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Academy school makes cycle helmets compulsory and says it will suspend pupils who ride on the pavement

School rates pavement cycling to be as serious an offence as racial abuse

Sandringham School in St Albans says it will suspend children if they’re caught riding to school on the pavement. It has also said that no child will be allowed to cycle to school without a helmet and promised that regular checks will be carried out to enforce the rule.

Current government guidance is that cyclists may ride on the footway, provided they do so considerately.

However, a letter to parents from headteacher Alan Gray states that cycling on pavements has been made a C5 offence – the same rating assigned to racially abusing another pupil.

Concerned father David Stacy tweeted the letter and has since written to the school to object.

Cycling UK Head of Campaigns, Duncan Dollimore said: “In March, this Academy published a School Travel Plan which acknowledged there was significant interest from both children and their parents in students cycling to school, that the school wanted to encourage this and should look at incentives to do so. The same document also referred to parents and residents parking on the road outside the school, blocking the cycling lanes, but that the school was wholly reliant on their goodwill to comply with parking restrictions.

“It really was not difficult. The school could have liaised with the local authority about parking restrictions and enforcement, so that children cycling to school didn’t have to negotiate parked cars on both sides of the road with both oncoming and following traffic in a narrowed lane, as described by parent David Stacy.

“Of course, that might have upset the grown-ups, so instead of applying his efforts to make it easier and safer for children to cycle to school, the headteacher has threatened to ban children from cycling to school, which he can’t do, make helmet wearing mandatory, when that is a matter of parental choice, and impose disciplinary sanctions for pupil’s actions outside of school.”

Surrey school says students can only cycle to school if they fit a number plate to their bikes

Stacy told The Hertfordshire Advertiser that teenagers should be taught to be respectful to walkers, getting off or slowing down when passing.

“A cyclist-motor vehicle conflict is significantly riskier than a cyclist-pedestrian one. And now, with fewer children cycling, there will be even more traffic on the road dealing with the resultant extra car journeys.

“Fewer, more dangerous cycling trips; more traffic; more pollution. This does not strike me as being a decision in the best interests of the health and wellbeing of the school’s pupils.”

Gray said: “The welfare of our students is of paramount importance to us and by enforcing these rules more robustly, we are ensuring that all of our students who cycle to and from school do so in a way that is both safe for them and for other travellers.”

Cycling UK is unimpressed. Dollimore said: “Rather than trying to tackle the problem outside his school gates he has implemented measures which are likely to lead children to decide that cycling to school is just too much hassle, because teachers will be checking what they are doing every day at the school gates.

“But at least he will look decisive in the eyes of the local residents, for whom an un-helmeted kid cycling on a footpath is a greater safety concern than the traffic congestion and chaos at school drop-off and collection time.

“Teenage girls who cycle to school are seven times more likely to meet the Government’s recommended levels of physical activity than girls who don’t, but helmet compulsion in Sydney Australia led to a 90% reduction in teenage girls cycling. That’s the sort of unintended consequence that this type of ill-thought out policy, placating local residents, can lead to.” 

Alex has written for more cricket publications than the rest of the road.cc team combined. Despite the apparent evidence of this picture, he doesn't especially like cake.

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65 comments

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ClubSmed replied to Rich_cb | 7 years ago
2 likes
Rich_cb wrote:
ClubSmed wrote:

Increase in the number of cyclists resulting in more driver awareness that they exist so more likely to look out for them?

I don't think that fits the timeline.

 

Avatar
Rich_cb replied to ClubSmed | 7 years ago
1 like
ClubSmed wrote:
Rich_cb wrote:
ClubSmed wrote:

Increase in the number of cyclists resulting in more driver awareness that they exist so more likely to look out for them?

I don't think that fits the timeline.

 

Difficult to be sure at that scale but doesn't look like that fits either.

Avatar
ClubSmed replied to Rich_cb | 7 years ago
6 likes
Rich_cb wrote:
ClubSmed wrote:

You could say that the data of increased sales of ice-cream at the beach during summer months and the increase of shark attacks during the same period means that sharks are attracted to ice-cream. You would be a fool to draw such a conclusion though as the two sets of data are not connected to each other.

Correlation isn't always causation but it is sometimes. There is a clear correlation between increased helmet use and decreasing cyclist deaths. Do you know of any other correlations that are more likely to be causative?

The fall in cost and rise in adoptation of LED lights

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Rich_cb replied to ClubSmed | 7 years ago
0 likes
ClubSmed wrote:

The fall in cost and rise in adoptation of LED lights

So show the data that supports your idea.
I don't think this fits the timeline either.

Avatar
ClubSmed replied to Rich_cb | 7 years ago
1 like
Rich_cb wrote:
ClubSmed wrote:

The fall in cost and rise in adoptation of LED lights

So show the data that supports your idea. I don't think this fits the timeline either.

Avatar
Rich_cb replied to ClubSmed | 7 years ago
1 like
ClubSmed wrote:
Rich_cb wrote:
ClubSmed wrote:

The fall in cost and rise in adoptation of LED lights

So show the data that supports your idea. I don't think this fits the timeline either.

