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exdulwicher

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Everything posted by exdulwicher

  1. Why don't you ask the relevant council department? You're aware that there are hundreds of different funding streams, grants etc for councils, mostly very tightly ring-fenced, yes? What the Transport Dept spends (or doesn't spend) on streetlights or LTNs or potholes has no bearing whatever on what is available for libraries or toilets or computers or bin collections. It's not an either/or thing.
  2. That actually doesn't appeal to me at all. With Santander, I know where my favourite/routinely used docking stations are and I can reliably park or pick up a bike there. Lime, you sort of get to know the popular places where bikes are often parked/dumped but it's a complete lottery and you can end up being in a dead zone - even if that same area had half a dozen bikes in it yesterday. It's a minor point, and to some people, the convenience of being able to leave it wherever clearly appeals but I'm not a fan at all. Absolutely agree on designated parking zones. Personally I'd prefer an extension to the Santander scheme out to Dulwich/Peckham rather than 2 or 3 competing dockless systems.
  3. Again, not really. Let's suppose that heartblock is right and it misses 1 car in every 20 (so 95% accurate). For the sake of argument we'll assume that's consistent and it never over-reads. Again, for simplicity, we'll assume that the council are getting their data from this one counter and nothing else. The counter reliably tells the council that an average of 9500 vehicles are going past it every day. Of course that's not the true figure, it's missing 1 in every 20 so the actual number of cars going past it is an average of 10,000/day. Post intervention, the council, based on info from that same counter, announce there's been a 2% drop in traffic. That must mean that the counter is recording 2% less so 9310 vehicles (on average) going past it (2% less than 9500, yes?). Of course, once again, it's missing one car in every 20 so the true number of vehicles going past it is (on average) 9800. Still a 2% drop. Still the same percentage. The counter doesn't need to be 100% accurate, it only needs to be precise* and consistent. And in practice, this will be cross-referenced with other traffic data anyway. *precise is not the same as accurate Not really cos working with shit data doesn't benefit anyone. I fear you're attributing too much conspiracy theory capability to Southwark Council. Most councils aren't very good at conspiracy theories cos you need to be quite competent to run them... I've not even bothered to look at which count sites are active to be honest so I have no idea if they're getting any info from there or not.
  4. "Some reports"... Which ones? Link? And 1 in 20 is 95% accuracy which is pretty decent. If it's always counting at 95% accuracy then it's the same baseline throughout and the figures get processed anyway to account for a few % either way. If it's consistently missing 1 in 20, that's not the end of the world; you really don't need to count every single vehicle on every single road 24/7/365. What you're looking for is trends and patterns. Nothing is going to give you 100% accuracy 100% of the time but you actually don't need that.
  5. That's not technically true. If you count traffic along (say) the South Circular via whatever means you want - sensors, manual count etc - at some point you're going to find that only 20 vehicles passed your count in 15 mins. That's kind of low so there are two conclusions. One: it's a really quiet road, very little traffic. Two: it was really congested and slow moving at that time. You can therefore do a number of things to cross reference that. Look at the speed data (if available), collate counts from different times of day/week/month, video or in-person surveillance to report back on the situation, look at other info for live traffic data (Google Maps is great for this plus it has historical data and will calculate delays based on time of day to a fair degree of accuracy) and go from there. Plus you'll have historical data from various sources and be able to cross reference. Bottom line is, it's not (or it shouldn't be) based on JUST a count, it's a range of data.
  6. I didn't say it wasn't a problem, just that any errors tend to average out since a vehicle is not stationary on the tubes for long. Worst case you get a week of slightly duff data and just change the location. Generally they work out at about 90+% accurate. Normally, any readings from those are used in conjunction with other info from (eg) Vivacity sensors, manual counts, other automated counts in the vicinity, GPS / mobile phone data and so on to allow cross-referencing. I'd be more concerned that the council are apparently (from that short excerpt posted above) trying to "measure" pollution by pneumatic tube traffic counters since that's not measuring, that's inferring. OK, you can (to a certain extent) model it but honestly, the results are so variable you're often better off not even bothering. It's easier (and just as accurate) to say "too many cars = too much pollution". Pollution is highly dependent on external factors too like surrounding buildings, weather, type of traffic etc and it'll vary seasonally and of course "pollution" covers a huge range of issues like greenhouse gas, NOx, particulates and so on.
