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Motorcycle campaigners postpone Cycle Superhighway demo ahead of talks with Westminster Council

Motorcycle Action Group opposed plans to segregated infrastructure, though insists it is "sympathetic" to cyclists' needs...

A group representing motorcyclists in the UK has postponed a demonstration planned for a week tomorrow against Mayor of London Boris Johnson’s flagship East-West Cycle Superhighway. The Motorcycle Action Group (MAG) says it has achieved a “major breakthrough” with Westminster City and will be holding discussions with the local authority.

The demonstration was due to have been held in the capital on Saturday 30 May, but the MAG now says it will “sit down with key players in the WCC to promote the benefits of motorcycling and highlight the potential adverse effects of the cycle scheme on traffic movement in the City.”

The organisation, which claims to have around 50,000 members, says it “is sympathetic to the expectations of cyclists as fellow users of single track vehicles," but insists that "the justification for turning over such large areas of road space seems disproportionate and likely to cause severe congestion that will ironically prejudice efforts to enhance London’s air quality.”

It is also campaigning against proposals to charge motorcyclists £12.50 a day to enter the planned ultra low emission zone in London, the same as Transport for London (TfL) intends to charge motorists.

Most of the route of the East-West Cycle Superhighway passes through the City of Westminster, including the stretch along the Embankment west of Temple, and Bayswater Road once it exits Hyde Park.

Separately, The Royal Parks, which is the body responsible for the St James’s Park, Green Park and Hyde Park, all of which the proposed route passes by or through, has blocked plans for it to pass immediately in front of Buckingham Palace and also wants it routed away from Birdcage Walk.

Selinda Lavender, MAG’s chair, said: “While MAG is an activists’ organisation, we don’t use demonstrations gratuitously. The door on discussion has opened somewhat, possibly because of the prospect of a demonstration.

“The demonstration will still go ahead this summer unless major compromises are made both to the Superhighway scheme and the plan to charge motorcyclists the same as motorists to enter central London.”

The MAG’s transport policy and campaigns adviser, Dr Leon Mannings, said in his response to TfL’s consultation to the scheme last year that he objected to the plans for the East-West Cycle Superhighway, as well as the one running from North to South, “in the strongest possible terms.”

Among his criticism was the impact on powered two-wheelers such as mopeds and motorbikes reduction of road space, including the safety of riders, and he expressed concerns that the scheme would lead to more congestion and longer journey times.

Dr Mannings, who is also a member of the Parliamentary Advisory Committee on Transport Safety and the Mayor’s Roads Task Force as well as TfL’s Design Review Group for the Cycle Superhighways and Better Junctions for Cyclists programmes, also said the consultation period was too short.

He added that insufficient consideration had been given to a potential link between cycling and prostate cancer in men as part of the cost-benefit analysis of the scheme, an issue he said he had raised with “senior figures” within TfL.

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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24 comments

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Airzound | 9 years ago
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I have and ride several motorbikes and I dissociate myself totally from the views of this MAG group. They are basically morons.

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ianrobo | 9 years ago
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I have common cause with motorcyclists we face the same kind of dangers so this protest group does itself no good with this kind of daft points

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SNS1938 | 9 years ago
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Just awesome. MAG's position seems to be 'We sympathize with cyclists, but if creating a cycle super highway takes any road space away from us, or slows us down at all, then it's a non-starter. And, add to that, we care for cyclists so much that we think they should stop cycling incase it causes prostate cancer ... And women don't ride bicycles, but even if they did, they'd probably become a carrier for whatever it is on bicycles that causes prostate cancer, and then pass it on to motor cyclists'.

So essentially, MAG's propose building the cycling superhighway, but not in London (or maybe even in the uk), and banning men from cycling on it. Perhaps it could be built in the middle of the ocean?

Living in London for a while, I got buzzed by so many motorbikes nailing it along in the combined bus/bicycle/motorbike lanes. They'd think nothing of doing twice the speed limit and passing within a foot or two of me. Bring on the congestion charge for motorbikes!!!

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thereverent | 9 years ago
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I'm not sure what a “major breakthrough” with Westminster Council would mean as both schemes (Cycle Superhighway and Ultra Low Emission Zone) are TfLs?

The cycle superhighway will affect motorbike less as they can filter, and with the solid central reservation removed they won't get stuck so often.

"the justification for turning over such large areas of road space seems disproportionate and likely to cause severe congestion that will ironically prejudice efforts to enhance London’s air quality.”

