Jump to content

LTN Discussion


Administrator

Recommended Posts

Malumbu - your nirvana doesn't exist I am afraid so, in the meantime, we should probably avoid measures that don't actually make the problem worse by increaseing congestion and pollution so maybe a time for a rethink on LTNs as they seem to be roundly failing.


In addition to the One Dulwich update I would suggest people also complain about the abuse and bullying of TFL staff by council representatives/councillors - it needs to be made a matter of public record, investigated and action taken against those who were responsible for it and we need to hear from the council on what steps are being taken to ensure TFL staff can work without being abused and reduced to tears - it's utterly uncalled for.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Wow...if this is correct this is the most damning evidence we have seen...but probably validates what a lot of us have been saying for a long time about the real impact of LTNs....



More evidence is emerging that LTNs are not cutting traffic – one of the main reasons for imposing them. According to an investigation by the Times, Department for Transport (DfT) figures show that vehicle miles driven rose by an average of 11.4% in the ten inner London boroughs that introduced LTNs in 2020. By contrast, in the two inner London boroughs that didn’t introduce LTNs, vehicle miles driven rose by an average of only 8.9%.


(In Southwark, which has ten LTNs, vehicle miles driven rose by 13% between 2020 and 2021.)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Wow...if this is correct this is the most damning evidence we have seen...but probably validates what a lot of us have been saying for a long time about the real impact of LTNs....


More evidence is emerging that LTNs are not cutting traffic – one of the main reasons for imposing them. According to an investigation by the Times, Department for Transport (DfT) figures show that vehicle miles driven rose by an average of 11.4% in the ten inner London boroughs that introduced LTNs in 2020. By contrast, in the two inner London boroughs that didn’t introduce LTNs, vehicle miles driven rose by an average of only 8.9%.


(In Southwark, which has ten LTNs, vehicle miles driven rose by 13% between 2020 and 2021.)

 

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...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Well, just wait for labour to win general election - they will ban all vehicles and pedestrians full stop. No buses, no ambulances, no delivery lorries. It will only be cyclists and eScooters :) Edited by ab29
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Introducing the LTN, denying its negative impact on those living outside of the closed roads, data manipulation, ignoring results of the consultation, bulling TfL staff for telling the truth, pandering to cycling lobby, pursuing Dulwich village utopia - Southwark council has moved into a parallel universe, the La La Land, where everyone cycles everywhere,


Ambulances, social care workers, NHS, blue badge holders, buses, fire brigades, pavements - none of these is needed because there is no illness, no old age, no fire, no pedestrians - everyone cycles and lives happily ever after in La La Land.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Come on, they need to tell us which council representative/s it was that abused TFL staff.....looks like they are trying to sweep it under the carpet...these are elected officials representing constituents and are behaving awfully.


https://southwarknews.co.uk/news/transport/tfl-staff-left-upset-and-in-tears-by-abusive-southwark-council-staff-in-meeting-about-dulwich-village-ltn/

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Yeah but who cares?

People who voted Southwark labour? - No.

People living outside of LTN / off-main roads? No.

Southwark labour Cllrs - Hell no. Not for many years to come (as long as they get their salaries). Have they ever cared ? I do not think so

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Last chance to object – deadline 20 November


If you haven’t already done so, please object to Southwark’s plans for the Dulwich Village junction. Not only do the proposals block blue badge holders, NHS workers and carers, but Southwark’s surprise closure of Turney Road would displace traffic over a wide area. See Object to junction plans — One Dulwich and forward the link to friends, family and neighbours – there is just a week left to register your views.


Our open letter to the Leader of the Council


Southwark’s Labour manifesto promised that Labour would work with TfL to reduce traffic on main roads and make bus journeys quicker and more reliable. The Dulwich LTNs have had the opposite effect. In our open letter, we ask Cllr Kieron Williams – who is now on the board of TfL – to explain. Add your voice to ours by emailing [email protected].


Our open letter to our MP Helen Hayes


On Monday 14 November, Andy Carter, MP for Warrington South, is leading an urgent debate on LTNs in Parliament because 87% of residents affected by closures in his constituency want them scrapped. In our open letter, we are asking our MP Helen Hayes to join the debate and support Andy Carter’s call for LTNs to be taken out if local people don’t want them – reminding her that the majority has always been against the closures in Dulwich. Contact Helen by emailing [email protected].

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I wonder if it's better not to object at this point.


Presumably the only logic to closing Turney Road is to try to decrease traffic on Croxted Road.


That traffic will have to go elsewhere and it is likely to be Half Moon lane, Dulwich Village and the South circular.


Let's see what TFL have to say about the LTN's when teh South Circular is clogged up all day long.


Closing yet another road to disperse traffic from somewhere else might be the final nail in the coffin of this hair-brained game of whack-a-mole.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

What really worries me is that they want to close off an entire Dulwivh Village plus and push all traffic onto the LL and South Circular. The latter has never been as congested as it is now.


Obviously the council will ignore the outcome of the consultation as they've done previously because they don't care. Not sure how you get your arguments through to someone who is blinded by ideology.

Edited by ab29
Link to comment
Share on other sites

The squeals of pain of the posh Dulwich piglets is music to their ears - it demonstrates to their main 'constituency' that they are 'doing something' about all their 'climate issues' whilst hurting only those who are anyway most hated in most of Southwark - a win:win for them. Even if they lost Dulwich Village in 3 years time, they would still rule the roost. A price worth paying.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Unless you live on East Dulwich Grove of course (the increases there are catastrophic and as a direct consequence of the closures)...and remember we were promised the LTNs would reduce traffic for all across the area and that objective has clearly not been achieved. And each time they update the dashboard it gets worse with more roads turning orange and red.....
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • But you have to assess whether these persistent drivers are creating more safety issues than diverting emergency vehicles on a longer route and clearly they are not. The fact members of the pro-closure lobby have built their argument on this actually shows how desperate, some would say selfish, they are to have the junction closed and just the way they want it. And unfortunately they seem to have the council over a barrel on something as the council weakly concedes to their position without hesitation.
    • A song thrush visited my back garden today. I watched as it smashed open a snail by whacking it against the patio.
    • I have no doubt that local people are genuinely involved (and personally can understand their not wanting to publicise their involvement). That said the proliferation of One groups across London and the degree of co-ordination suggests it is more than just a local grassroots group. I’m not really that interested, except that many of their supporters do bang on about transparency and accountability. I would be interested in the substance of their latest missive. Who has been pressurising the emergency services and how? Who genuinely believes that people are partially covering their plates and driving through due to inadequate signage? Sounds a little ridiculous / desperate. It feels like it may be time for them to start coming to terms with the changes tbh.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...