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Tom Pidcock unimpressed by Amstel beer... but Pogačar chops the lot; "That's sportsmanship": Uno-X come to Conti racer's aid; "Quite positive" close pass prosecution figures; UK's most abused bollard; But cyclists; Weekend round-up + more on the live blog

The start of a new live blog week and Dan Alexander is back on duty for Monday (don't worry, Ryan will be back tomorrow)...
17 April 2023, 07:57
Tom Pidcock unimpressed by Amstel beer... but Pogačar chops the lot

'Give us a pint of t' proper stuff, not this cat piss'...is almost certainly not what Tom Pidcock said as he placed his glass back on the podium after one tentative sip, after all he doesn't drink, as far as we're aware...

He wasn't alone though, Irishman Ben Healy also seemingly not taken by the Heineken-owned beer's self-professed "perfect balance of taste and refreshment with a unique honey malt aroma"... and we thought bike companies were bad for marketing rubbish...

"Amstel delivers a subtle citrus and herbal hop character with a clean bitter finish"... apparently... not that Tadej had time to taste his, knocking it back like a fresher celebrating getting out of bed.

Tadej Pogačar drains his beer at the 2023 Amstel Gold Race (Zac Williams/SWpix.com)

Anyway, the fans came to Pidcock's defence... (look away now Heineken N.V.)... just some of the reviews for the race-sponsoring beer suggesting the Ineos man wouldn't have been the only one to turn his nose up...

"Dog-****"... "**** beer"... "Piss in a glass"... "Not the best beer on the market"... "Like if somebody took all piss tests from the first day of the Tour and bottled them" (perfectly clean piss tests, we should add)...

It wasn't the only Amstel-related controversy of the day, however, the positioning of the race director's car (featuring some understated advertising) attracting criticism from many, including EF Education-EasyPost's Jonathan Vaughters who said it helped race winner Pogačar, the Slovenian himself admitting it was "too close".

Apparently the halfs were alcohol-free anyway, so fair play to Pidcock for putting it down... unlike this lad at Ironman worlds last year...

Swim. Bike. Run. Chug.  

17 April 2023, 14:35
Telegraph publishes column claiming 'Net Zero is trapping us in the dungeons of state control'

On the subject...

This is Alan Miller of the Together Declaration, an initially anti-lockdown group which has turned its hand to freedom of speech, ULEZ and 15-minute cities in recent times. Yep, all the greatest hits...

In a nutshell... "One main purpose: to unite people from all walks of life to push back against the rapidly growing infringements on our rights and freedoms."

Now you know what we're dealing with, here are the words of Miller in The Telegraph...

"Low Traffic Neighbourhoods have been imposed too often without consultation, curtailing our freedom of movement," he wrote. "Why, exactly, did Britain decide to allow meddling councils crack down on our freedom of movement in the name of climate change? Overnight, Low Traffic Neighbourhoods (LTNs) sprang up across London like mushrooms, blocking off roads with bollards or large wooden plant holders, and driving some locals round the bend.

"If these areas – where traffic calming measures are used to reduce the number of vehicles on residential streets – had been enthusiastically agreed to by residents, then they would at least be defensible. But all too often they were imposed from above without consultation, rushed through as an emergency measure in response to Covid. Now many of the capital's main roads are clogged up, and the schemes are spreading across the country as overzealous green ideologues look to follow suit."

The words not of a fringe group's website, but published in one of the UK's largest broadsheet newspapers. It will certainly be interesting to see how BBC's Panorama deals with views presumably of this camp...

> "Reasonably balanced or needlessly confrontational?" New BBC Panorama episode about low-traffic neighbourhoods raises concerns over stirring culture war

Analysis from May last year showed that nearly a third of low-traffic neighbourhoods have been scrapped while, on the topic of Miller's complaints, a 2020 government survey showed that 8 in 10 people support measures to reduce motor traffic.

A study from around the same time also suggested that Hackney's low traffic neighbourhoods had not caused a rise in traffic on nearby main roads. Elsewhere in London, Lambeth Council said car traffic was down by almost two thirds inside one of its LTNs.

> LTNs halve number of road traffic casualties, new study shows

17 April 2023, 14:15
Tao Geoghegan Hart wins opening stage of Tour of the Alps

Tao's resurgence continues. After two and a half years without a win since his Giro d'Italia success the 28-year-old from Hackney now has two in 2023... insert something about London buses...

Preston's Hugh Carthy was third too, Felix Gall the Austrian meat in that particular British sandwich...

Will we see these two on similar form come May?

17 April 2023, 11:56
"That's sportsmanship": Uno-X come to Conti racer's aid

road.cc contributor and AWOL O'Shea racer Charlotte Broughton found herself in one of those familiar mechanical spirals this weekend, when you just can't seem to work out what's wrong with your bike... the problem? She was on her own, in a foreign country, without her team and had a race on the horizon...

After fixing an issue with her front brake a new issue arose with her rear shifter. A diagnosis of a broken bolt followed... and in the next update finally some good luck...

There's a faith-restoring tale for your Monday lunchtime... 