Quite a lot of the new route on the Embankment will use what is currently coach parking, so not really used by motorbikes.

As background this group has an interesting history: http://www.visordown.com/motorcycle-news--general-news/mag-uk-wound-down...

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bikebot replied to thereverent | 9 years ago
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thereverent wrote:

As background this group has an interesting history: http://www.visordown.com/motorcycle-news--general-news/mag-uk-wound-down...

The comments in there are priceless.

"MAG reminds me of the old boys clubs of the 70's and the old fashioned out of date set-up of our old unions."

"Does MAG actually have any relevance anymore? Do people still actually attend these meetings? I went to a few in the late 80's and thought it was out dated then."

"Have MAG, in any iteration achieved any measurable results this century?"

"Al the above comments are spot on.They are a self serving bunch of ego maniacs.Some of the nonsense they spoutis embarrassing."

"Even back in the 70s MAG was the complete opposite to anything that I was ever going to be involved in. Complete absence of reason and justifiable argument - just a bombastic campaign of lawlessness."

And those are all from bikers!

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atgni | 9 years ago
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One way to test the prostate cancer claim would be to stop killing us unnecessarily.

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CXR94Di2 | 9 years ago
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I am keen motorcycle rider, but their arguments are weak and jealousy oozes from their comments.

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bikebot | 9 years ago
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The prostate thing made me chuckle.

Motorcycling of course has by far the highest KSI rate of any mode of transport, but without any health benefits from exercise to compensate.

I love motorcycles, and would use one myself if I lived further out from London. I don't think this group is very representative, not of the bikers I know anyway.

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atgni | 9 years ago
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Dr Leon Mannings
@ CrossrdsRider
London

Freelance writer/researcher, biker & dad with PhD in transport politics. Seeking better ways to go & reasons to be cheerful in face of puritans & doom-mongers
crossroadsrider.com

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PaulBox | 9 years ago
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Bunch of pricks.

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Airzound | 9 years ago
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I ride big motorcycles Honda SuperBlackbird and Triumph Sprint 1050 and I have never heard of this seemingly twatish organisation MAG. I also cycle to work as well 3-4 days a week, motorbike the other 2. I have no problems with the infrastructure being created for cyclists in London as a motorcyclist. MAG seems to be a right wing group claiming to represent a lot more of a type of road user i.e. motorcyclists than it actually does.

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jacknorell | 9 years ago
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'Sympathetic' does not mean in favour, or anything else that translates into action.

They're like the City of London, who was 'in principle' in favour of protected space, but in the first round seemed to be wholly against it in practice.

Creating better road space for all users benefit everyone in major ways. This has been shown true again and again... but of course evidence isn't welcome when principles and convictions carry the day.

The fact they got a hearing from Westminster also says a lot, worst roads in London for everyone, but particularly pedestrians and cyclists, in that order.

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mtm_01 | 9 years ago
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Meh, it's just standard selfish pageantry instead of thinking of the more vulnerable.

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Mystery Machine | 9 years ago
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So these 'representatives' of motorcyclists are 'sympathetic' towards cyclists, but object to the reallocation of road space to vulnerable road users?

Maybe they are concerned that it will be harder to 'share' the new, largely-segregated facilities than is currently the case (albeit completely illegally) with Advance Stopping Lines, which frequently seem to have a biker or two parked in them alongside the cyclists for whom they are intended.

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hampstead_bandit replied to Mystery Machine | 9 years ago
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Mystery Machine wrote:

Maybe they are concerned that it will be harder to 'share' the new, largely-segregated facilities than is currently the case (albeit completely illegally) with Advance Stopping Lines, which frequently seem to have a biker or two parked in them alongside the cyclists for whom they are intended.

Totally agree. Perhaps this motorcycle action group could start educating their members of the following, taken from the Met Police website:

"Do not enter the ASL box when the light is red – this space is reserved for the safety of cyclists.

Crossing the first or second ASL line when the light is red makes you liable for a £100 fixed penalty, three points on your licence, and endangers vulnerable road users.

If the traffic light changes from green to amber and you cannot safely stop before the first stop line, you may cross the line but must stop before the second stop line (Highway Code rule 178).

Myth: Motorbikes are allowed in the ASL.

Not true. The law applies to motorbikes and scooters, too."

I am fed up of telling motorcyclists to stay out of the ASL, especially when it endangers my safety by compromising the position I have put myself in to protect myself once the lights change to green.

