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Cyclists ‘a real worry’ says North Yorkshire Police and Crime Commissioner – before conceding they aren't actually doing anything wrong

“We haven’t seen any large groups of cyclists. What we have seen is just a lot of cyclists”

Speaking about concerns that people will flout lockdown guidance during the Easter weekend, North Yorkshire’s Police and Crime Commissioner has said that cyclists in particular are ‘a real worry.’ Julia Mulligan went on to clarify that cyclists in the area hadn’t been doing anything wrong and it was just that simply by riding through villages, they had been “causing a bit of tension.”

Speaking on BBC Breakfast, Mulligan said that for the most part people in North Yorkshire had been following the government guidelines.

She then said: “One of the real worries, I think, is cyclists. We’ve seen large numbers of cyclists – some of them travelling long distances; long routes.

“Local communities are getting a bit anxious about that, so I would just ask those cyclists to be mindful that they are going through people’s villages and communities and to think about their behaviour, because that is causing a bit of tension.”

Asked to clarify what exactly cyclists were doing wrong, Mulligan said: “People are not gathering in groups to go cycling, so we haven’t seen any large groups of cyclists. What we have seen is just a lot of cyclists.

“They are allowed to cycle. There isn’t an issue with that. They fall within the guidelines. I’m just asking those cyclists to be mindful that they are going through communities and that is making people a little bit anxious.”

Criticism was led by Greater Manchester cycling commissioner, Chris Boardman, who described Mulligan’s comments as “deeply disappointing.”

Responding to criticism, Mulligan tweeted: “I fully expect a backlash, but the concerns from villages are real, so it’s just to flag that if you are going through a community, please be aware.”

Whether or not the concerns are real is surely not up for debate. The issue is whether or not those concerns are legitimate and proportional and whether Mulligan’s comments about cyclists being ‘a real worry’ merely reinforce and amplify them.

She added:

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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92 comments

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David9694 | 4 years ago
1 like

It's another example of bikes somehow being a threat, the motor car somehow ok.  

But from what's reported, this is an odd intervention for a competent person to have made.  I'm wondering if there's something going unsaid here, e.g. perhaps something about the content of some of the calls received by the police? Pure speculation, but it all doesn't quite add up. 

Boo-hiss down near where I live:

http://www.sandbanksferry.co.uk/news.php 

It's official: wheels good, two wheels (and two feet) banned!  The result?

Http://www.dorsetecho.co.uk/news/18376084.still-come-camper-vans-day-trippers-s...  

"Later, officers went to Ferry Road, Studland and found cars parked along the road."  (There's a better article than this, with pictures, which I can't find right now.) 

Dewn from Lon'on, are ye?
https://www.bournemouthecho.co.uk/news/18374461.anger-second-home-owners...

I guess this is how the virus makes its way into every corner of the country.  It's been slower to take off in the south-west so far.  There's clearly visitors in my (relatively unfashionable) bit of the New Forest.  I've been here long enough to know the difference. 

40 Cyclists! This article is a bit confused:

https://www.bournemouthecho.co.uk/news/18374539.throop-overrun-visitors-...

While trying to find the Ferry Road, Studland story, I visited the Facebook page for Dorset traffic cops. This comment is from 26 March, so quite early on:

Noel Bishton People arnt affecting people in there cars. Why people got issues with people driving. It Dosnt infect people. And if people want to go for ba drive to clear there heads and go for a drive away from people they stuck in there homes with. Why there such an issue with it. If not coming in to contact with overs cars don't infect people. People do.

and another just for the hell of it:

Whats your stance on keeping batteries charged up by driving cars? I don't fancy the cost of a new one & coding to my car during this already tough time.

(don't worry, he receives plenty of good advice)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Hirsute replied to David9694 | 4 years ago
0 likes

https://www.bournemouthecho.co.uk/news/18376326.cyclist-found-serious-in...

Taught a lesson by some driver for their own good ?

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David9694 replied to Hirsute | 4 years ago
0 likes

I'll post back if I hear any more.  Hard to imagine how this can have happened in the middle of the day in the middle of a small town, no-one saw anything, car or no car.

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crazy-legs | 4 years ago
3 likes

Little hint if you're out riding and someone asks where you've come from. Make sure you know your route and always have a town/village about 5-10 miles away in mind. That way you can say you've come from [town] that's only 8 miles down the road, short ride, blah blah.

Everyone is happy.

(if possible, pick a decent sized town, not some random village with only 8 inhabitants where everyone knows everyone else by name and is probably related!)

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Hirsute replied to crazy-legs | 4 years ago
0 likes

Bloody hell, you cycle fast !

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njblackadder replied to crazy-legs | 4 years ago
2 likes

My response is much more likely to be, 'what's it got to do with you?'

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Hirsute replied to njblackadder | 4 years ago
0 likes

It's a shared problem of course it has to do with anyone you encounter.

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Anglepoise | 4 years ago
1 like

So are politicians and other high profile public figures who make sweeping statements and promises in public which they are unable to backup with any proven evidence. Unfortunately despite this being the information age too many people don't question what they read & hear, taking it at face value instead.