17 April 2023, 11:09
UK's most abused bollard

You might have heard BBC's Panorama is tackling LTNs tonight with an episode on BBC One at eight (half eight in Wales)...

We'll have more on the initial reaction to the eye-catchingly culture war styled 'Road Wars: Neighbourhood Traffic Chaos' title shortly, plus what you can expect from the episode. In the meantime, in preparation the BBC's homepage now has a promo article asking: 'Is this the UK's most abused traffic bollard?'

Yes, this is Howard Street in east Oxford where the bollard has been repeatedly vandalised, run over, bent, set on fire, stolen and replaced since last year, leading the BBC to guess it is "probably the most abused bollard in the UK"...

> Active travel campaigners release footage of anti-LTN vandals setting bollards alight

> Low-traffic neighbourhood 'human bollards' step in following repeated vandalism

17 April 2023, 11:06
But cyclists
But cyclists

 

17 April 2023, 09:50
"Quite positive" close pass prosecution figures from Hampshire

Last week we brought you the news that West Midlands Police had prosecuted just one driver from 286 close pass submissions in 2022, a figure that attracted much ridicule and criticism on our Thursday live blog.

near miss of the day 837 close pass mercedes driver - screenshot via Das_Pig on Twitter

Well, road.cc reader Olly got in touch with the figures he received from Hampshire Police regarding Operation SNAP submissions ("with video and confirmed registration number") in the county...

Of the 1,068 reported, 40 per cent (423) resulted in 'PENTIP', the police's penalty notice platform used to record and process fixed penalty notices, while 38 per cent (403) received a warning letter. In contrast to West Midlands Police's figures, less than a quarter (23 per cent) resulted in no further action.

17 April 2023, 08:53
The award for the most unnecessary alternative description of a saddle sore goes to...
Astana Qazaqstan Amstel Gold tweet (Twitter)

 

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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23 comments

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marmotte27 | 1 year ago
0 likes

Saddle sore and furuncle are quite different things.

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IanMK | 1 year ago
5 likes

I find it interesting that the right wing press always blame LTNs on local councils. At least he BBC appear to be pointing out that they actually are Government Policy and that the Government is actually handing out money for implementation.

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vthejk | 1 year ago
1 like

Considering that WMP ignored - No Further Action - the case where I was T-boned at a roundabout (on Station road in Berkswell in front of two witnesses, both of whom testified), it doesn't surprise me that they'd ignore close passes, too.

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adamrice | 1 year ago
1 like

Furuncle. That's a great word.

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Awavey | 1 year ago
1 like

I saw the Mail did another LTN exclusive piece at the weekend, i suspect the telegraph will be lined up for post the Panorama showing.

I only glanced at it but it was focussed on business owners saying LTNs were destroying their business, but I couldn't work out how exactly. Like an example they gave of a wholesale ice cream seller whose suppliers refused to deliver to them because of an LTN in the way!?!?

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brooksby replied to Awavey | 1 year ago
1 like
Awavey wrote:

Like an example they gave of a wholesale ice cream seller whose suppliers refused to deliver to them because of an LTN in the way!?!?

Seriously??

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Awavey replied to brooksby | 1 year ago
2 likes

It's what they claim ": 'We have six companies saying they are not going to be delivering to us (because of the LTN)" https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-11956383/Businesses-slam-Sadiq-...

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Awavey | 1 year ago
0 likes

If the men were getting half pints, technically quarter litres, then the women were only getting 3rds by the look of it. Who looked even less interested in drinking it, though I do recall Lotte Kopecky has said she doesn't like beer.

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Matthew Acton-Varian | 1 year ago
4 likes

It looks like Hampshire police kinda know what they are doing. Hopefully other forces take note to actually start making a difference.

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Jogle replied to Matthew Acton-Varian | 1 year ago
2 likes
Matthew Acton-Varian wrote:

It looks like Hampshire police kinda know what they are doing.

That's not the impression that I get from submitting to them. Part of the problem is that they won't tell you what the result was. If you ask for an update you get an email telling you that they don't have enough money to tell you the result and to complain to the PCC. While it might sound good to spend the money on dealing with the offences instead of updating the victim, if they don't tell you what action was taken, you have to assume that none was taken.

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Matthew Acton-Varian replied to Jogle | 1 year ago
1 like

Fair enough, though I did say kinda, as was not 100% sure on victim feedback. I don't have personal experience as I have only ever had experience from West Mids Police. I have never bothered with a camera for the exact reason it is a waste of money with their lack of prosecutions.

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wtjs replied to Jogle | 1 year ago
1 like

if they don't tell you what action was taken, you have to assume that none was taken

And you'd be right almost all the time. When the police are prepared to spend all the time and money in response to a FoI request refusing to tell you what they actually did when they claim they 'took action', you know they were lying and did either nothing at all or sent out the joke warning letter

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Tom_77 replied to Jogle | 1 year ago
1 like

Jogle wrote:
Matthew Acton-Varian wrote:

It looks like Hampshire police kinda know what they are doing.

