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Town where cyclist ordered to pay £1,150 to trial speakers playing 'no cycling' message every 15 minutes

Numerous cyclists have been ordered to pay £500 or more since a controversial town centre cycling ban came into effect in Grimsby

In the latest attempts of one council to crack down on "anti-social behaviour", namely people cycling through parts of Grimsby town centre, a speaker system will play messages reminding residents that cycling is banned on certain streets.

The news was first reported by the BBC and concerns Grimsby town centre, where hundreds of cyclists have been fined and some ordered to pay sums in excess of £500, and even as much as £1,150 in one case, after the council introduced a controversial Public Space Protection Order (PSPO) that prohibits cycling in parts of the town centre.

Victoria_Street_West,_Grimsby_-_DSC07296.JPG

Councillor Ron Shepherd, the council's portfolio holder for communities (pictured in the main image illustrating this story in front of boarded-up shops), argued the fines and speaker messages will ensure anyone behaving in an anti-social way will "be made aware of what they are doing and reprimanded accordingly".

He added: "Additionally, this new [speaker] system will be a way of educating a wider audience as visitors and residents go about their daily business. Should the trial be successful, we look forward to expanding its use in the future."

Short messages will be played every 15 minutes, outlining the 'no cycling' rules brought in by a PSPO by North East Lincolnshire Council in 2019 and that have seen more than 1,000 fixed-penalty notices issued since then, the bulk of which have been for cycling on Victoria Street South and walking dogs along the main beach.

Just last week we reported that another cyclist had been ordered to pay £500 in fines and costs for cycling in the town centre. Last summer, a female cyclist was ordered to pay over £1,100 in fines and costs, while numerous others have also received a hefty bill for their town centre cycling.

Councillor Shepherd, has previously called similar fines a "great result for our enforcement teams", and warned that cyclists will continue to be "rightly punished".

Grimsby town centre fine (North East Lincolnshire Council)

"These PSPOs are there for a reason. Not because we want to put them in place or to cause a nuisance, but to ensure the safety of the borough," he said. "These people have not followed the rules and for that they have been rightly punished. Others need to be made aware that we will not simply look the other way, those breaking these PSPOs will face repercussions."

Some locals have accused the council's enforcement officers of targeting cyclists "they can get away with". In October 2022, the local council faced a backlash from residents after a pensioner was fined £100 for cycling through the town centre, with some accusing the council officers of targeting "old and slow" riders while ignoring youths "racing up and down".

Barrie Enderby, 82, told North East Lincolnshire Council he would "rather go to prison than give them £100" and that they could "stick it up your a*se", after he was fined for breaching the PSPO. 

In social media posts shared at the time, one person said they witnessed the incident which saw Mr Enderby fined and claimed that there had been "other young lads riding past" who officers "didn't bother to stop".

Another claimed she had also been "targeted", while someone else reported seeing "three youths doing wheelies and racing up and down" while a council officer "just stood [by]".

In one reply a local woman said: "Catching all the wrong ones... I sat and watched them all last week, only targeting the old and slow cyclists that aren't in anyone's way."

In June of last year four separate cyclists, ranging in age from 31 to 65, were found guilty of breaching the PSPO, with all four being fined £220 and ordered to pay almost £300 in costs, before a month later Lauren Cullum was ordered to pay £1,150.

In contrast, in the same week at Grimsby Magistrates' Court, Paul Berry pleaded guilty to driving at 50mph on a 40mph road. He was disqualified from driving for seven days, fined £60, and ordered to pay a victim services surcharge of £16.

Cycling bans in urban areas are one of the more commonly seen PSPOs and are often justified as a means of tackling dangerous, anti-social behaviour by youths on bikes in town centre areas.

> "We get a lot of kids wheelie-ing through": Police claim danger of "anti-social behaviour" should be tackled with town centre cycling ban

However, they are controversial because they impact anyone who may wish to cycle to shops or amenities in the area. There are also concerns about their effectiveness considering, as has been claimed in Grimsby, often the people whose anti-social riding the PSPO is brought in to tackle could not care less about the local authority suddenly banning their behaviour.

