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Third cyclist killed on London Cycle Superhighway, tipper lorry involved

Latest death 2 weeks after Coroner's report into earlier fatalities...

A cyclist has been killed this afternoon on Barclays Cycle Superhighway CS2 in east London, the third cyclist to die on the route in a little over two years. Once again, a tipper lorry is reported to be the vehicle involved.

The incident that claimed the life of the male bike rider (later identified as hospital porter Brian Holt) took place on Mile End Road in the London Borough of Tower Hamlets, reports the BBC. It happened at 4.38pm, according to the Metropolitan Police.

That location lies between the western end of the route, where student Philippine de Gerin-Ricard lost her life in a collision with a lorry in July this year, and the eastern end of the route at Bow Roundabout, where Brian Dorling was killed by a tipper truck in October 2011.

The latest fatality on CS2 takes place a fortnight after a Coroner gave Mayor of London Boris Johnson, who chairs Transport for London, 56 days to respond to a Prevention of Future Deaths report issued following the inquests last month into those two previous deaths.

It comes just one day before the eastern extension of CS2 from Bow to Stratford is due to open.

The new route incorporates safety features including kerbed cycle lanes that have been welcomed by cycle campaigners but which are missing from the existing route – described by a police accident investigator at the inquest into Mr Dorling’s death as “just a piece of blue paint.”

 

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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69 comments

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Scowel | 11 years ago
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So very sad, condolences to the family of the guy concerned. I desperately hope that a safe solution can be found before more lives are lost on CS2

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AndrewRH | 11 years ago
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My deepest condolences to the families affected today by this tragic crash. The only solution is to remove the conflict on the roads: create space for cycling.

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William Black | 11 years ago
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Surely it's time for the DVLA to seriously reconsider the standards required to pass the HGV licence?

They are without question some of the most lethal vehicles on the road but seem to be driven almost exclusively by labrador brained knucleheads, that's not to say that any vehicle cannot be driven by similarly labrador brained knucleheads but HGVs by their very nature are more dangerous. [/sweeping generalisations regarding fat lorry drivers>

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Neil753 replied to William Black | 11 years ago
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William Black wrote:

Surely it's time for the DVLA to seriously reconsider the standards required to pass the HGV licence?

They are without question some of the most lethal vehicles on the road but seem to be driven almost exclusively by labrador brained knucleheads, that's not to say that any vehicle cannot be driven by similarly labrador brained knucleheads but HGVs by their very nature are more dangerous. [/sweeping generalisations regarding fat lorry drivers>

A bit extreme, isn't it? As a C+E licence holder, I'd say the testing standards in the UK are among the highest within the EU, We now have to undertake regular professional competence training by law, and stringent medical testing starts when you reach the age of 45. All measures far beyond those required of other drivers.

It isn't so much the standard of training that is the problem, it is the degree of pressure to which the driver is exposed which increases the chances of a fatal "accident". If firms pay "by the load", or make the "delivery window" quite difficult to achieve in heavy traffic, you just know that safety will be compromised. Subcontracting means that you can ligitimately distance your own organisation from certain health and safety issues. Utter the right sysmpathetic platitudes, instigate another "driver awareness" program, but make sure those contractors keep their trucks rolling ever faster.

My condolances to the family and friends of the cyclist who died today. Very sad.

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kie7077 replied to | 11 years ago
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Neil753 wrote:
William Black wrote:

Surely it's time for the DVLA to seriously reconsider the standards required to pass the HGV licence?

They are without question some of the most lethal vehicles on the road but seem to be driven almost exclusively by labrador brained knucleheads, that's not to say that any vehicle cannot be driven by similarly labrador brained knucleheads but HGVs by their very nature are more dangerous. [/sweeping generalisations regarding fat lorry drivers>

A bit extreme, isn't it? As a C+E licence holder, I'd say the testing standards in the UK are among the highest within the EU, We now have to undertake regular professional competence training by law, and stringent medical testing starts when you reach the age of 45. All measures far beyond those required of other drivers.

It isn't so much the standard of training that is the problem, it is the degree of pressure to which the driver is exposed which increases the chances of a fatal "accident". If firms pay "by the load", or make the "delivery window" quite difficult to achieve in heavy traffic, you just know that safety will be compromised. Subcontracting means that you can ligitimately distance your own organisation from certain health and safety issues. Sack the driver, utter the right sysmpathetic platitudes, instigate another "driver awareness" program, but make sure those contractors keep their trucks rolling ever faster.

My condolances to the family and friends of the cyclist who died today. Very sad.

Unfortunately there are many driving in the UK on EU licenses and other countries licenses of dubious validity.

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FluffyKittenofT... replied to Neil753 | 11 years ago
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Neil753 wrote:

It isn't so much the standard of training that is the problem, it is the degree of pressure to which the driver is exposed which increases the chances of a fatal "accident". If firms pay "by the load", or make the "delivery window" quite difficult to achieve in heavy traffic, you just know that safety will be compromised. Subcontracting means that you can ligitimately distance your own organisation from certain health and safety issues.

I do agree entirely with this point though. The issues with HGVs go well beyond any individual driver.

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William Black replied to Neil753 | 11 years ago
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Neil753 wrote:
William Black wrote:

[/sweeping generalisations regarding fat lorry drivers>

A bit extreme, isn't it? As a C+E licence holder, I'd say the testing standards in the UK are among the highest within the EU, We now have to undertake regular professional competence training by law, and stringent medical testing starts when you reach the age of 45. All measures far beyond those required of other drivers.

Perhaps, and I did add the "sweeping generalisations" bit as I'm all too aware there are numerous exceptions to any rule.

But as the 'Shouty Man Troll' has demonstrated so wonderfully, when lorry (again citing the exceptions to the rule) drivers don't even have the slightest clue as to why a cyclist in a narrow lane might want to place himself bang in the middle, and think he's 'deliberately trying to hold up traffic'** rather than just protect himself, it just seems to me we're banging heads against a brick wall and only continued driver education can save us.

** One of the best retorts to this was by a rider in the team of a friend doing JOGLE with a big support van tailing them. They pulled in to a 'greasy spoon' layby for a refresh of bottles and all that a few minutes later a driver on the way to the burger van see's them all and remarks 'oh, you're the ones who were holding up the traffic back there' rider replies quite simply with "we are traffic" bloke didn't have a response to that one.

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VeloPeo | 11 years ago
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The CS2 extension looks like an improvement from the original part. However it'll still spew riders out onto the Bow Roundabout and this original section which TfL know is not fit for purpose and now has another cycling fatality on it.

Yet again it's a tipper truck.

TfL could easily sort this by banning them during peak hours but there's no sign of this happening

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Rouboy | 11 years ago
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Very sad....
Please sort this Superhighway??? out...

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