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25 Jan 2024

With more than 500 cycle businesses having now signed up to its campaign for change to the Cycle to Work scheme, a delegation from the Association of Cycle Traders has met with All Party...

24 Jan 2024

The Office for Product Safety and Standards (OPSS) is taking enforcement action and warning consumers about a brand of e-bike battery – UPP – that has been linked to a number of...

16 Jan 2024

Walton Street Cycles, one of Oxford’s oldest bike shops, has been trading in the city since 1975.
 

16 Jan 2024

ACT Gold Member ICE Trikes has announced a new partnership announcement with British Cycling’s Limitless disability and para-cycling programme. This partnership will help to support the...

15 Jan 2024

An interesting article has appeared in Forbes reflecting many of the issues that ACT members will be experiencing – the challenges and opportunities that are currently...

15 Jan 2024

The Guardian has reported that ministers decided to prioritise driving over active travel because of worries about “15-minute cities”.

15 Jan 2024

Go Outdoors, which operates 75 stores across the UK, has announced an apprenticeship scheme involving Cytech training with the aim of addressing what it terms a nationwide shortage of...

3 Jan 2024

gogeta, the new tax-free cycling platform that offers a better deal for retailers and bigger savings for customers, has published further details of its new Flexi Voucher, an industry first...

3 Jan 2024

Bike for Good, the Glasgow-based cycling charity and social enterprise, which delivers Cytech training in Scotland, has announced a Young Bike Mechanic Programme designed to create opportunities...

3 Jan 2024

With the UK economy set to tread water in 2024, the KPMG/RetailNext Retail Think Tank (RTT), an independent board of retail experts, expects this will impact growth within the retail sector.

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Cycling UK urge government to undertake urgent review of road traffic laws

Posted on in Cycles News

Cycling UK has launched a campaign to persuade the Government to undertake an urgent review of road traffic laws.

The national charity believes an increasing number of families whose loved ones have been killed or seriously injured on Britain's roads are suffering injustices, but significant improvements could be made by addressing three key areas:

  • Simplifying and improving the legal definitions of unsafe driving behaviour
  • Increasing the use of driving disqualifications and closing the ‘exceptional hardship' loophole
  • Increasing the current six month maximum prison sentence for drivers who fail to stop

The campaign is being supported by Brake, the road safety charity, and RoadPeace, the national charity for road crash victims.

cycling ukDuncan Dollimore, Head of Campaigns, said: "Every death or serious injury is a tragedy but too often families are also being let down by loopholes and a legal system that victims and bereaved relatives don't think treats road crime seriously.

"Road crime is real crime, and today we're calling on the Government to take action and carry out the full review of road traffic offences, as it promised four years ago."

Two prominent cases among many others highlight the need for a review:

  • In 2015, cyclist Lee Martin was killed by driver Christopher Gard who had been texting behind the wheel of his van. He had been convicted on six previous occasions of using his phone while driver but was allowed to keep his licence
  • In 2014, Michael Mason died after he was hit from behind by a driver on Regent Street in London. The driver claimed she didn't see him. After the police declined to charge her, a private prosecution was brought for causing death by careless driving, in a case that demonstrates the uncertainty in the law around what amounts to careless driving, what's dangerous, and what's treated merely as a mistake.

Earlier this month, the Department for Transport announced it was opening a consultation into new offences of causing death by careless or serious cycling.

It follows the case of cyclist Charlie Alliston who was jailed for 18 months in September 2017 for knocking over and killing 44-year-old Kim Briggs as he cycled through east London on a bike with no front brakes.

Alliston, 20, was cleared of manslaughter but found guilty of causing bodily harm by "wanton and furious driving", a crime under the 1861 Offences Against the Person Act. He was sentenced to eighteen months in prison.

But Cycling UK believes the review of cycling legislation is merely tinkering around the edges of road safety and that the Government should use the opportunity to fulfil its commitment to a wider review, promised in 2014.

Mr Dollimore said: "Since the Government made that promise, it's estimated that over 1,800 pedestrians have died on Britain's roads.

"In 2016, the last full year we have full casualty figures for, 445 pedestrians died in collisions with motor vehicles, and three in collisions with cyclists, but the Government plan to review cycling offences and ignore the main cause of road danger.

"This is a serious issue being overlooked by the Government, especially when you consider that in the last ten years 99.4% of all pedestrian deaths involved a motor vehicle.

"It's time the Government took this problem seriously and ended the injustice suffered by far too many families who are being let down by the system."

Cycling UK has released a video to coincide with the launch of its campaign, and is urging as many people as possible to take action by following its campaign action.

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