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Congestion charge questions
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Congestion charge questions
Colum Mylod wrote: The extension will include zone 2 so your fears of an extension too far are well grounded. Impossible to have an extension too far. IMHO the boundary for the congestion charge should be the M25, with a minimum charge of £50. [Ken's] evil brain has postulated widening to the Circulars... If I had any doubts about voting for Ken next time, those doubts have now been erased. Patrick |
Congestion charge questions
On Wed, 4 Oct 2006 21:38:43 +0100, Tom Anderson
wrote: On Wed, 4 Oct 2006, Colum Mylod wrote: Oh don't worry, your local shops will be wiped out but you'll have uncharged access to BrentX and the "Westfield" aka White City complex. So that's all right then. And Oxford Street can decline to cater for tourists, tram or no tram. So Colum, how many people get to Oxford Street by car, then? No hard numbers but the report (looking for it) favouring the tram and an improvement to Oxford St did state the White City complex would pull the west/north of London big spenders away from the street. No details were given if they were users of car parks nearby or how they got there. -- Old anti-spam address cmylod at despammed dot com appears broke So back to cmylod at bigfoot dot com |
Congestion charge questions
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Congestion charge questions
Colum Mylod wrote: On 4 Oct 2006 07:04:01 -0700, "Earl Purple" wrote: Does the route then follow Barlby Road (not even a classified road) or does it head along the B412 (St Quintin Avenue, St Marks Road and Cambridge Gardens) up to Ladbroke Grove. Most of these are fairly narrow residential streets. The boundary will be formed by the railway line that crosses over North Pole Road so Barlby Road etc will be inside and chargeable (but the cameras are at NPole Rd and at the top of Ladbroke Grove where the roundabout leads to Sainsbury's, allowing free access to the big shop). Oddly the camera before that rbt seems to cover entrance but not exit. The side streets bordering Wood Lane will be uncharged but residents there will have access to the 90% discount. But for how far? What about residents around Du Cane Road etc. that might normally use that Sainsbury's. They would no longer be able to use North Pole Road / Barlby Road but would have to divert all the way around up Scrubs Lane, right onto Harrow Road then right again into Ladbroke Grove. Now won't that cause more congestion rather than reduce it? In that neck of the woods almost all of K&C is inside except the bits to the south of the Harrow Road towards Sainsbos. My guess is that the few pinch points were chosen as the edge with Sainos arguing successfully for exemption. The xM41 and Westway will not be covered, which could be interesting if the new shopping centre gains a few new roads into K&C territory. The thing is that I think many people in London don't object to the congestion charge in the centre so much because there is fairly good public transport to the centre - after all the underground lines do all go to the centre of London. Also that zone has few residents, the initial CC affected few ordinary bods. The extended one will scalp more peeps. The buses are better for the investment they've received. There are quite a few mainly residential areas in the current CC zone: - Most of what is North of Clerkenwell Road. They might have made the CC zone instead go along Kings Cross Road / Farringdon Road up to the junction of Clerkenwell Road then along that road and Old Street instead of Pentonville Road / City Road. - Most of Lambeth. Thus the zone could have gone up Albert Embankment then along Lambeth Road. The issues are not so much with those in the zone but with those just outside who now have to pay the full charge to access what is inside. Perhaps the solution is to have multiple charging zones, give residents totally free access to their own zone and any immediate neighbouring one, thus you have to cross through 2 zone boundaries before you have to pay. An example of a facility across the boundary is the Brunswick Shopping Centre around Marchmont Street, WC1. This is just inside and used to have (don't know if it's still there) a big supermarket. Those who lived in Somers Town would probably have used it. Now those who live in Somers Town would probably go up to the Sainsbury's in Camden or the Morrison's in Chalk Farm instead. I'd like to mention the system I saw in Madrid: bodies on the ground enforcing local access only for locals and limited deliveries - but there's no profit in that scheme is there? Not sure I like the idea either. Taking away people's freedom. Not saying that people shouldn't have to pay to drive in, but it should still be an option. The CC is about money: Capita fill their boots and some sloshes to Ken. It is not a user friendly setup either: no lights to say the zone is active, no easy way to pay automatically after the event, in fact it appears to be designed to make money from non-payment. And an open charter for plate cloning or plain reregistering of the car in Poland or Latvia. For Capita it might be. For the point of view of Tfl, the money is redistributed - Ken does not directly pocket any of it himself. (Whilst I have some reservations about Ken on many issues, I don't think he's a thief). I would rather pay a reasonable amount to have a smooth journey than pay nothing but sit for hours in traffic. After all, time is money. My own solution, albeit probably not too practical, would be to build some more decent by-passes and charge for using them. The toll would not be excessive, but even 50p a day for 60,000 users, say, would raise £30,000 a day. Well it's fine, they can just make every road in London private flats and have no facilities. More and more facilities are being replaced with private flats anyway. Hardly surprising then that to access facilities you can no longer find any in walking distance and have to get into your car... London is quite poor for local walkable facilities. I've lived in places with far more on the ground locally (and much safer bike lanes than mere blobs of paint) but London is focused on cars + shopping areas. It's all based on profit and who will make the highest bid. The big property developers can easily outbid anyone else. Suburban London is a very popular place to live. |
Congestion charge questions
On Thu, 5 Oct 2006, Earl Purple wrote:
