There are so many things wrong here we don't know where to begin, but we'll attempt to summarise - an article on the Plymouth Herald's website Plymouth Live is 'reporting' that a car leasing company, fittingly called LeaseCar, have started a campaign calling for parents on the school run to be allowed to use bus lanes. They say it could ease congestion and "save hours" for mums and dads by allowing them to skip the morning rush hour: "families who must promptly arrive at school before work often get held up on congested British roads and need help to avoid lateness. Allowing parents to make use of quiet bus lanes would save them valuable time and help sleep deprived pupils cope with annually increasing educational pressure. A quicker journey to school should mean children have more time at home to spend on homework and extracurricular activities, with the family and resting."
If you live in a city or have common sense, you may also be thinking that allowing parents on to bus lanes may simply... clog up bus lanes, thus making it slower for buses carrying lots of people more efficiently to make their journeys, and also make it more dangerous for cyclists who are legally permitted to use bus lanes in the UK.
While local news website comment sections aren’t usually renowned for being favourable towards cycling and sustainable transport, the 26 comments and counting on Plymouth Live so far appear to be overwhelmingly against the campaign as well. The idea of safer streets so kids can cycle to school instead is suggested, and it's also mentioned that it would be extremely difficult to police.
What's all the more odd is how the article appears on Plymouth Live (link here ICYMI) - author Max Channon hasn't used quotation marks after the brief intro outlining LeaseCar's cunning plan, so the text reads like a piece of Plymouth Live's own editorial... is this a strange misguided advert that Plymouth Live have failed to label as such? Do Plymouth Live actually just think this is a good idea? Would you share a bus lane with lots of people carriers taking their little cherubs to school?? We're confused, it's all confusing, we don't know what's going on!
*We can't find an original source of the campaign and there's nothing about it on LeaseCar's website... however Plymouth Live are currently running a poll asking if we think parents should be able to use bus lanes, which is probably the best way to voice your displeasure at the moment.
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10 comments
Well done Justine Greening.
On the tweet about planning consultations/planning for cycle parking vs e-car chargers, I like the twittery reply that says:
Kind of sums our government's real attitude toward allocation of road space correctly, I think.
How about the novel idea of putting the kids on the buses instead?
Reading the replies below the Danish Embassy's tweet, it looks like one of the cyclists is Leigh Turner, the British Ambassador to Austria. This would also partly explain the kilt!
Yep. The British Embassy in Vienna also has a small pool of bikes for staff to borrow to get to meetings. But those bar ends though....
As if the average motorist doesn't already have an overblown sense of entitlement, we now have a sub-section of motorists who have an even greater sense of entitlement!
They'll be wanting flashing lights and sirens next.
What a brilliant idea. Come up with something batshit mental which is clearly nonsense, but you can claim is well intentioned, but will get the red tops talking in some way. Claim it as a brilliant idea. Talk to a local journalist under your company’s name. Free advertising on national news!
Great idea. Even better, what is needed is a number of large multi-occupancy vehicles that could travel in the bus lanes, for which users would be charged a modest fee. If only there were such a thing, people could be encouraged to use these, then there would be less congestion.
I'm going to move to Plymouth where there is a bus lane outside every house and school.
Wow! In this day and age, it is quite sobering to find that dinosaurs really do exist.
Some good news though, as the poll is currently 91% against.