Active travel charity Cycling UK has long been a prominent critic of PSPOs, which it says have the effect of criminalising cycling, with head of campaigns Duncan Dollimore pointing out that the orders only discourage people from riding bikes into town.

Dan is the road.cc news editor and joined in 2020 having previously written about nearly every other sport under the sun for the Express, and the weird and wonderful world of non-league football for The Non-League Paper. Dan has been at road.cc for four years and mainly writes news and tech articles as well as the occasional feature. He has hopefully kept you entertained on the live blog too.

Never fast enough to take things on the bike too seriously, when he's not working you'll find him exploring the south of England by two wheels at a leisurely weekend pace, or enjoying his favourite Scottish roads when visiting family. Sometimes he'll even load up the bags and ride up the whole way, he's a bit strange like that.

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52 comments

Avatar
brogs | 3 months ago
2 likes

Give him a top hat and he could control the North Western Railway.

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john_smith | 3 months ago
0 likes

Did any anyone else parse it as "cyclist ordered to pay £1,150 to trial speakers"?

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eburtthebike | 3 months ago
4 likes

How are the cyclists going to hear it?  They might hear a word or two as they ride past at 70mph, but unless there are speakers every couple of meters, that's all they'll get.

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chrisonabike replied to eburtthebike | 3 months ago
0 likes
eburtthebike wrote:

How are the cyclists going to hear it?

It's to let the *pedestrians* know. A regular reminder of the outlawry of wheeled bandits. Announces that the council's looking out for them - without them needing to do stuff which would actually tackle the causes).

Perhaps council could provide handy piles of bricks / stacks of pitchforks for people to use also?

As for cyclists the deaf ones *can't* hear it and the scofflaws won't care.

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Martynofsheepy | 3 months ago
2 likes

The 2nd photo of Mr Shepherd shows his body language, his forearms and hands, trying to hide his fat stomach. He ought to "get on his bike" and lose a few stones/kilos. I've a old bike he could have.

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NPlus1Bikelights | 3 months ago
2 likes

We need to get rid of all the Tory councillors, next.

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Martynofsheepy replied to NPlus1Bikelights | 3 months ago
2 likes

Especially the fat ones.

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workhard | 3 months ago
8 likes

Perhaps the grim-faced councillor could mandate that the local radio station broadcasts warnings to drivers every 15 mins? "Stop speeding" "Put down that phone" "Pay some attention" "You're pissed, get out of the car" "Get off the pavement"

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anke2 | 3 months ago
2 likes

On the first picture, the town looks like a wasteland - I wouldn't want to walk there, and only cycle on a mad max type electric mountainbike wearing motorcycle leathers... Funny how Mr Councillor doesn't even seem to dare to enter...

On the second image, the pedestrian density is so high that save cycling seems (almost) impossible and pushing the bike would be preferred by (almost) anyone.

Can't the police, Mr. Councillor - and perhaps locals (pedestrians and cyclists) - apply some common sense, then?

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Aluminium can | 3 months ago
6 likes

Four wheels good, two wheels bad.

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stewb62 | 3 months ago
9 likes

Presumably he is unaware of the extensive body of research evidence that cyclists spend more than drivers in town centre shops, as he stands outside closed and boarded up shops. Less per trip, but more trips per week. The bike racks in the shopping streets of my reasonably cycle friendly town are well used, including in the pedestrianised street where cycling was recently officially permitted (and previously unofficially allowed). Not many empty shops either!

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Bigfoz | 3 months ago
11 likes

Maybe get a crowd of cyclists (enough to fill the street - couple hundred?), and spend the day riding up to one end, legally pushing the bikes through it at a dawdle, then riding round back to the start and repeat. All day. I'm sure councillor large pants would have a conniption because people are obeying the law...

 

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Matthew Acton-Varian replied to Bigfoz | 3 months ago
8 likes

Agreed. And to participate you must be silent and have quiet freehubs. Make as little sound as possible and complain the speakers are spoiling your quiet stroll through the town.

 

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brooksby replied to Bigfoz | 3 months ago
7 likes

"Don't ride your bike through here - that's antisocial.  Just get off and push it ... No, not like that!"