That's not the impression that I get from submitting to them. Part of the problem is that they won't tell you what the result was. If you ask for an update you get an email telling you that they don't have enough money to tell you the result and to complain to the PCC. While it might sound good to spend the money on dealing with the offences instead of updating the victim, if they don't tell you what action was taken, you have to assume that none was taken.

Hampshire only let you know the outcome if it goes to court. I've had a couple of cases that did - https://road.cc/content/news/near-miss-day-733-291029

With the current system, I put a YouTube link in the report and then they subsequently asked me to upload the original files. I don't think they would have asked for the original files if they weren't going to do anything. Bit frustrating not to know if they're just sending letters or if they're actually prosecuting, I'm sure that could be automated very easily.

 

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wtjs replied to Tom_77 | 1 year ago
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I don't think they would have asked for the original files if they weren't going to do anything. Bit frustrating not to know if they're just sending letters or if they're actually prosecuting

An charmingly charitable assumption, which will please the people in Police BlackOps! It's a way of making you put more effort in, with no effort on their part (they don't have to watch or do anything with those 100s of MB files other than delete them) with the hope of putting you off any more reports. The aim of the police is to appear to be taking action without taking any- how difficult is it to knock out a quick email when they've sent a letter to the offender?- because that, or nothing, is almost invariably what they've done. The answer is that it would be easy, but they don't want you to know how little they've done. Secrecy is the major weapon of the police in relation to offences against cyclists, or any offences for that matter

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gareth@attrill.uk replied to Jogle | 1 year ago
1 like

What one force does is upload a spreadsheet of dates/times/locations of reported offences and the outcome. Anybody interested could just check the list.

I'm also greatly encouraged by Hants' stats. I have reported a few dozen to them and, like others, heard nothing back except one where the driver stopped and swore at me, they wanted to record it as a separate offence. Amusingly the car appeared for sale on a local Facebook group and I caused a stir by mentioning the incident  4 

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wtjs replied to gareth@attrill.uk | 1 year ago
0 likes

What one force does is upload a spreadsheet of dates/times/locations of reported offences and the outcome. Anybody interested could just check the list

Well, that's very interesting. Which force?, and do you have the link to this spreadsheet which would completely contradict Lancashire Constabulary's official position that they are prevented by law from even confirming that Lancashire Constabulary knows what Lancashire Constabulary did about this case where they stated in writing they were taking action?!

The important point is that the person who reported the offence woud know the details and the registration, and so would know the outcome linked to, say, the driver of 4148 VZ although no other member of the public would be able to link the punishment to the driver. This published spreadsheet seems highly improbable to me!- not least because it would be seriously breaking ranks with other forces, but if it exists I will be using it in communications with the Information Commissioner and, I hope, the Information Tribunal, so I'm hoping for a reply

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HoarseMann replied to wtjs | 1 year ago
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wtjs wrote:

Well, that's very interesting. Which force?, and do you have the link to this spreadsheet

It's Northamptonshire: https://www.northantspas.com/PAWeb/Public/Content/23

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wtjs replied to HoarseMann | 1 year ago
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Thanks. But I've now looked through a couple of massive 'concluded cases' spreadsheets and not found anything to do with offences against cyclists, such as close-passing- it's almost all speeding cases You can find a reference number for an offence against a cyclist, but I need to know from some cyclist in the Northamptonshire area who has actually managed to find 'their' offence listed and then been able to link it to an outcome. How do you do It? 

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HoarseMann replied to wtjs | 1 year ago
0 likes

wtjs wrote:

Thanks. But I've now looked through a couple of massive 'concluded cases' spreadsheets and not found anything to do with offences against cyclists, such as close-passing- it's almost all speeding cases You can find a reference number for an offence against a cyclist, but I need to know from some cyclist in the Northamptonshire area who has actually managed to find 'their' offence listed and then been able to link it to an outcome. How do you do It? 

Make sure you're looking at the 'Op Snap' link, not the 'FOI' link.

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HoarseMann replied to HoarseMann | 1 year ago
0 likes

In the 2023 March submissions file there are examples of cyclist 'witnessed' incidents:

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HoarseMann replied to HoarseMann | 1 year ago
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I will be able to tell you soon if that egress ref actually matches the reference you get when you report, as I have one submitted from early April, and you get a number assigned to the submission:

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HoarseMann replied to HoarseMann | 1 year ago
0 likes

Done a bit more digging and you can find out a bit about the outcome. If you filter the 'concluded offences' spreadsheets under the FOI tab by camera type 'dashcam', you can see all the public submitted content.

I looked at the 2nd July 2021 in the 'dashcam submissions' spreadsheet under the OpSnap tab. There were three offences marked for prosecution (processed), two of which involved cyclists. The concluded offences sheet has those three offences listed, with the time and location, two marked as attended courses and one prosecuted. It doesn't state number of points or fine, which is a shame, but is a lot more feedback than some forces give out.

(bit hard to read, but here are the snippets - bit worrying reading the reason they didn't prosecute one close pass: because the road was a bit narrow!)...

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lllnorrislll | 1 year ago
2 likes

Can't blame him - I found that if I have too much Amstel's I am Pidcock-ing like a race horse!!

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