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Ban cyclists and e-scooter riders using phones, Tory peer urges (BBC)

Quote:

Baroness McIntosh of Pickering wants a law change so cyclists are prosecuted for the offence of using a phone, in the same way that car drivers are.

...

Lady McIntosh questioned why Rule 149 of the code, requiring motorists to "exercise proper control of your vehicle at all times" and banning use of a mobile phone while driving, did not apply to cyclists and other road users.

To illustrate her point, she said she had recently been walking to the Houses of Parliament and as she was crossing the road, she suddenly became aware of a cyclist travelling towards her using a mobile phone, "one hand bicycling, one hand on the mobile phone, on the wrong side of the road".

She added: "I wasn't clear whether he was going to stop or not."

Ahhhh - legislation based on anecdata  3

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-61018584

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74 comments

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Hirsute replied to ktache | 2 years ago
5 likes

According to DoT nts0101 stats, from 2010 to 2019 (I ignored 2020 ) the average trip is between 6.8 and 7.1 miles and 22.5 to 23.9 minutes.

But you need that massive suv just in case you have to transport a us style fridge every week.

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chrisonabike replied to ktache | 2 years ago
1 like

Interesting.  I think you're right - who's going to buy a car that "only" does 100 miles when I can sell you one that won't leave you on the hard shoulder... (Yeah, what was that average journey distance / weekly mileage again?)  It's the normal up-selling via fear / anxiety mostly.

The removable battery idea - if only we had light enough ones - would seem to have a lot going for it.  Mentally it's similar to the present - we're used to checking the dial, going to a central location, waiting a couple of minutes and then driving off again.  As expected charging arrangements turn out to be the hard part for electric cars. It's not the technology, it's the logistics.

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lonpfrb replied to ktache | 2 years ago
2 likes
ktache wrote:

; Perhaps removable battery packs for that very rare occasion that the really need the range would work.

Honda of Japan have been working on a standard battery spec for the interchangeable value that you mentioned.

As you say, range anxiety and mass disappear if you can just swap in a fully charged standard battery, and go.

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hawkinspeter replied to ktache | 2 years ago
2 likes

ktache wrote:

Small, light and more efficient cars are just not wanted anymore, or so it seems.

Because of "range anxiety" car owners seem to want 2-300 mile range, or that is what the car company seem to sell them.  That means transporting huge weight of batteries meaning more weight which then needs more batteries.  When most journeys are only a few miles, and even 50 miles would be a huge amount to drive on a daily basis.  Perhaps removable battery packs for that very rare occasion that the really need the range would work.

I think it might be in Singapore, they did an emoped scheme that you never charged the battery, when getting flat you'd visit a hub remove the old battery and pick up a fully charged one, shove it in and away you went.  Negating the problems of charging in apartment complexes.

That kind of thing works great in cities where people are doing lots of short journeys (e.g. pizza deliveries). There's an advantage to having smaller nimble vehicles as they don't need so much juice and thus the battery can be small enough to make it easy enough to swap out.

Just had a quick search and there's e-scooters available with removable batteries and 150km range. Considering that they cost a lot less than a car, I can see them becoming popular (I read somewhere that they're becoming very popular in India).

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Backladder replied to ktache | 2 years ago
2 likes

ktache wrote:

Small, light and more efficient cars are just not wanted anymore, or so it seems.

Because of "range anxiety" car owners seem to want 2-300 mile range, or that is what the car company seem to sell them.  That means transporting huge weight of batteries meaning more weight which then needs more batteries.  When most journeys are only a few miles, and even 50 miles would be a huge amount to drive on a daily basis.  Perhaps removable battery packs for that very rare occasion that the really need the range would work.

I think it might be in Singapore, they did an emoped scheme that you never charged the battery, when getting flat you'd visit a hub remove the old battery and pick up a fully charged one, shove it in and away you went.  Negating the problems of charging in apartment complexes.

