New Forest MPs have once again called for statutory regulation of sportives — and it appears that cycle sports's national governing body, British Cycling, agrees.
The New Forest National Park Authority (NFNPA) yesterday approved a cycling events framework that includes a 1000-rider limit on rides in the forest. Representatives of cycling bodies strongly opposed this move, and the only event organiser to have run events on this scale in the park has said he will not comply.
Faced with that opposition New Forest East MP Julian Lewis and fellow Tory Desmond Swayne, MP for New Forest West, say they will press for legal restrictions on sportives.
Mr Swayne told the Southern Daily Echo: "The charter is a step in the right direction but it’s voluntary.
“A limit on numbers is an important element. That is why we will continue to try to get enforceable regulations.”
The call for legal regulation of sportives has support from an unexpected corner: British Cycling.
A British Cycling spokesman said that an "arbitrary cap on rider numbers wouldn’t work" but the organisation believes regulation and calendar coordination of sportives "needs to be urgently addressed."
He said: "We’re asking the government to take action to ensure that all formal cycling events on the public highway are better co-ordinated and regulated through an agreed process. Unlike road races, sportives sit outside of any formal regulation process and given the high volume of events and participants it is a serious cause for concern."
But according to the Echo, Hampshire county councillor David Harrison, Lib-Dem representative for the New Forest ward of Totton, told yesterday's NFNPA meeting there was “zero chance” of the Government introducing new laws to regulate mass cycle rides.
He said: “Let’s stop victimising cyclists.
“To paint them all as anti-social menaces just plays into the hands of a small minority of local people who have developed a visceral hatred of anyone wearing Lycra.
“Recent large-scale cycling events have taken place with barely a problem. They involved hundreds of people visiting the area, enjoying themselves, benefiting the economy and raising thousands of pounds for charitable causes.
“I want the organisers to be around the table when events are planned. I want co-operation, not confrontation.”
Cycling charity CTC also sees no need for regulation. Sam Jones, CTC Campaigns Coordinator said: "There is a need to manage cycle events in honeypot locations such as the New Forest but we remained unconvinced that there is a need for regulation. We believe there needs to be a flexibility in approach which can work in different circumstances."
“Arbitrary caps based on no evidence, like the New Forest now has, serve no purpose but to infuriate cyclists and inflame conflict. A ‘catch-all cap’ like this, can never be anything more than discriminatory.
“There is a case to be made for rider limits in mass events, but these should be light touch and limited to known areas of conflict. So much depends on what is happening on any route on that day. Therefore any limitations should be based on a case by case assessment that takes into account safety and potential for disruption in the local area. This is what we called for in the Charter, and this is what was ignored.
“Yesterday we saw the Government take a historic step towards achieving David Cameron’s ‘cycling revolution’, while the New Forest authorities took a massive step backwards.”
We've requested clarification of British Cycling's position, in case it gets interpreted as exploiting the situation in order to grab the legal authority to run a regulatory system for sportives. Meanwhile, here's the full statement.
“An arbitrary cap on rider numbers wouldn’t work because it doesn’t deal with the underlying issue - the lack of regulation and calendar coordination of sportives, which is a serious concern that needs to be urgently addressed.
“The growth in sportives has been unprecedented, British Cycling has seen a 240% increase in the number of registered events in the last five years. This is why we’re asking the government to take action to ensure that all formal cycling events on the public highway are better co-ordinated and regulated through an agreed process. Unlike road races, sportives sit outside of any formal regulation process and given the high volume of events and participants it is a serious cause for concern.
“It is important that we introduce measures to reduce the risk of highway based cycling events taking place on the same day and in the same area, as well as ensuring that events do not conflict with other forms of highway based activity. Regulatory measures should also improve event standards and provide an environment where both competitive and non-competitive events can run in harmony to meet increased demand. Improved calendar coordination should also result in less disruption in some of those communities that continue to experience problems.
“Mass participation cycling events should be embraced as they are hugely beneficial to the local economy and provide tremendous health benefits to participants, although we fully understand that local residents and road users require clarity and awareness of road cycling events in their local area.”