So it doesn't fit the timeline at all.

Avatar
ClubSmed replied to Rich_cb | 7 years ago
6 likes
Rich_cb wrote:
ClubSmed wrote:

You could say that the data of increased sales of ice-cream at the beach during summer months and the increase of shark attacks during the same period means that sharks are attracted to ice-cream. You would be a fool to draw such a conclusion though as the two sets of data are not connected to each other.

Correlation isn't always causation but it is sometimes. There is a clear correlation between increased helmet use and decreasing cyclist deaths. Do you know of any other correlations that are more likely to be causative?

Rise in mobile phone usage and coverage resulting in quicker response from emergency services to incidents in less populated areas.

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Rich_cb replied to ClubSmed | 7 years ago
0 likes
ClubSmed wrote:

Rise in mobile phone usage and coverage resulting in quicker response from emergency services to incidents in less populated areas.

That's not cycling specific.

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Rich_cb replied to CygnusX1 | 7 years ago
0 likes
CygnusX1 wrote:

Yes, really. Your own graphs support it. Despite the increase in helmet usage in graph one, the rate of injury has remained in line with that of pedestrians (graph 2) who are pretty much 100% non-helmet wearers. Therefore helmet use has had no impact on casualties.

You've just failed to interpret the graph correctly.

The pedestrian rate starts falling earlier and approaches parity in the early 90s.

From 1995 onwards the cycling rate starts to fall faster than the pedestrian rate.

So there is clearly a cycling specific factor that becomes significant after 1995.

The pattern fits perfectly with the increasing use of helmets disproving the initial point I was replying to.

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wknight | 7 years ago
1 like

This past week a friends husband was in a serious collison with a car, he is alive, without a helmet he would be DEAD!! 

Yes we do lots of things that are dangerous like climbing up ladders but I like to minmise my risk when I can. 

Avatar
Hirsute replied to wknight | 7 years ago
8 likes
wknight wrote:

This past week a friends husband was in a serious collison with a car, he is alive, without a helmet he would be DEAD!!

I not sure how you can know that as a implied fact.

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burtthebike replied to wknight | 7 years ago
6 likes
wknight wrote:

This past week a friends husband was in a serious collison with a car, he is alive, without a helmet he would be DEAD!!

No he wouldn't.  Despite the thousands of "helmet saved my life" stories, the death rate of cyclists does not fall as helmet wearing rates increase, and the number of these stories is many times the annual death rate of cyclists.  http://www.cyclehelmets.org/1209.html

"Yes we do lots of things that are dangerous like climbing up ladders but I like to minmise my risk when I can. "

So do you wear a helmet up a ladder?  Or even walking in the street, which has the same risk per mile travelled as cycling?  Or for travelling in a car, which causes many more head injuries than cycling?  If not, you aren't minimising risk when you can, only when you assume the risk is much greater than it is, because you've been fooled by the thirty year propaganda campaign for helmets.  But you're not alone, most people think that cycling is much riskier than it is, and that helmets are much more effective than they are, because of the outright lies and propaganda.

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Rich_cb replied to burtthebike | 7 years ago
0 likes
burtthebike wrote:

No he wouldn't.  Despite the thousands of "helmet saved my life" stories, the death rate of cyclists does not fall as helmet wearing rates increase

Oh really?

Avatar
martib replied to wknight | 7 years ago
1 like
wknight wrote:

This past week a friends husband was in a serious collison with a car, he is alive, without a helmet he would be DEAD!! 

Yes we do lots of things that are dangerous like climbing up ladders but I like to minmise my risk when I can. 

Was this proved scientifically with an exact forensic replication of the collision? I think we know the answer to that one, a big fat NO. Facts not speculation.

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kingleo | 7 years ago
3 likes

Make it compulsory for children to wear crash helmets when they travel in cars or are pedestrians going to /from school ?- I think not, there will be a nationwide protest.

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kil0ran replied to kingleo | 7 years ago
5 likes
kingleo wrote:

Make it compulsory for children to wear crash helmets when they travel in cars or are pedestrians going to /from school ?- I think not, there will be a nationwide protest.

Never mind that, make it compulsory for them to be worn on school premises, including for all sport.

Wonder if the school plays full contact rugby/football/hockey?

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Velovoyeur | 7 years ago
4 likes

Another autocratic (probably hypocritical aswell) headteacher telling children to do what isn't even a legal requirement. If my kids went to this school, I would expect him to justify his personal made-up legislation to protect my kids and would then let him know that his sole responsibilty is their education and I call the shots on what they wear when they ride their bikes.  If he spent more time and effort on education as opposed to "conditioning" kids they would be sufficiently informed to arrive at their own decisions.

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Yorkshie Whippet | 7 years ago
3 likes

I thought cycling on the pavement was made “legal” and was not enforced by the police any more.

If so, what message is given out by punishing  kids for doing a legal thing?

Avatar
Hirsute replied to Yorkshie Whippet | 7 years ago
2 likes
Yorkshie Whippet wrote:

I thought cycling on the pavement was made “legal” and was not enforced by the police any more.