Its not that small light and efficient cars are not wanted its that they can no longer be legally produced as they will lack all the passive safety systems (airbags, seatbelts, abs, crumple zones etc) that have been legislated into existance and increase the weight of the base car, this then requires a bigger heavier engine/motor and battery/fuel load to get it to move and all of a sudden even the smallest cars weigh over a ton when the original mini 850 weight was under 600Kg.

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chrisonabike replied to hawkinspeter | 2 years ago
1 like

RE opportunity to rethink transport rather than swap ICE for electric.  You're preaching to the choir but don't underestimate the escape velocity of the present.  From biological evolution to English spelling and grammar "have to be able to get there to from here" is almost a law.  Skeuomorphs and panda's thumbs are everywhere.  Stonehenge was designed with woodwork joints.  I find that troubling in some ways as it suggests ideas of being able to get away without incremental change (e.g. just import the infra designs and principles from The Netherlands to avoid reinventing it / wasting time on "but does it work?") are fantasy.

Electric bikes?  That'll never fly.  Anyway it all started with the car as I discovered when I found I'd move next to the UK's first electric car factory.

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Sriracha replied to hawkinspeter | 2 years ago
4 likes
hawkinspeter wrote:

with electic cars - there's a major opportunity to reduce size

That's what I love about you hawkinspeter, you come up with some corkers. And such a dry delivery too; smaller cars - as if!
😆 🤣

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wtjs replied to hawkinspeter | 2 years ago
1 like

Maybe something like a bicycle powered by electricity could be invented?

Yes, and they could even mention the price of replacement batteries and how you fit them to that sleek 'disguised e-bike' frame. An e-bike branded by some nominally Italian (owned by Volkswagen, I recall) marque was recently advertised on here where the flash marketing didn't mention either of these factors, and I couldn't find any on the website either. That means you're not going to be able to get a replacement or fit it. 

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Rendel Harris replied to wtjs | 2 years ago
2 likes

wtjs wrote:

Maybe something like a bicycle powered by electricity could be invented?

Yes, and they could even mention the price of replacement batteries and how you fit them to that sleek 'disguised e-bike' frame. An e-bike branded by some nominally Italian (owned by Volkswagen, I recall) marque was recently advertised on here where the flash marketing didn't mention either of these factors, and I couldn't find any on the website either. That means you're not going to be able to get a replacement or fit it. 

Take it you're referring to Ducati, all of whose ebikes use either FSA or Shimano batteries which are easily obtainable and which can be replaced in five minutes, even the in-frame "stealth" options. Batteries cost about £400, which isn't peanuts but they should last about 25,000 km+, which is a pretty negligible cost when, as with me, adding an ebike to the stable allows one to get rid of the car. I know you've got a weird obsession with ebikes (tip: what other people choose to ride doesn't do you any harm, just chill and enjoy your ride without worrying about others) but no need to lie about them.

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wtjs replied to Rendel Harris | 2 years ago
1 like

no need to lie about them

No lying involved, not by me at any rate, and I rather take exception to the allegation. I went onto the website as I described and there was nothing about the batteries there, as I described. You are an e-bike enthusiast, so I'm quite prepared to take your statement about replacements at face value and just wait for stories about irreplaceable parts to appear. As for your claim about a 'weird obsession', we have been through this before and I don't need any of your condescending tips- I rarely think about e-bikes because I never see them far from power sources or in less than ideal conditions. I did see one motor past me last Thursday on the big hill out of Lindale in the South Lakes when I was heaving the trusty trailer for 4 days above Coniston- full motor power, effortless upright position versus gruelling effort for 7 hours. Cool, but a completely different activity

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chrisonabike replied to brooksby | 2 years ago
2 likes

"Must look / fit as many as my last car" may not be helping.  If you can get away with not needing to permanently carry 4 extra seats with you then microcars can probably go further.