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51 comments
Calendar coordination should happen but surely any event organiser would look into that anyway? Races and sportives mixing has got to be a bad idea obvious to anyone.
Obviously this could be done without statutory regulation i saw a comment above about BC requiring riders to wear helmets which doesn't seem the most outrageous rule. What are they doing that's preventing organisers registering with them other than that? The insurance costs are higher but some of the cheapest sportives on BC are around £16 so not that expensive.
I don't get it? Are sportive organisers puting profit before common sense especially the larger events? Most of the smaller ones are organised by clubs or for the love and profit isn't the motive.
I do think that Sportives should be better coordinated - it seems as though there is a sportive going up box hill every other weekend, and that is frankly too much.
So - who to regulate? Surly a pro-bike organization such as BC are going to be better than the New Forest lot?
Why should it be a cycling organisation though? If a local motorbike club holds an event, which co-incidentally has overlapped quite frequently with HONC, what is achieved by a cycling only organisation being in control?
Isn't this where SAGs and the like come in???? Get the interested parties in a room and talk?
There's cyclists going up box hill every day of the week - not to mention motorists. What's 'too much' ?
The M25 is frequently at a standstill at peak commute time. Is that 'too much' or something else ?
Sympathy with you guys in The South, although I can't help thinking that there are probably less popular and easily accesible sportives that are keeping their heads down in The South whilst those over-hyping New Forest argument generate negative publicity for all sportives.
Try this - not that many entrants and very few cars:
http://www.handsonevents.co.uk/?page_id=343
or practically anywhere else that isn't the New Forest...
1,000 official entrants and 20,000 day visitors (on bikes) ... now there's an idea.
I lost all faith in BC when they started backing bids for the Grand depart.
From the BC statement: "given the high volume of events and participants it is a serious cause for concern."
Why is it a serious cause for concern? This is a very generic, blocking, type of statement. Very fuzzy.
Also, for whom is it a concern? NFNPA and a few rabid but influential looney NIMBYs, I got that, but they should not matter for BC one bit.
Stinks. I'm cancelling my membership, there are alternatives for getting the commuting insurance and legal assistance covered.
Indeed. I've got the cheapest BC membership simply for buying advance tickets for events, but haven't even done that this year.
Despite grumbles about the CTC and their charity-chasing fiasco, I guess they'll be keeping my membership money..
As a parent with a young family, we like to holiday in the UK and ideally somewhere with good riding close by. However, I can't see myself spending any time in the Nimby, I mean New Forest.
I suppose I don't blame the NFNPA for representing residents to a certain degree but the MP's are by and large, jumping on this as a hobby horse for political gain. I suppose they have to been seen to be doing something. It's not like they have major employment or crime problems down there.
Trouble is, NFNPA doesn't really represent "residents". It is heavily in thrall to the Verderers. This group is elected after a fashion - their electorate comprises New Forest "Commoners" who have registered to vote, but the number of those is less than 1,000. If you live in a bungalow in Lyndhurst or Brockenhurst you are almost certainly not a commoner, so you don't get a vote.
NFNPA claims significant opposition to large cycle events in the Forest, but there is no admissible evidence for this claim - their own officers conducted a proper opinion survey, with multiple points of delivery (drop in centres, online, the New Forest Show) in which only a small single figure percentage of respondents even mentioned the size of events being an issue for them. All they actually have to go on is the ear-poundings they get from lippy nimbies across the bar at their local golf club or the Conservative Association. they almost certainly hear nothing whatever from anyone who isn't a member of the Tory Party, or who doesn't play golf, or who doesn't graze a few ponies on the Forest (and those last should know that their animals are only at risk from speeding cars - there is not one recorded instance of a pony or donkey being killed by a bicycle).
Truth is that the New Forest is run like the feudal fiefdom that it always has been since the day in the 11th century when William Rufus established it as his personal hunting ground.
Where is Walter Tirel when you need him?
Problem with the New Forest stuff is that you've got a vaguely elected group of NIMBYs setting their own very dangerous agenda. Far better for an overall body to be pushing for a form of nationwide legislation than various "biased parties" making their own local rules.