If so, what message is given out by punishing  kids for doing a legal thing?

Not exactly legal but within guidelines for certain categories

https://news.npcc.police.uk/releases/support-for-police-discretion-when-...

"Chief police officers, who are responsible for enforcement, acknowledge that many cyclists, particularly children and young people, are afraid to cycle on the road, sensitivity and careful use of police discretion is required."

 

More recent http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-38688256

 

I'm sure the Headmaster knows best though and has show a good example of mastering facts and presenting them as a coherent argument.

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arowland replied to Yorkshie Whippet | 7 years ago
1 like
Yorkshie Whippet wrote:

I thought cycling on the pavement was made “legal” and was not enforced by the police any more.

If so, what message is given out by punishing  kids for doing a legal thing?

It has not been made legal, but police have been instructed to use discretion and not enforce it in the case of, for example, children, or when the road is dangerous for cyclists and the cycles are not causing any problem for pedestrians.

Avatar
burtthebike | 7 years ago
4 likes

Am I the only one who is just grateful that the cockwomble of a head teacher hasn't made number plates a requirement too? 

Seriously, what will it teach the children to see that you don't need evidence or data, you just need to impose your will because you're bigger than them.

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kil0ran | 7 years ago
2 likes

I wonder what he drives. And what business interests he has outside school.

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124g | 7 years ago
4 likes

Don’t you just love how this cockwomble has become an expert in highways and usage cycling and helmet wearing and no doubt high visibility clothing  to boot. It infuriates me beyond belief when folk utter such tripe without any evidence to support this. 

 

It it also doesn’t take a rocket scientist to check it’s on the Google’s just enter and all will be revealed. Still as most posters have mentioned he’ll no doubt give himself a huge pat on the back and say what a great wise and wonderful sage he is to implement this crock of shit. 

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Deeferdonk | 7 years ago
6 likes

I see they are one of those cockwomble academies that make children wear ties and blazers. How can they expect children to run around, play football and generally be children at break times when they have to wear a suit and tie all day. And they wonder why kids are fat.

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Pudsey Pedaller | 7 years ago
8 likes
From the article wrote:

The same document also referred to parents and residents parking on the road outside the school, blocking the cycling lanes, but that the school was wholly reliant on their goodwill to comply with parking restrictions. [my emphasis]

Alan Gray's letter to parents wrote:

If they are caught doing so they will face a C5 for disobedience and being banned from cycling to school. Could I ask you to reinforce this with your son/daughter. 

Has Andy Gray considered making parking on the road outside the school a C5 offence for disobedience and threatening to ban parents from driving to school. He could maybe issue a letter asking the children to reinforce this with their father/mother.

On the basis the school feels they are in a position to identify pupils who are cycling on pavements, can they not just as easily identify just the students cycling fast or without due care and attention (whether on the pavement or on the road) and offer them further cycle training/education before going down the route of sanctions. This way there is no need to put those pupils cycling with consideration in unnecessary danger by forcing them on to the roads alongside the drivers who are only expected to follow the rules as an act of goodwill.

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davel | 7 years ago
8 likes

I'm pissed off enough about the topic at face value.

But a school pushing such dogma is managing to trump that in my blood-pressure stakes.

I'd like to think teachers and governors, of all people, would maybe pause on their way to pulling policy out of their arses, and LOOK AT THE FUCKING EVIDENCE.

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BehindTheBikesheds | 7 years ago
3 likes

Why are the local authorities not doing anything? Oh that's right because they don't give a fuck about safety, pollution and encouraging active travel options.
Laissez faire complicit cunts!

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Woldsman | 7 years ago
3 likes

We’ll see more of this as schools are unable to punish parents who, say, park irresponsibly so to be seen to be doing ‘something’ about traffic concerns pick on the kids they have direct  control over. A robust group of parents might ask Ofsted if turning law-abiding students away from the school gates - or punishing them in some other ingenious way - is truly an example of ‘best practice’. 

Avatar
hawkinspeter replied to Woldsman | 7 years ago
2 likes
Woldsman wrote:

We’ll see more of this as schools are unable to punish parents who, say, park irresponsibly so to be seen to be doing ‘something’ about traffic concerns pick on the kids they have direct  control over. A robust group of parents might ask Ofsted if turning law-abiding students away from the school gates - or punishing them in some other ingenious way - is truly an example of ‘best practice’. 

I'd prefer it if schools concentrated on educating the pupils. We employ councils and police to deal with traffic issues outside of schools.

Avatar
Woldsman replied to hawkinspeter | 7 years ago
3 likes
hawkinspeter wrote:
Woldsman wrote:

We’ll see more of this as schools are unable to punish parents who, say, park irresponsibly so to be seen to be doing ‘something’ about traffic concerns pick on the kids they have direct  control over. A robust group of parents might ask Ofsted if turning law-abiding students away from the school gates - or punishing them in some other ingenious way - is truly an example of ‘best practice’. 

I'd prefer it if schools concentrated on educating the pupils. We employ councils and police to deal with traffic issues outside of schools.

Yes indeedy.

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