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Police say cyclists in club kit are ignoring rules and riding in groups

“Large groups” seen on Peak District’s Snake Pass – police say “Stay at home”

Police in Derbyshire have urged cyclists, among others, not to flout government restrictions regarding exercise during the coronavirus pandemic, highlighting what they say are “large groups” of riders apparently in club kit riding on the Snake Pass in the Peak District. They have also underlined that while individual exercise is permitted, people should not be driving somewhere away from home to do it.

On Monday evening, outlining new rules under which people have to stay at home with limited exceptions, Prime Minister Boris Johnson said that it was permitted to go out for one form of exercise – walking, running or cycling – once a day, either alone or with members of your household.

However, it appears that many people are driving to beauty spots such as the New Forest or the Peak District to go for a walk or bike ride, resulting in police underlining that this is not permitted under the rules and telling them to start and finish their exercise from their own homes.

Earlier today, Derbyshire Roads Policing Unit said on Twitter: “We are patrolling all areas of the county and continue to see an unusually high volume of activity particularly in rural areas.“None of us ever expected or wanted this to happen but the message is clear – stay at home.”

In subsequent tweets, the force added: “Essential travel and local exercise does not include driving to locations and going for walks. It does not include Lycra-clad leisure cycling on the now quieter roads.

“It isn’t just about preventing the spread of the virus but also reducing the burden on essential services.”

Clarifying one of those tweets, it added: “Lycra clad cyclists is in reference to what appeared to be members of cycling clubs in matching outfits riding in large groups along the 11 mile stretch of the A57 Snake Pass.”

It’s not just cyclists that were criticised for ignoring the rules laid down by the government, breach of which is now subject to a £60 fine for a first offence.

“Snake Pass. Large groups gathering enjoying picnics, kebabs and shisha. Visitors from Manchester, Sheffield and Ipswich,” they said.

“Dispersed with no resistance but seriously this is not social distancing and staying home.”

Derbyshire Police also posted a film shot by its drone unit showing people engaging in activities deemed non-essential in remote areas of the Peak District.

It’s clear from social media posts from police forces across the country that many people are ignoring the rules on staying at home and avoiding social gatherings, as well as those laid down regarding avoiding non-essential journeys and exercising alone or with people who live in the same house.

While cycling is one of the permitted forms of exercise, the risk is that if some people continue to flout the rules and ride in groups, or take their bike by car to ride elsewhere, is not only that they may spread the virus, but that cycling will be banned altogether, as has happened in several countries on the continent.

A week before the Prime Minister’s announcement on Monday, the charity Cycling UK urged people not to ride in groups, and after his address to the nation it reinforced that point.

“Under no circumstance should you cycle or take part in any cycling activity in groups,” it said. “This is critical to stop the coronavirus disease spreading between households.

Our own advice is in the article linked below, originally published at the weekend and updated since then as the situation has evolved is that if you do feel that you need to ride outside, “then ride on your own, stay on your own, go home on your own and keep social interactions down to the absolute minimum. If you do meet people along the way then observe the guidance on social distancing.”

> How to cycle responsibly in a time of pandemic

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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52 comments

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Secret_squirrel replied to Rome73 | 4 years ago
2 likes
Lukas wrote:

'Lycra clad' is an unnecessary dig.  It kinda emphasises what they really think. 

Really?  Get over yourself.  It was perfectly factual as it appears to be have been a club ride in club gear.    

You're showing a victim mentality.  Stop being so sensitive and get on with your life instead of parsing every text for umbrage. 

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Captain Badger replied to Secret_squirrel | 4 years ago
17 likes

Sorry Squirrel, you are utterly wrong. The "Lycra-clad" bit is used frequently by the right wing press as a perjorative to "otherise" a minority. The Police should be above jumping on this particular band wagon. The message was strong and to the point already, without resorting to slurs.

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mdavidford replied to Secret_squirrel | 4 years ago
13 likes

But they didn't say 'in club gear', did they. They emphasised the lycra, and in doing so implied that anyone going out in lycra was in and of itself anti-social and breaking the rules. When someone goes out for their daily exercise, it should be no concern of the police's, or anyone else's, what they choose to wear, lycra or otherwise.

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OnTheRopes replied to Secret_squirrel | 4 years ago
10 likes

Wrong, one tweet from Derbyshire Roads Policing Unit actually said

"Essential travel and local exercise does not include driving to locations and going for walks. It does not include lycra-clad leisure cycling on the now quieter roads. It isn't just about preventing the spread of the virus but also reducing the burden on essential services. 2/3"

No mention of groups there, Idiots riding in groups need to be stopped and I am with the Police on this, but this in language incites hatred (try reading the actual tweets  and all the hundreds of replies) is targeting anyone in Lycra

This is no more acceptable than if they were calling walkers "The Red Sock Brigade" which of course they don't. And in balance another tweet critising walkers gets almost 100% support for the walkers in the drone video.

In the tweets not one photo of a groups of cyclists, name and shame I say.

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Hirsute replied to Secret_squirrel | 4 years ago
3 likes

And who else gets these labels then? It's just anti cycling contempt is the problem.

See letter from last year on road cc

 

 

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fukawitribe replied to Hirsute | 4 years ago
0 likes
hirsute wrote:

And who else gets these labels then?

Everybody - welcome to the world.

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Chris Hayes | 4 years ago
3 likes

I guess crime rates in Derbyshire must have fallen to zero for the Police to be out spying on dog-walkers with Drones.... Obviously, nothing else to do....