  7. Different funding streams. Councils have 15+ funding pots provided by DfT to bid for - it's a confusing mess of very specific pots of money, a lot of which is allocated according to factors of work already done by the council, ongoing work, a "deprivation weighting", the possibility of match funding from other sources and so on. There is a General Fund which is often used to backfill shortfalls from other, more specific, pots of money - for example if DfT give you £150,000 for streetlamp repair and maintenance (and yes there is a specific Streetlamp Fund) but you need £200,000, you can take £50,000 from the General Fund. Also, LL is a TfL road, not solely owned by Southwark Council so it's not entirely up to them. No they don't, they're not allowed to. CPZ, once you factor in the back-office stuff, admin etc are broadly cost-neutral. Surplus always comes from short-term parking costs (ie the on-street machines where people are paying for parking of 2hrs or so) and parking fines (which is allowed but also has to be proportional / reasonable - ie, you can't charge a parking fine of £10,000!) The provision to put a CPZ in comes from the Road Traffic Regulation Act; the RTRA 1984 is not a revenue-raising or taxing statute and does not permit the Council to use that provision to raise surplus revenue for other transport purposes funded by the General Fund. The exact wording in the RTRA that covers CPZ etc is to allow the council to "secure the expeditious, convenient and safe movement of vehicular and other traffic (including pedestrians) and the provision of suitable and adequate parking on and off the highway…" So for a CPZ, the purpose is to temporarily limit the parking supply to prevent the residential areas around schools and stations in particular from turning into Piccadilly Circus for 2hrs every morning and evening.
  8. Sorry, very poor phrasing... Scooters, you can be arrested and have your licence endorsed. Cycling - arrests are incredibly rare, there'd have to be aggravating factors. Same with endorsing a licence - I think it theory it might be possible but since there's no requirement to hold a DL to use a bike, it's pretty meaningless.
  9. Bikes, no. There's no law of cycling while under the influence although the police can stop you riding for your own safety, they can't actually arrest you for it. Scooters, yes! They're under different legislation and because it's a trial scheme and you need to sign up on the app using a driving licence, the same drink drive (drink ride?) laws apply. I know of at least one case, I'm sure there are probably others... https://www.bristolpost.co.uk/man-caught-drink-driving-e-5557035
  10. I'd happily see a ban on fireworks sold to the public and strictly limited / regulated professional displays for dates such as Bonfire Night / NYE / Diwali. There was a much older Guardian article that cropped up on Twitter earlier about the pollution too: https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2015/nov/15/fireworks-bonfire-night-diwali-pollution It's a bit rich on the one hand to be going on about climate change, air pollution etc and then go "hey everyone, let's burn the crap out of everything for a few nights!"
  11. That would depend on the T&C's / operating agreement that the council has with the e-scooter company and TfL has some oversight in it as well. More info here: https://tfl.gov.uk/modes/driving/electric-scooter-rental-trial#on-this-page-2
  12. Doesn't need to be that complicated. Dockless scooters and bikes work off GPS, they have geofenced "go-slow" zones where the speed is automatically capped at about 8mph, the parking zones are all programmed in and (in theory), if you leave one randomly lying around, the app is supposed to dock you credit for not leaving it in a designated parking spot. (I don't know whether it does or not, I'm not signed up to them although I've read the T&C's which say they will charge you more per ride if you leave them outside designated zones). Part of the trial stuff is finding out when and how people use them and moving the parking zones accordingly. If you find a host of scooters regularly being left outside the pub, then it'd be logical to put a parking zone there, which means one can be painted in properly out of the way of pedestrians. If you "install" a parking zone and its never used, it's an indication that it's in the wrong place!
  13. It's not correct or at least, your interpretation of it isn't correct (and neither was the Times article which they later admitted). Firstly, data gets "re-baselined" routinely anyway - sometimes due to revised statistical methodology, sometimes to accommodate new streams of data (good example being the info from Vivacity sensors which is far above the previous traffic count stuff), there are various reasons and none of it means the previous stuff was "wrong", just that it's been revised. The data in question is DfT and is essentially estimates based on a series of actual roadside counts of the number of vehicles passing. Main road stuff is pretty straightforward but back streets (residential streets, whatever you want to call them) are much harder; some have very little traffic anyway, some have lots so accurate averages are very hard to come by and the averages themselves hide lots of extremes. The traffic counts in those places are also extremely infrequent, you simply cannot count traffic along every single road so for many roads there's gaps of years between actual counts with the rest filled in by estimates and modelling. That fact also hides info like what has happened along that road in the 10 years since you last did an actual count there - has it become an LTN, has the land use changed (say from residential to business or vice versa), has a new development been built...? Any of those would have a very significant impact on the count. Suppose you did an actual count in 2010 and then another in 2020 and found it was 50% more or 50% less traffic - the data doesn't examine WHY that happened, it simply says "twice / half the number of cars from previous count". Cross referencing with TfL and council data (noting that the councils are responsible for most residential streets, TfL for the major roads and DfT sort of indirectly responsible at this level) and combining things like population density, walking/cycling casualty figures, schools, deprivation indices etc gives a much more complete perspective - the DfT data is simply nowhere close to enough to come to any kind of conclusion. The revised counts don't offer credible evidence that traffic *hasn't* increased, the data is simply too scarce to be used in that kind of context. It can however be combined with other info and assessed in that way. The Times did later (quietly) admit that their article made connections that couldn't be backed up. During the height of Covid, TfL produced a Strategic Neighbourhoods Analysis which showed the potential and need for LTNs, you can see it here: https://content.tfl.gov.uk/lsp-app-six-b-strategic-neighbourhoods-analysis-v1.pdf There's this recent study as well which is a meta-study of 800 peer-reviewed studies on traffic control in cities across Europe: https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/most-effective-ways-reducing-car-traffic Far and away the three most effective ways to reduce traffic are congestion charging, parking controls and modal filters (LTN's / Limited Traffic Zones, they have various names). Again, it's best to do a combination of these things, as no one control on its own is a perfect solution. In the same way that no one data set on its own is accurate... Edit because I posted the same link twice...