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hawkinspeter replied to Bigfoz | 3 months ago
5 likes

Bigfoz wrote:

Maybe get a crowd of cyclists (enough to fill the street - couple hundred?), and spend the day riding up to one end, legally pushing the bikes through it at a dawdle, then riding round back to the start and repeat. All day. I'm sure councillor large pants would have a conniption because people are obeying the law...

Malicious compliance

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NPlus1Bikelights replied to Bigfoz | 3 months ago
1 like

Dom of Drum and Bass on a Bike fame needs to visit.

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bikes | 3 months ago
6 likes

What is the £/injuries prevented cost of this system compared to the money being used elsewhere?

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eburtthebike | 3 months ago
4 likes

Councillor Ron Shepherd: Big Brother is watching you, and I mean big.  Looks like he would benefit from a daily bike ride, and he's a conservative, so guaranteed to be completely out of touch.

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philhubbard | 3 months ago
10 likes

The only reason you would cycle through this part of town is to go to the shops which they are now stopping, contributing to the fact that the whole town centre is now bookies, pubs or off-licenses. You can either go round the diversion by a pretty quite road or 4-lane street which is pretty likely to get you knocked off due to the sheer amount of oblivious drivers coming out of Home Bargains at one end and a shopping centre at the other. That's before you get to the end of it and have the 5-way light system...

In another light, a really successful brewery, out of the town centre recently had just under 100 riders raising money for the local ambulance service. Thanks to this councillor none of them went through the town at all: https://www.instagram.com/docksbeers/p/C9iAsMbtkx9/

 

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HLaB replied to philhubbard | 3 months ago
0 likes

I don't know much about the town but if they extended the zone and made a good crossing of the A16 and /or Ellis Way it has the potential to create a good route from the homes in the west of the town to the railway stations and supermarkets to the east of the A16.  The A16, Ellis Way and that stupidly oversized 5way signal junction you mention looks too much of a barrier at the moment though and will supress a lot of demand.

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philhubbard replied to HLaB | 3 months ago
3 likes

In all fairness there is a bike lane at the traffic lights (east and west) but no bike lane so you have to ride along the 4-lane road then get up onto the kerb at the end of it. The main issue is that there is no cycle lane on the north or south routes (or the east and west but at least you have the crossing). 

To be completely honest it's a pretty safe area to cycle in but I am comparing this to living and working in either Sheffield or London for several years. The sad thing is that from either Cleethorpes or Immingham you can get most of the way across the county on good segregated cycle lanes apart from Grimsby. 

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Car Delenda Est | 3 months ago
7 likes

Starting to feel like a protest ride needs to be organised.

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Mr Anderson | 3 months ago
13 likes

Someone must hack into this system and replace the recorded message.

Perhaps the return of the "Phantom Raspberry Blower"!!!

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NotNigel | 3 months ago
5 likes

Made me chuckle...it's almost like people are sticking two fingers up to such a ridiculous idea.

Someone suggested it's not enough having the speakers repeating the rules....there should be police at either end of the street.

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brooksby | 3 months ago
3 likes

Another thing - does North East Lincolnshire Council use an old Nokia or something to take their publicity photos?  Or is Councillor Shepherd just naturally pixellated?

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mdavidford replied to brooksby | 3 months ago
4 likes

brooksby wrote:

Another thing - does North East Lincolnshire Council use an old Nokia or something to take their publicity photos?  Or is Councillor Shepherd just naturally pixellated?

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NickSprink | 3 months ago
13 likes

So cycling is banned as it is "anti-social", but a speaker blearing out instructions isn't?

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brooksby replied to NickSprink | 3 months ago
6 likes

I said it when this was being discussed on yesterday's live blog, but I do wonder what Grimsby's policy is regarding noise pollution?

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chrisonabike | 3 months ago
11 likes

This is perfect for a takeover by Banksy.  In fact I'm not sure this wasn't in Dismaland...?

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Mr Hoopdriver | 3 months ago
13 likes

Councillor Shepherd - putting the grim into Grimsby.

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