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lonpfrb replied to chrisonabike | 2 years ago
0 likes
chrisonatrike wrote:

"Must look / fit as many as my last car" may not be helping.  If you can get away with not needing to permanently carry 4 extra seats with you then microcars can probably go further.

I may be mistaken but recall that you provided evidence that many if not most 4 seat motor vehicle journeys were completed with just one occupant. Even a 'shopping trolley' (Fiat 500 up) is largely wasted space, mass, and energy..

A well known motor vehicle manufacturer did produce a 2 wheel vehicle with a roof and engine but UK legislation still required a helmet to be worn so it wasn't successful...

eBike will have to do then.

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chrisonabike replied to lonpfrb | 2 years ago
0 likes

lonpfrb wrote:

I may be mistaken but recall that you provided evidence that many if not most 4 seat motor vehicle journeys were completed with just one occupant. Even a 'shopping trolley' (Fiat 500 up) is largely wasted space, mass, and energy..

As windfarm enthusiast* Donald Trump said "I am the evidence".

lonpfrb wrote:

A well known motor vehicle manufacturer did produce a 2 wheel vehicle with a roof and engine but UK legislation still required a helmet to be worn so it wasn't successful...

Why stop at 2 wheels?

* This is not true. But he did use that phrase when opposing them appearing near his golf resort in Scotland.

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wycombewheeler replied to ktache | 2 years ago
1 like

ktache wrote:

There was a bit in the graun yesterday on the new electric hummer, four and a half tons.

Are us tons different to our tons?

us Ton = 907 kg, as opposed to 1000kg, so the 4.5tons is just over 4 tonnes

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Rendel Harris replied to Rockhopper229 | 2 years ago
11 likes

13 posts and still not one about anything other than criticising cyclists or supporting anti-cycling measures, got to give you credit for consistency, even the most notorious trolls on here occasionally try to throw in the odd neutral "I'm a genuine cyclist" post for credibility, you're really going for it 100%.

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Jimmy Ray Will | 2 years ago
7 likes

Another demonstration of our current adminstration playing to the crowds. I'm so tired of this populist agenda...

I think it is utterly sensible that people cycling do not operate mobile phones whilst cycling. 

However I also believe there is not parity between the level of risk using a phone on a bike creates compared to when driving. And I'm not just talking about the risk presented by 80kg of cyclist compared to 1.5+ tonnes of motor vehicle, for me its more about the level of distraction caused and how that manifests itself in actions. Specifically;

 - the line between happily cruising along and ending up an injured mess is much narrower for a cyclist than a motorist. Smaller mistakes are more likely to cause accidents and injuries, therefore cyclists are less likely to divert attention from the road for any period of time

- aligned to this, operating a phone on a bike is a fiddly thing, where you are never more than a few moments away from lying in a ditch, or dropping your £700+ phone on the road. People either won't do it for long, or won't do it without paying greater attention to the road, or mitigating against the risk by slowing down

- phone use in cars is often associated with boredom... literally used to distract from the monotony of driving. I imagine the amount of motorist phone use on a busy A road, in heavy rain and busy traffic is minimal... cyclists do not need this distraction

I guess what I'm saying, the negative effect of using a phone is so much more obvious for a cyclist than motorist, that using it is likely to cause heightened attention rather than reduced, should it happen at all. 

Cyclists are already unlikely to use a phone, as its inconvenient and generally unnecessary. If doing so, it is unlikely to have the same distracting effect as seen when driving because cyclists literally have too much skin in the game.

So what we are talking about is adding specific legislation for something that people already rarely do, that is not evidenced as actively causing harm to others. It does not seem a sensible use of time or public funds to me.  

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jh2727 replied to Jimmy Ray Will | 2 years ago
4 likes

Jimmy Ray Will wrote:

Another demonstration of our current adminstration playing to the crowds. I'm so tired of this populist agenda...

Nothing particularly current about it. Baroness Pickering has been trying - and failing - to get such laws passed for over a decade.