I don't think BC would ever call for things like numbers front & rear, caps on rider numbers etc. but there does need to be something to aid calendar coordination so that you don't end up with situations of Sportives and/or road races attempting to use the same bit of road on the same day or over-using one area and pissing off the locals.
At the moment, I could go out and put on a Sportive and not tell anyone - Police, Highways, BC... None of them need to know and that is surely wrong? You get 3 people doing that on the same weekend with no control or "looking at the bigger picture" and it's a recipe for disaster (and that leads to NIMBYs bashing cycling). If there's a clear procedure for events to go through, people can't really complain. Well, they can but it won't go any further, it'll simply be a case of "they obeyed the law, now shut up".
James, do you still work for British Cycling ?
British Cycling: alienating swathes and blowing smoke up their own arse since, oh, forever.
As an event organiser I say this to British Cycling: Join the Far Queue.
I refuse to sign my participation-oriented event up to BC because BC insist on helmets. BC insurance is expensive. The cut they take from entry fees is high.
This is like the F1 Governing body insisting all vintage car rallies be overseen by them. The idea that in accepting regulation that removes the common law right to travel on the public highway, that somehow 'we' would be afforded *extra* rights is laughable.
Every county has existing SAG (Safety Advisory Group) processes for dealing with events on the public highway. Event organisers already have insurers and venue managers insisting on consultation with local SAG prior to events. Any organiser worth his/her salt does so regardless, to ensure their customers are not put at risk / into conflict.
We have fundamental rights to free movement on the public highway. We have existing processes that work very well. We have examples of massive delays being caused by non-cycling events that go totally unremarked-upon whilst a few bikes get slammed.
Thanks British cycling for helping nefarious powers with hidden agendas undermine that.
Arses.
Leaving aside all that whataboutery, cycling is different in many ways. Use of public roads for any event requires some form of consultation and inevitably some form of compromise. The growth of sportives does need some form of regulation be it voluntary or leglislative because large groups of cyclists of varying abilities spread out over a large distance and can cause other road users problems.
It should be a two way street; if sportives become regulated, they should gain some rights and some recognition as well as the less palatable restriction.
From a personal point of view, I don't want the roads near me to be subject to groups of 1000 cyclists for 4 or 5 weekends a year, largely because of the delays and subsequent disdain for cyclists which will have a knock on effect for me.
Unbelievable. They'll be after people having to join BC to take part in a sportive.
yes it makes sense to co-ordinate events, but is this simply a land grab by British Cycling? Are we going to end up with groups wearing black jerseys and using codes to identify where they are riding?
As an aside how healthy is road racing in the UK, I seem to recall a number of events have been abandoned/blocked/etc because of and by police in recent years.
Take the NFNPA, the verderers and the local constabulary, how independent of each other are they.....
This isn't just sportives, what about Audax? Are BC trying to land grab that as well.
And what about the real problem on the roads? cars? Where are the calls to regulate car rallies, shows, events etc? What about the load Glastonbury places on local roads? How about Sunday drivers in Richmond Park? What about the Motorcyclists on the Horseshoe at the Ponderosa?
If you look at one group in isolation what do you actually achieve?
Yep I agree. British Cycling are in overreach here and I am BC member. Yes I definitely agree that sportives should be coordinated and that there should be some guidelines agreed about the routes, the numbers, the frequency etc. But this should be voluntary and the sort of thing that amounts to just good sense, courtesy and manners.
BC needs to be very careful that they're not backing a bill that someone then adds an amendement to that suts down some of their activities. It's easily done and this bill could well become a Trojan Horse bill for lots of anti-cycling (or more particularly anti freedom to cycle on the roads by right )legislation.
I suspect the latter may be part of the reason for the former..
Nah, that's 'cos some Audaxers ride recumbents
On a more serious note - that's probably one reason not to have BC, as they stand, have anything to do with events outside racing. RideLondon (not sure that it was originally planned for, or followed badgering by various people) are trialling 'bents this year after trialling tandems last year.
Velothon Wales - a UCI sanctioned event IIRC - allow tandems, but don't allow recumbents. (Just checked, seems Velothon Berlin has the same head-up-it's-arse regulation *rollseyes*)
Desmond has got lovely hair!
And a Desperate Dan chin.
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