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brooksby replied to Chris Hayes | 4 years ago
3 likes

I am wondering about crime that doesn't involve 'walking in a public place'.

We've had three burglaries in our village in the last week, and speeding motorists are becoming a real problem (more than usual - they see an empty road and think they're in a car advert).

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EddyBerckx | 4 years ago
4 likes

They've been getting plenty of stick on twitter for spreading misinformation over what you can and can't do.

If the police can't be trusted to know and enforce the basic rules what chance do we have?

And as other have pointed out. The more you highlight the people breaking the rules while ignoring the majority who are following them, the more normal you make the rule breaking and the more likely people will break them. See: drivers, speeding.

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David9694 | 4 years ago
2 likes

Gaming the rules, upsetting the police like this is just going make this worse for cyclists and more prolonged for everyone.  Don't let me see anyone spitting either - horrid habit at the best of times, unacceptable now. 

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crazy-legs | 4 years ago
7 likes

I rode Snake Pass (from my house) last weekend. Half way up it, a cyclist caught me up and passed me - no big deal. The problem was that he'd clearly seen me ahead of him and chased me down and he was blown by the time he got past. So he sat there like 6ft in front of me getting slower and slower and in the end I went round him and opened up a bit of a gap. Not racing, I was just riding my own pace, enjoying the scenery.

2 minutes later, he was back on my wheel and then went past again. This time I just sat up and let him go cos he was clearly one of those "must chase down the rider in front" people who wasn't going to let it go.

Was just thinking - at a time when we're specifically told RIDE ALONE this guy was intent on turning it into some sort of competition or 2-up or social thing. Fuck off, leave me alone. Go past and disappear or admit that you're not actually fast enough to drop me, I dont care either way.

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billymansell | 4 years ago
3 likes

Unfortunately much of the information around this whole situation has been muddled and confusing.

Having just looked at the gov.uk page on social distancing it says,

You can also go for a walk or exercise outdoors if you stay more than 2 metres from others.

There's currently no suggestion about not driving to a place to go for that walk or exercise. It simply needs to be amended to say 'from where you are self-isolating go for walk... and do not use a motor vehicle'

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AlsoSomniloquism replied to billymansell | 4 years ago
6 likes

But there are plenty of bits that say non essential travel. The Police was pointing out the majority drove there to have a walk, non essential.

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billymansell replied to AlsoSomniloquism | 4 years ago
2 likes

No. If you look at the gov.uk page on social distancing, which is the page that refers to exercise, the only reference to non-essential travel is;

Avoid non-essential use of public transport when possible

As I say you've highlighted the muddled and confusing messages. Further to this they are guidance and not rules as the police have suggested although the police are getting additional powers to enforce them.

Now there is talk of avoiding non-essential travel but that is on the separate page relating to self-isolation and as you've shown confusion reigns when there's a lack of clarity from the govt.

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Kendalred replied to billymansell | 4 years ago
0 likes

True, but from what I have seen, many police services (including Cumbria where I live) are specifically stating that travelling by car to exercise is not essential and therefore forbidden. And it's the plod who do the enforcement, not Government ministers.

I agree that the guidance on this is wooly, I seem to recall at one of the recent press conferences this issue was specifically broched, and the answer was ambiguous at best, and downright confusing at worst.

It needs clarifying - I've literally just heard the chief plod from Derbyshire on the news on the radio, and even he said 'travelling to REMOTE AREAS' is against the Govt guidelines' - so again no real clarity on what constitutes unnecessary travel. 

Anyway, this shouldn't really affect cyclists should it? Who the hell is driving in order to cycle?

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BBB | 4 years ago
2 likes

Name and shame the idiots. Fines should be £1000, not £30

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Hirsute | 4 years ago
10 likes

"Lycra clad"
So what were the people in the drone video described as: "cagoule clad", "jeans clad" ?

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Sriracha replied to Hirsute | 4 years ago
13 likes

The "lycra clad" epithet betrays a certain animosity towards cyclists in general - after all there is no ruling on what materials to wear in these times of trial.

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caw35ride replied to Hirsute | 4 years ago
3 likes

Rather than blot the lot of us, I'd prefer it if they came out and named the club and published supporting photos. Not hard. 

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Rick_Rude replied to caw35ride | 4 years ago
8 likes
caw35ride wrote:

Rather than blot the lot of us, I'd prefer it if they came out and named the club and published supporting photos. Not hard. 

It is if they made it up.

State 1 of our imported Chinese dystopia is working well. You've got neighbours spying on each other and certain types of people like cyclists vilified.

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crazy-legs replied to Rick_Rude | 4 years ago
6 likes

I cant find any evidence on Strava of GROUP rides on either of the main Snake Pass segments (up from Glossop heading east or up from Bamford heading west) on 25th March, the day they quote. Easily found a few solo rides, check them out and there's no "[person a] rode with....." on there.

I suspect the police saw a few solo - maybe couple - riders and drew their own conclusions, added in the unneccesary "lycra clad" just to stir some animosity and job's a good'un.

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Awavey replied to crazy-legs | 4 years ago
1 like

but I have on my rides outside, seen at least one group (well 2 riders together actually) who didnt look to necessarily be from the same house even if that maybe a sweeping assumption and doing them a disservice , but they didnt pop up on Strava when I checked later,  and I can guarantee if anyone else saw them riding on the road like that, they would be the ones who'd be remembered, not the 15 other riders I saw just riding out solo just like myself

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