Wednesday 23 January 2019

Government in serious danger of missing cycling and walking targets, saying leading charities

23 January 2019
Photo of family walking on cycling and walking path, National Cycle Network

The Government is in serious danger of missing its targets to increase levels of cycling and walking in England unless there is an increase in funding, three leading cycling and walking charities said today.

Giving evidence to the House of Commons Transport Committee inquiry into Active Travel, Cycling UK, Sustrans and Living Streets urged the Government to make a significant increase in investment in active travel to address a public health crisis.

The Government’s Cycling and Walking Investment Strategy (CWIS), published in 2016, sets out to double the number of cycling trips by 2025, with similar aims to increase walking, particularly for school journeys.

However, in a safety review document to support the strategy, published last November the Department for Transport admitted its current policy would only see cycling increase by a third over the next six years.

“  We welcome the UK Government’s work on walking and cycling in England to date. The Government now needs to up its game on the low cycling levels and the decreasing numbers of children walking to school. ”

- Rachel White, Senior Policy and Political Advisor, Sustrans

The Government has set an ambition in the CWIS of getting 55% of primary school children walking to school by 2025. This is an important recognition of the benefits of getting children walking to school. However, last year the figure dropped from 53% to 51%.

The charities recognise Transport Minister Jesse Norman’s push to strengthen the Government’s Cycling and Walking Investment Strategy; but a very significant funding boost is still needed if the Government’s ambition, for walking and cycling to become the normal choices for short journeys, is to be realised.

Only 2% of total transport spending is on cycling and walking. Cycling UK, Living Streets and Sustrans say this should rise to at least 5% by 2020, and 10% by 2024, with a large proportion of this allocated to support local authorities’ plans to increase cycling and walking.

Without this increase in funding and more cross-departmental working, the role of cycling and walking as outlined in the Government’s strategies to address the obesity epidemic and air pollution will be limited.

“ Enabling more people to walk and cycle everyday journeys can hugely improve our health, air quality, traffic congestion and road safety. The government need to invest to make this happen. ”

- Joe Irvin, Chief Executive of Living Streets

Roger Geffen, Cycling UK’s policy director, who gave evidence to the committee said:

‘Cycling is a miracle pill that can cure a lot of the ills this Government is facing with air pollution and the physical health problems associated with inactivity.

'However, by its own admission, the Government is not going to meet its own modest targets to double cycling, which Cycling UK believes is due to inadequate funding. Cycling UK believes Government should rebalance its spending to local solutions to car dependence.

'It’s not the people currently cycling who will benefit from more funding, but rather those who feel forced to drive those short distances to school, work or the shops due to having no suitable alternative.’

Joe Irvin, Chief Executive of Living Streets said:

'Enabling more people to walk and cycle everyday journeys can hugely improve our health, air quality, traffic congestion and road safety. The government need to invest to make this happen.

'In particular, the government needs to encourage and enable more children to walk to school, or it will fail to meet its own target of 55% of primary school children walking to school by 2025.’

Rachel White, Senior Policy and Political Advisor for Sustrans, the walking and cycling charity said:

'We welcome the UK Government’s work on walking and cycling in England to date. The Government now needs to up its game on the low cycling levels and the decreasing numbers of children walking to school.

'Physical inactivity, air pollution, climate change and struggling high streets can all be reduced through the provision of high-quality infrastructure such as a network of protected cycle lanes and pedestrianisation of our shopping centres.

This requires sustained, long-term investment in cycling and walking but we need real cross-departmental leadership and investment now to make the change. Additionally, any increase in funding nationally must be matched with a commitment to delivery at a local level.’

Cycling UK and Living Streets are running a joint campaign, supported by Sustrans, urging the Government to allocate more funding to authorities devising plans to encourage cycling and walking.

For more information contact Anna Galandzij in the Sustrans Press Office on 07910 559739

from News https://www.sustrans.org.uk/news/government-serious-danger-missing-cycling-and-walking-targets-saying-leading-charities
via IFTTT

source https://bondedmulchspecification.tumblr.com/post/182244829234

No comments:

Post a Comment

Bonded Mulch Specification

-Several play area surfaces are constructed with bonded rubber bark, that is a product made by using recycled tyres. The truck tyres are cr...