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HoarseMann | 4 years ago
12 likes

The real worry for me is all these villagers coming into the town to use the supermarket facilities. Shouldn't they grow their own veg or something?

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Rik Mayals unde... | 4 years ago
2 likes

I am an essential worker. As well as being a little pissed off that those still working are not being paid any more, or getting any more holidays(Tongue in cheek) I am sick of the fuckwits who are wandering all over cycle paths with their masses of 'families' when I am trying to get home after a busy stressful day at work. They have no concept of 'Social distancing'. They are in great spirits.
I have an idea. Why don't all the people furloughed who are currently thinking they are on 'holiday' continue to get paid 80% of their salary when back at work? The remaining 20% can be put back into the pot for what they have been given. That way, the key workers won't have to pay more tax and the country can avoid another decade of austerity.
Anybody still working and reading this? Please sign this epetition. https://petition.parliament.uk/petitions/306845

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Simon E replied to Rik Mayals underpants | 4 years ago
7 likes

Being furloughed is not necessarily fun or like being on holiday. The vast majority of furloughed workers have no choice in the matter. There is no logic in the idea of them getting 80% of their wage when they return to work, that argument appears to be based solely on resentment. Are you getting 80% of yours now? And what if they're on the minimum wage?

It's nothing new for people to spread out across a shared path, it has been a bone of contention for decades. Live with it. You don't own the path. Take a breath, slow down and be considerate. It doesn't cost anything.

Can't people go for a walk and be cheerful on a sunny Spring day? Perhaps you'd rather they stayed confined at home, drove each other mad and then it ends with a beating (the number of domestic abuse cases reported has risen sharply during the lockdown).

The bitterness that prompted your comments will not do your mental health - or that of the people around you - any favours.

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Rik Mayals unde... replied to Simon E | 4 years ago
2 likes

I'm working full time, working harder than usual due to many being furloughed. All the furloughed people I know are happy as a pig in shite, they do think they are on holiday. All the people I see out walking don't seem to have a care in the world. Why do they have to walk all over both the footpath and the cyclepath, 15 at a time? Do they all live in the same house? No. So they are taking the piss. And yes, I am pissed off. I am working my tits off, trying to keep a fleet of ambulances on the road for the ambulance service. When they are recovered in to us to be repaired, we don't know if they are contaminated with Covid - 19, we just know that we have to turn them around and get them back on the road ASAP. My wife works for the police, they have no PPE and are still expected to work on a bank of four sitting together, no social distancing there. We are putting our lives at risk on a daily basis, for nothing more. Finally, why are the dickheads out ignoring the Government directives so cheerful? Because they see it as a holiday, at least all the ones I've spoken too do, they don't want it to end. Because they are sat at home 'earning' 80% of their wages for doing fuck all. And that is why those on furlough should pay back what they have been given for nothing at a rate of 20% until they have paid off what the Government has given them. 

I take it that you're furloughed, hence your opinion on it. Try carrying on working in difficult conditions.

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srchar replied to Rik Mayals underpants | 4 years ago
6 likes
biker phil wrote:

All the furloughed people I know are happy as a pig in shite

Exactly this. If you don't believe it, here's a question for you. Would you rather:

a) Work full time for 100% of your wage.

b) Do whatever you like with your time for 80% of your wage.

If you answer (a), you're either one of the lucky few who actually enjoy their work, or you're fibbing.

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HoarseMann replied to srchar | 4 years ago
3 likes

Being furloughed might seem a good option in the short term, but how many will have jobs to go back to? The gov have said it's a temporary measure. Your struggle is now, theirs may be down the line.

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srchar replied to HoarseMann | 4 years ago
2 likes

The whole point of the furlough scheme is to preserve jobs. I can't see why it wouldn't be extended if need be. The money will just be printed - the world will need to inflate away debts when this is over.

I'm not furloughed, by the way. I'm working from home, which is probably the worst option of all, except being sacked, of course.

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bikeman01 replied to srchar | 4 years ago
0 likes

But it's not 80%, it's up to 80% capped at £2500 per month (less tax and NI). Many of us have commitments based upon our usual salaries and whilst it's welcome, I'd rather I was working.

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mdavidford replied to bikeman01 | 4 years ago
0 likes

Minor point, but it's £2.5k (per month) - not £25k. (That would be equivalent to £30k per annum.)

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Rik Mayals unde... replied to srchar | 4 years ago
0 likes

I would rather work, I am not lazy nor a shirker. I have worked bloody hard all of my life, and I don't want to sponge off the state. And that my friend, is the truth.

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kevvjj replied to Rik Mayals underpants | 4 years ago
6 likes

You've completely missed the point. The aim of furloughing is not to give people a holiday but to ensure that the thousands of businesses and companies that employ them don't collapse creating an even bigger burden on the social care system. 

Your friends who have been furloughed and who are happy as a pig in shit must be on decent salaries. My friends who are furloughed are getting 80% of fuck-all! Add to that the worry of what will happen three months down the line when the lenders finally start asking for mortgage payments and other loan payments. I'm sure everyone of them would be far happier with job security rather than being furloughed.