I won't be aggressive as it just gets a rise, but use sarcasm "nice bicycle you've got there mate.." or "bit confused how the traffic lights work?"

Busy cities are dangerous enough for motorcyclists without them making it more dangerous for cyclists, by blatantly riding into the ASL box, even when full of cyclists.

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goggy replied to Mystery Machine | 9 years ago
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Mystery Machine wrote:

So these 'representatives' of motorcyclists are 'sympathetic' towards cyclists, but object to the reallocation of road space to vulnerable road users?

Maybe they are concerned that it will be harder to 'share' the new, largely-segregated facilities than is currently the case (albeit completely illegally) with Advance Stopping Lines, which frequently seem to have a biker or two parked in them alongside the cyclists for whom they are intended.

Spot on. Filter through stationary traffic to get to the ASL and there they are - a row of motorbikes double as wide as me in the ASL. I tend to go past them and stop in front of them - effectively creating an "Advance ASL". I find that annoys them a tad, especially when I can't get clipped in on the odd occasion. More annoying to me though is when they use the blue lane to the left of motorised traffic at a vastly faster speed than the average cycling speed, then hoot for you to get out the way.

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congokid | 9 years ago
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"the justification for turning over such large areas of road space seems disproportionate and likely to cause severe congestion that will ironically prejudice efforts to enhance London’s air quality.”

So it's 'likely', but if they're going to make such claims they really need to provide solid evidence that this indeed is the case, rather than make vague and unsubstantiated inferences and insinuations.

From what I understand of proper protected space for cycling that has been installed elsewhere, their claims have no foundation.

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jmaccelari | 9 years ago
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I don't know if she was quoted out of context, but the mooted congestion charge for motorbikes will only be for bikes manufactured before 2007 and will only come into effect in 2020. So only motorbikes more than 13 years old in 2020 will affected. And from the amount of crud some of these things spew out, this can't be a bad thing.

I'm a motorbiker and I have never heard of MAG. It seems they are a small group of uninformed t**ts who are trying to forward their own agendas...

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gavben replied to jmaccelari | 9 years ago
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MAG appears to be the equivalent of the "Taxpayers Alliance": an extremist thinktank with opaque funding sources that very loudly promotes the interests of a very small proportion of those it claims to represent.

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Some Fella | 9 years ago
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Dicks

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LarryDavidJr | 9 years ago
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Quote:

He added that insufficient consideration had been given to a potential link between cycling and prostate cancer in men as part of the cost-benefit analysis of the scheme,

If that's the reasoning then you should be calling for a ban on all motor vehicles because of the pollutions proven effects on breathing disorders et al.

If he has a doctorate and that's the best he can come up with .... What a twat.

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jacknorell replied to LarryDavidJr | 9 years ago
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LarryDavidJr wrote:
Quote:

He added that insufficient consideration had been given to a potential link between cycling and prostate cancer in men as part of the cost-benefit analysis of the scheme,

If that's the reasoning then you should be calling for a ban on all motor vehicles because of the pollutions proven effects on breathing disorders et al.

If he has a doctorate and that's the best he can come up with .... What a twat.

Has he taken advice from Steve McNamara of the LTDA (before their swift u-turn that is)?

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rore replied to LarryDavidJr | 9 years ago
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LarryDavidJr wrote:
Quote:

He added that insufficient consideration had been given to a potential link between cycling and prostate cancer in men as part of the cost-benefit analysis of the scheme,

If that's the reasoning then you should be calling for a ban on all motor vehicles because of the pollutions proven effects on breathing disorders et al.

If he has a doctorate and that's the best he can come up with .... What a twat.

It's also worth noting the fact he states it's a 'potential link' and reading this: http://www.nhs.uk/news/2014/07July/Pages/Cycling-linked-to-prostate-canc...

What about you motorbike giving you cancer, that's what I say http://www.skepticblog.org/2010/10/21/motorcycle-cancer/  103  35

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Beatnik69 replied to LarryDavidJr | 9 years ago
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LarryDavidJr wrote:
Quote:

He added that insufficient consideration had been given to a potential link between cycling and prostate cancer in men as part of the cost-benefit analysis of the scheme,

If that's the reasoning then you should be calling for a ban on all motor vehicles because of the pollutions proven effects on breathing disorders et al.

If he has a doctorate and that's the best he can come up with .... What a twat.

Threaten to make the cycle superhighway 'females only' and see what his objection is then.  4

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