The issues are not so much with those in the zone but with those just outside who now have to pay the full charge to access what is inside. Perhaps the solution is to have multiple charging zones, give residents totally free access to their own zone and any immediate neighbouring one, thus you have to cross through 2 zone boundaries before you have to pay. Makes sense - although having a you-count-as-residents neutral zone around a charging zone has much the same effect. An example of a facility across the boundary is the Brunswick Shopping Centre around Marchmont Street, WC1. This is just inside and used to have (don't know if it's still there) a big supermarket. There is - it recently reopened as a Waitrose. I bought a couple of bottles of Bordeaux blanc there only this week. Those who lived in Somers Town would probably have used it. Now those who live in Somers Town would probably go up to the Sainsbury's in Camden or the Morrison's in Chalk Farm instead. You're kidding, right? It's a straightforward walk, or a few minutes on a bus. Driving there from Somers Town would be insane, even without the charge. I'd like to mention the system I saw in Madrid: bodies on the ground enforcing local access only for locals and limited deliveries - but there's no profit in that scheme is there? Not sure I like the idea either. Taking away people's freedom. Sigh. Taking away one set of people's freedom to drive their cars wherever they like, and bringing a new freedom to walk to another, larger, set of people. I'd be in favour of that. tom -- see im down wid yo sci fi crew |
Congestion charge questions
On Thu, 5 Oct 2006, Colum Mylod wrote:
On 5 Oct 2006 01:07:55 -0700, wrote: Colum Mylod wrote: The extension will include zone 2 so your fears of an extension too far are well grounded. Impossible to have an extension too far. IMHO the boundary for the congestion charge should be the M25, with a minimum charge of £50. Offer that one up in a democratic system and see how it flies. I'd vote for it. Although ideally the zone would stop just beyond my house - otherwise it makes it more likely that people from outside will drive in! It could happen but only under a dictator. I love the way that you equate your preferencs with the will of the majority. tom -- see im down wid yo sci fi crew |
Congestion charge questions
On Thu, 5 Oct 2006, Colum Mylod wrote:
On Wed, 4 Oct 2006 21:38:43 +0100, Tom Anderson wrote: On Wed, 4 Oct 2006, Colum Mylod wrote: Oh don't worry, your local shops will be wiped out but you'll have uncharged access to BrentX and the "Westfield" aka White City complex. So that's all right then. And Oxford Street can decline to cater for tourists, tram or no tram. So Colum, how many people get to Oxford Street by car, then? No hard numbers Right. but the report (looking for it) favouring the tram and an improvement to Oxford St did state the White City complex would pull the west/north of London big spenders away from the street. No details were given if they were users of car parks nearby or how they got there. Which has nothing whatsoever to do with car use, then. tom -- see im down wid yo sci fi crew |
Congestion charge questions
Tom Anderson wrote: On Thu, 5 Oct 2006, Earl Purple wrote: The issues are not so much with those in the zone but with those just outside who now have to pay the full charge to access what is inside. Perhaps the solution is to have multiple charging zones, give residents totally free access to their own zone and any immediate neighbouring one, thus you have to cross through 2 zone boundaries before you have to pay. Makes sense - although having a you-count-as-residents neutral zone around a charging zone has much the same effect. Not quite. If a resident "just outside" is given the privelege of going into the whole zone, then they can now start driving right across it, as would be the case for any residents of Notting Hill, who were previously outside of the zone but now having been pulled inside it may be more inclined to use their cars even when going into the old zone. An example of a facility across the boundary is the Brunswick Shopping Centre around Marchmont Street, WC1. This is just inside and used to have (don't know if it's still there) a big supermarket. There is - it recently reopened as a Waitrose. I bought a couple of bottles of Bordeaux blanc there only this week. Those who lived in Somers Town would probably have used it. Now those who live in Somers Town would probably go up to the Sainsbury's in Camden or the Morrison's in Chalk Farm instead. You're kidding, right? It's a straightforward walk, or a few minutes on a bus. Driving there from Somers Town would be insane, even without the charge. Yes but depends on how much you want to buy. For a big shopping trip, it may be a big problem carrying it all home on the bus. Yes, you can get home-delivery if they happen to have everything that they stock listed on the website. I'd like to mention the system I saw in Madrid: bodies on the ground enforcing local access only for locals and limited deliveries - but there's no profit in that scheme is there? Not sure I like the idea either. Taking away people's freedom. Sigh. Taking away one set of people's freedom to drive their cars wherever they like, and bringing a new freedom to walk to another, larger, set of people. I'd be in favour of that. Actually I'd be in favour of having the road in which I live as a through road for the residents only. That means having a gate somewhere blocking through access for most vehicles but given residents a means to open it. Emergency services would also have a device to open such gates. Residents riding in cabs could open it for the cab driver. Delivery vans would generally not have through access unless a resident opened it for them. There could be certain times at which the gate is open anyway and there would be a gap for cyclists at all times. Of course that would also mean I would not be able to use other rat-runs if they put up similar schemes. Some pedestrianised areas have hours during which delivery vehicles are allowed access. |
Congestion charge questions
Tom Anderson wrote: So Colum, how many people get to Oxford Street by car, then? Many did before the congestion charge zone was brought in. There is a car-park at Cavendish Square and meters on many of the side roads. I did notice in February 2003 how much easier it became to find a meter. At that point in time the parking rate was only £3 an hour. If there are 2 people going in and doing a fair amount of shopping it is not a bad option. I still use car to get to Oxford Street to shop on bank holidays when parking is free and there is no congestion charge. |
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