  14. This is very true. Can be an issue for blind/partially sighted pedestrians or for people pushing prams/buggies/wheelchairs.
  15. It's classified as micro-mobility rather than Active Travel although it does fulfil a gap for journeys too long for easy walking but not far enough to bother getting a bike out for.
  16. The two main ones: Cargo capacity. Range (not so much the range of the vehicle but the actual comfort level for the user - scooters are a pain for anything over a couple of miles, bikes you can pretty much ride all day). I've not seen a huge amount of info on the "user groups" or the demographics between e-bike uses and e-scooter users but I'm sure it's out there. Noting that the scooter hire schemes require users to be over 18 and hold a driving licence which will dramatically skew the data anyway.
  17. There's this famous clip from a few years ago of exactly that. Guy pretends to be hit, accomplice (pretending to be "just a passing stranger") steps out saying he saw everything, he'll be a witness etc. When the driver ponts out she has a dashcam, they both run off. Well worth getting a dashcam.
  18. The 12 is going between Dulwich Library and Lower Marsh Street (Waterloo) only, it won't go any further into town. I wouldn't expect full services into town to be running until the end of next week depending on how long it takes to pull up all the barriers, move piles of floral tributes etc. TfL website has a live bus services tracker, you can also put a route number in and it'll tell you what the alterations are.
  19. Pets at Home, Southwark (up on the Old Kent Road). Believe it or not, you can also order them on Amazon Prime, truly there is nothing that they can't supply!
  20. Part of me is wondering how much of it is a distraction away from the rail strikes tomorrow and Saturday, plus the TfL strikes on Friday (and/or cost-of-living, inflation etc) Part of me wonders if he really is just that thick and opened his mouth without engaging his brain, particularly as another interview given to The Times he said: "I'm not attracted to the bureaucracy of registration plates. That would go too far." And then part of me is thinking that it's as @Rockets says - the final dog-whistle / pandering to the voters during the last throes of this appalling Government. None of it is remotely workable - even DfT have continually said that bicycle registration is pointless and unworkable so Shapps is off message from his own department. However it's given the papers 2-3 days of clickbait joy. Edit to pick up on @Rockets most recent post: It would cost more (hundreds of times more) to administer than it would ever make in revenue.
  21. You can pay cheques in using the banking app now as well. Take a photo of it within the app, it clears in a couple of days (often faster than paying it in over the counter!) I guess the anecdotes of "old people" will be as varied as they come - there will undoubtedly be some who can't (or don't want to) use smartphones, there will be some that welcome the fact they no longer have to walk to a branch, stand in line etc for a job that can be done in minutes using a laptop or phone. I wonder what will become of the building...? Wine bar maybe. There are only about a dozen estate agents within easy reach of it too, maybe we need another one of those... ;-)
  22. You don't look at the number of cyclists using a route before considering segregated infrastructure. If anything, it's the exact opposite - people aren't currently using it as a cycle route because of (perceptions of) road danger - add in proper infrastructure / remove the danger and it'll be used. In the same way that you don't say "no wheelchair users are trying to access this building, we won't bother building a ramp" or "no-one is swimming across this river, we won't bother building a bridge" The infrastructure is the enabler. There have long been issues with that road anyway - people routinely speed down it, slam the brakes on for the 20mph cameras and then charge off after it. Wide road, good sightlines sort of tempts speeding. Narrowing the road using cycle lanes would solve a lot of the speed issues as well.
  23. I pretty much knew that as soon as that Guardian article was linked, Rockets would be along with more "written by Peter Walker..." You could try reading the original piece of research rather than the summary notes in the newspaper: https://www.centreforlondon.org/publication/london-low-traffic-neighbourhoods/
  24. Bill Bailey has some excellent takes on the National Anthem - he once asked why we would call upon an unspecified deity to save an unelected head of state from an untold fate. And then played a jazz version of the National Anthem. Strangely, he didn't do that one while performing at the Royal Variety Show. ;-)
  25. The alternative point being that spending a lot of money on plastic flags and a cardboard cutout of the Queen for a one-off weekend may not be the wisest investment - especially if people are going to be up in town watching or gone on holiday. I get the "looking smart" and "keeping the place tidy" things absolutely. I just don't necessarily get the need to festoon everything in flags.
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