | 3 years ago
0 likes

OldRidgeback wrote:

Road maintenance and construction is paid for by general taxation, which every wage earner pays. 

In any case, I've got a car and two motorbikes. Does that mean I've got three times as much right to ride any of my bicycles than a car driver with just one vehicle?

So by rights non-tax payers shouldn't be allowed on the roads. I'd vote for that.

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wycombewheeler replied to Rich_cb | 3 years ago
3 likes

Rich_cb wrote:

...Most motorists pay a fee to use the roads, cyclists do not. .

1) I have a car on my drive, so I am still paying that fee. If I choose to use my bike instead of the car it is wins all round, no fuel costs for me, less congestion in front of other drivers, less wear on the roads and less pollution.

2) Do the drivers complain about electric vehicle users not paying for roads? No, because it isn't an issue of fairness of payment, it is just a made up excuse because they don't like the perception of being delayed in their journey by a cyclist, and they want cyclists off the roads.

3) How we are in the state that paying £30 a year VED somehow confers extra priviliges to road users is a mystery to me. If people are choosing high fuel consumption vehicles and so paying more VED that is their choice, lower tax alternatives were available. VED is such a tiny proportion of my annual tax bill as not to be noticable.

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Titanus replied to hawkinspeter | 3 years ago
0 likes

hawkinspeter wrote:

It obviously does matter as idiots keep on misinterpreting what it's for and then punishing cyclists because of it.

Names can be changed for good reason - the best example I can think of was back in the 1950s when "flammable" became the preferred adjective over "inflammable". It was a significant safety hazard, but maybe you don't think that people being burnt is worth making such a fuss?

That's definitely an exception. I have came across old gas cylinders with "inflammable" on them and can see how that could be confusing. In that respect, inflammable is literaly worse than the N word.

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hawkinspeter replied to Titanus | 3 years ago
1 like

But, I'd consider that using the term "road tax" also leads to some drivers endangering other road users because it makes them feel entitled. As it's both incorrect and dangerous, we should make an effort to correct people when they use it.

Merry Xmas!

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eburtthebike replied to Titanus | 3 years ago
6 likes

Titanus wrote:

Pluto, planet.

Road tax, VED.

Yes it matters, and the reason it matters is why Churchill abolished it.  If you call it road tax the drivers will assume that they own the roads and no-one else has any rights.

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Mungecrundle replied to eburtthebike | 3 years ago
5 likes

If you do get into the "road tax" argument try asking if paying more road tax should grant greater "rights" to use the road. If they agree then ask if they wouldn't mind pulling over to let HGVs past.

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David9694 replied to Mungecrundle | 3 years ago
0 likes

Blimey, what a needlessly embittered argument about a tax we don't even pay on our bikes and e-bikes. 

For what it's worth, I'm in favour of promoting the term "VED" simply because it's that much harder for gammons to pronounce out of their car windows at speed.  

 

Avatar
open_roads | 3 years ago
3 likes

On his LinkedIn profile Stephen Diaz claims:

"proven man management skills...[and] ability to work under pressure"

Shame that doesn't include not assaulting members of the public that raise his ire.

Avatar
eburtthebike | 3 years ago
5 likes

Stephen Diaz; Managing Director at Richmond Park Consulting Ltd, "...proven man management skills with the ability to work under pressure."

He might want to revise his self-assessment there.

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Philh68 replied to eburtthebike | 3 years ago
1 like

Sounds like a job description for a gigolo.

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brooksby | 3 years ago
6 likes

Quote:

"Why don't you use the cycle lane?" Because there's a lorry parked in it

And its even a properly segregated lane with a kerb and everything.  Did that truck driver seriously think, "Gosh - this is a nicely laid out layby!"...?

Avatar
Captain Badger replied to brooksby | 3 years ago
2 likes

brooksby wrote:

Quote:

"Why don't you use the cycle lane?" Because there's a lorry parked in it

And its even a properly segregated lane with a kerb and everything.  Did that truck driver seriously think, "Gosh - this is a nicely laid out layby!"...?

Yes.

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