 

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Rik Mayals unde... replied to kevvjj | 4 years ago
0 likes

Yes, I know that, I have not completely missed the point. But loads of people think that it is a holiday. Many people who I have spoken to all think that it is a holiday. One atually said to me "What? You'd rather be at work than on holiday?"

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Simon E replied to Rik Mayals underpants | 4 years ago
5 likes
biker phil wrote:

I take it that you're furloughed, hence your opinion on it. Try carrying on working in difficult conditions.

I'm not. However, it's very kind of you to make so many incorrect assumptions.

My wife works in social care and her team have no PPE but she doesn't need to bitch about people who aren't at work right now. She's earning 50p over the minimum wage for dealing with some very difficult and sometimes scary situations, with no perks and only getting 5 days sick leave a year. After that it's £94/week and some of her colleagues are trying to keep a family on that money. It's shocking. But that is what the Tories have done to council social care contracts, along with everything else thanks to 'Austerity'.

She is due to go to work this afternoon and won't be back until 7.30 tomorrow morning. But she won't get any double-time or overtime rate because Easter Sunday is not a bank holiday. And she knows people in worse situations and some with tougher jobs and worse conditions so she is still grateful.

You can keep blaming everyone else if you want, that's what the government want you to do. Divide and conquer, let the little people blindly fight amongst themselves. But you're just harming yourself.

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Mungecrundle replied to Rik Mayals underpants | 4 years ago
7 likes

I work for a biotech company that specialises in human biospecimens for contract research. We have the lab space and PCR machines that could be used for testing. In the meantime pretty much the entire pharmaceutical industry is working flat out to counter Covid-19. I'm now working from home, setting up data systems to record details of Covid patients who are willing to provide biosamples for research purposes, only going in a couple of days every other week on a lonely rota to cover basic office duties as the labs are still open. Personally I am doing many more hours per week than contracted with no promise or expectation of any extra pay, overtime or bonus. I'm happy to do this, it's my contribution to the effort.

Personally speaking I'd far rather this than being furloughed and those I know who have been are far from sanguine over their prospects when that finishes.

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bikeman01 replied to Rik Mayals underpants | 4 years ago
1 like

I was working from home but because we've been forced shut our manufacturing and distribution centres, the company wasn't sustainable so we'v ebeen furloughed. The govt cheque is welcome (when it comes) but it's a darn sight less than 80% of my normal salary.

Being on 'holiday' with nothiing to do and nowhere to go, whilst worrying about my mortgage payments is no 'holiday'.

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Prosper0 | 4 years ago
1 like

Instead of just whinging here. Make sure you make a complaint. This kind of language inspires hate crimes. 

https://www.bbc.co.uk/contact/complaints

https://www.ofcom.org.uk/complain-to-ofcom

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Jem PT | 4 years ago
9 likes

"We've seen large numbers of cyclists - some of them travelling long distances"

How the hell does she know how far an individual cyclist has travelled? Answer: she doesn't. As others have said this 'opinion' from an elected police official is worrying. Whatever happened to 'live and let live'?

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brooksby | 4 years ago
8 likes

I've written before about the horrors of my own villages fb group.

Today's special was how hordes of Lycra clad cyclists were using the riverside cycle path from the city to the village, and forcing their way between all the families with children walking along there.

Nobody thought to raise that if the cyclists shouldn't be travelling along there with their plague carrying bicycles (because its not essential travel) then those families ought not to have been walking along there either...

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Jetmans Dad | 4 years ago
7 likes

"some of them travelling long distances; long routes"

This is the bit that annoys me. I get that underlying advice is based around spending as little time as necessary not cooped up at home, and long bike rides go against that principle but (a) that has never been explicitly made part of the advice and (b) it ignores the reality of where people live. 

From where we are a ride of around 5 miles in any direction will keep me within the residential part of the area, beyond that (in all directions) is quiet, open countryside where, even in normal circumstances, I can go for miles and see very few people on the road. 

So ... I can do a quick 40 minute ride all within easy reach of other human beings, or I can do a 4 hour ride, of which I am within easy reach of other human beings for the exact same 40 minutes. As far as social distancing is concerned, it is literally exactly the same. 

That said, I do appreciate the concerns around trying not to have a serious accident out in the sticks and need emergency care, but the same applies to those drivers now driving less carefully on quieter roads, etc. 

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Butty | 4 years ago
6 likes

Surely it is vigilante villagers who are a "real worry" rather than law abiding cyclists?

As such she should be getting resources to deal with pond life trying to take the law into their own hands

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eburtthebike | 4 years ago
8 likes

Villages have always had idiots, but it seems they have been breeding.

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ktache replied to eburtthebike | 4 years ago
8 likes

Slightly off topic, but it was the invention of the railway, it's spread across the country and then the adoption of the bicycle that led to female freedom that lessened the rates of inbreeding within villages that generally stopped the "village idiots"

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