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There's barely a scrap of land that hasn't got a block of flats being built on it. More flats means more people which means more journeys which means more pollution. It's not rocket science.
However, local authorities see the coins dropping into their laps, the s106's that they can extort from developers and puffed-up self-important "cabinet members" sitting in town halls think they are doing a good job.
Take the cars off the road? How will people get to work? Public transport is uncomfortably packed in the rush hours. That little nugget of information seems not to have penetrated the thick skulls of those in the mayor's office . Pavements are littered with discarded bikes dumped there by thoughtless morons.
The air in tube stations which are not on the surface is far worse than the air in the street, but you can make money from ULEZ and fixing the problem of tube pollutiob will cost money.
Khan is only the mayor for good things. Anything else is someone else's fault. And after his term as mayor ends, may it be soon, he's got his eye on succeeding Starmer as Labour leader. Because he's made London such a nice place to live.
Problem up here is public transport doesn’t really work. Trains are expensive and often cancelled. To be fair none were cancelled on Friday. I know that because they were having one of their regular strikes.
The Metrolink is not particularly extensive and pretty slow. The cheapskates built it above ground by mistake.
Cycle lanes usually last about 100m and are generally just painted on the pavement. It rains nearly everyday so cycling is a soggy afair.
I’m lucky in that I’m close enough to work to be able to cycle or walk and my car is ULEZ compliant. But for many is will be chaos.
Our public transport is terrible.
While it's a revolving door between rumour-mongers, newsfeeders and PR execs into government and back, they will continue to sucessfully manage the messaging over cosy kitchen suppers.
Jokes aside, they really should have put in an extended phase in, especially for businesses and tradesmen who don't have a public transport alternative.
And yeah it's a cash grab. Same as when they extended the congestion charging zone (longer hours & weekends) after lockdowns which had nothing to do with congestion.
Re London being too big, yes. I reckon that parliament and the Civil service could/should move to Manchester and change the national power dynamic. But this country is trapped in traditional thinking and I don’t see an end to it soon.
If you want less people in cars then having government mandates on non-essential office work being remote 80% of the time will also affect drivers and commuting. I see trends slowly sliding back to 3 days a week in the office in alot of places of work. You can't decentralise if people can't work remotely.
Being devil's advocate rather than opinionated here, but ...
1 so it's OK to seriously f*ck over thousands of families economically to achieve this?
2 If your kid is badly asthmatic maybe do everything within your power to live in a clean air area rather than live in London and expect the world to revolve around you. (I accept that it's not possible for everyone)
3 This:
If it's really about clean air, why allow any polluting cars in??
I think that this is just another tax on London's poorest people.
The charge should be about encouraging desired behaviour. However, it needs to be matched by more investment in making it safe to cycle, and easier to take public transport (which isn't bad in London overall).
It wasn't Khan's idea, and he's gone for less of an expansion than the Tories ordered.
My grandmother always said 'never trust a man with small sloping shoulders ' ........so true.
I'm not locked in here with you, you are locked in here with me.
2. You've already answered your own point
3. It's about dissuading people so they reduce their polluting journeys, and by the fuss people are giving it clearly works. By not going for an absolute ban its an admission that people actually need to make some journeys.
All this going on about a £12.50 charge for a small majority of people is laughable when London is the most expensive place to park in the UK
Don't think of it as £12.50 a day, work out the annual cost, divide it by the Lindon living wage and then work out how many extra hours that person has to work to be in exactly the same position they were before Khan's charge.
Those that can afford it will pay it, assuming they don't already have a ULEZ compliant vehicle. Those that don't have a ULEZ compliant vehicle are being screwed both ways. They are being charged £12.50 per day to use their car and any possibility of changing it for a ULEZ compliant car is severely compromised by having to pay £12.50 a day, so they are essentially locked in to paying £12.50 per day for the foreseeable future in many cases.
If there's 365 days in the year, 104 of them are weekend days, 8 are bank holidays and say 25 are annual leave then that's still 228 days per year that one must pay £12.50 per day, assuming the car is used for commuting to work, as a typical example.
That's £2,850 per year which could be put towards a ULEZ compliant vehicle, and depending on a person's standards, could be all that is needed to buy a ULEZ compliant vehicle outright. Many older cars are ULEZ compliant (I drive one) and my two and half litre gas guzzling inline six of a barge can be bought for less than £2,000 in today's market - many other older ULEZ compliant hatchbacks can be had for a lot less.
The other problem I have with ULEZ is that it's the thin end of the wedge. There will be many people swapping their cars for something that is ULEZ compliant today, but when the various local authorities who run ULEZ charging schemes need more money you can bet your last penny that the ULEZ compliance criteria will be revisited and revised, and all of a sudden all those poor people who thought they'd cleared the final hurdle will be back at square one with a ULEZ non-compliant car again and find themselves paying the charge on top of possibly a bank loan taken out to pay for their used-to-be ULEZ compliant car.
As already stated, if this was France, everything would be on fire.
I meant April. ~ Simon Weir
Bit of trading feedback here.
Oh wait a minute, ULEZ means I can't drive my vehicle in London without paying?. Well, what about the economically disadvantaged?
Actually, there is a whole bunch of stuff we could do to help people on lower incomes that doesn't involve allowing vehicles to further pollute London's air, so please can we just stop pretending that the anti-ULEZ campaign is about helping the poor.
I'm not locked in here with you, you are locked in here with me.
They simply ban vehicles that don't meet the required emission standards from the zones, with fines far greater than £12.50 for non-compliant vehicles.
The other point that everybody overlooks is that those who can afford it already have very modern/newish cars .Some clients just moved from Hertfordshire to Primrose Hill now that their house is too big and all 3 kids have married/left home ...first thing they did was buy a Porsche Taycan and an Audi Q8 electric thing .........it's not hurting them but what about my brother-in-law who has a little contract decorating business ......2 old vans and all their work is in London suburbs ......he can just about afford to feed his family.
At the very least commercial vehicles ( for whom public transport /bikes/ walking is not an option ) should be registered exempt.
Just a small aside, when you say "everyone overlooks" have you done the research for this or was it just a piece of hyperbole?
I'm not locked in here with you, you are locked in here with me.
The ability and necessary technology already exists to dramatically reduce the number of private car journeys every day, not just in London, but all over the country and much of the world.
If it was about air quality, it would happen.
I meant April. ~ Simon Weir
Bit of trading feedback here.