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lonpfrb replied to jh2727 | 2 years ago
0 likes
jh2727 wrote:

Nothing particularly current about it. Baroness Pickering has been trying - and failing - to get such laws passed for over a decade.

You would have thought that during that decade someone from the whips office would have explained that evidence [of harm] is required to secure parliamentary time for preventative legislation....

Saying that, the Housing Act 2004, as amended, now adds £300 per bedroom to the cost of private rented accommodation. Where was the evidence of a general, and not exceptional, issue exactly? You may wonder.. #CostOfLiving #UnintendedConsequenses

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John Stevenson replied to lonpfrb | 2 years ago
0 likes

Sorry, I think you mean 'the Daily Mail has to be frothing about something to secure parliamentary time for preventative legislation....'

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brooksby replied to Jimmy Ray Will | 2 years ago
2 likes

Jimmy Ray Will wrote:

I'm so tired of this populist agenda...

They've only just started... 

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mdavidford replied to Jimmy Ray Will | 2 years ago
1 like

Jimmy Ray Will wrote:

Another demonstration of our current adminstration playing to the crowds.

Well, except that the person raising this isn't part of the administration - just a random backbencher. And the relevant minister basically rolled their eyes and told them to do one.

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brooksby | 2 years ago
7 likes

Has anyone noticed that the initials of a certain poster who it is believed might be a previously banned user are "D.Q.", and that DQ is often used as an abbreviation for "disqualified".  Hmm.   Disqualified from what??  Enquiring minds wish to know...  3

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AlsoSomniloquism replied to brooksby | 2 years ago
4 likes

I thought it was short for Dick Quotient, ie he fills the quotient of dicks on here. 

Still glad to see Road CC are on the ball with PBU posting on here. 

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Rendel Harris replied to brooksby | 2 years ago
5 likes

Also frequently used for Drama Queen, which seems appropriate for someone who comes out with nonsense such as "mobile phone use by cyclists, given its ubiquity and danger - can and does easily cause injury or death to vulnerable pedestrians."

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wycombewheeler | 2 years ago
13 likes

"Something mildly concerning happened to me on my way to work", *clutches pearls* "so the law must be changed."

Meanwhile 400 people a year killed by drivers on the pavement, no shits given in either house.

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ktache replied to wycombewheeler | 2 years ago
1 like

Luckily it's not that high, tends to be about 50 a year on pavements verges and crossings.  Most get killed crossing the road, I would suppose. With the police of course accepting the "nothing I could do about it" line.

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peted76 | 2 years ago
8 likes

Clearly this is the most important issue in Baroness McIntosh of Pickerings' life. 

- FFS get a grip.

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Rendel Harris | 2 years ago
10 likes

"It wasn't clear whether he was going to stop or not" – well did he or didn't he? 

Anyone using their mobile phone handheld while cycling is an idiot, in my opinion, but I would be interested to see the data regarding how many RTAs involve cyclists on mobile phones, I've not heard of the single incidence so I would imagine it is a minuscule number. I do fear that over the next couple of years we are going to see a number of calls for relatively pointless regulation for cycling as a form of revenge for the fact that the Highway Code has provided clarity regarding the way motorists should behave. One can easily see how "We can't use mobiles when driving so we need a law saying you can't either" could swiftly move on to "We have to have a licence when driving so you have to as well…"

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wycombewheeler replied to Rendel Harris | 2 years ago
10 likes

Rendel Harris wrote:

I would be interested to see the data regarding how many RTAs involve cyclists on mobile phones, 

Considering the rabid way the media reports any incidents caused by cyclists I'm sure we would know all about ANY serious injuries caused in such a manner.

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Mungecrundle | 2 years ago
9 likes

I once had a nasty incident involving a spoon. How many people are injured every year by spoons? I think the good Baroness should head up a Parliamentary committee immediately to look into this matter before another person is needlessly put at potential harm.

But, yeah, cycling with a phone pressed to your ear or whilst one handed texting is a dick move.

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