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Friday, 27 July 2018
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What a waste of money: hundreds of taxi drivers wrongly sent warning letters for using bus lanes
Graham Foley, with a bundle of warning letters sent to taxi drivers, by the bus lane camera on the A40 in Cheltenham(Image: Copyright Unknown)
Hundreds of warning letters have been sent to taxi drivers because they drove in Cheltenham bus lanes - even though they are perfectly entitled to do so.
A mix-up means the letters have been sent to drivers of taxis and private hire vehicles by APCOA, the company dealing with traffic enforcement matters on behalf of Gloucestershire County Council.
So even though those vehicles are exempt from a ban on general traffic using the bus lanes, and also Boots Corner, newly-installed cameras have captured their registration details and letters have been sent out. They have warned the owners of the cars that they were illegally driving in the areas and would be fined £60 if they did it again
Graham Foley, owner of Dial-a-Cab in Cheltenham, said it had been alarming for his drivers to receive the letters, which must have cost the tax payer a lot of money.
The new camera overlooking the bus lane on the A40, by the Benhall roundabout, has been in use since late last month. A new camera monitoring traffic at Boots Corner has also been operating since then.
Mr Foley said it seemed APCOA had sent out letters to hundreds of taxi drivers, telling them they had been spotted driving in the bus lanes at Benhall and in Albion Street.
He said drivers working for his company had been sent 100 and therefore he thought the total number sent out had been about 1,000.
The new traffic enforcement camera in Clarence Street, Cheltenham(Image: Rob Jenkins)
He said: "The biggest thing about this is the phenomenal waste of money and that is council tax payers’ money."
He said APCOA should have been sent a comprehensive list of taxis that are allowed to use the bus lanes and Boots Corner.
And he believed the county council could easily have got that information from the district councils in Cheltenham and surrounding towns and cities, which are responsible for issuing taxi drivers with their licences.
A spokeswoman for the county council said: "APCOA now has a full list of exempt vehicles from all district councils across the county and is working hard to upload them on to the system.
"We’re sorry for this delay and would like to reassure taxi drivers that this was a short term mistake and will not be happening moving forward."
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Gloucestershire County Council apologises to Taxi drivers after wrongly issuing warning letters
Victory for anti-CS11 campaigners as judge approves injunction against work starting and grants judicial review
The Mess That Would Be ‘Swiss Cottage’
A High Court judge has passed Westminster City Council’s bid for an injunction and judicial review into CS11, but said he was "exasperated" by both sides.
In a two-and-a-half-hour hearing this morning, Mr Justice Holgate heard Westminster City Council believed Transport for London (TfL) hadn’t properly modelled traffic for parts of the route, including through St John’s Wood.
Tristan Jones, acting for the borough, also alleged TfL hadn’t properly shared documents with Westminster City Council.
But this was rebuffed by TfL, which said it had shared the same information for the plans with consultants from the council as it had on the Oxford Street pestrianisation plans.
The High Court also heard the transport body hadn’t shown why the Swiss Cottage gyratory work and work on the 100 Avenue Road plans needed to take place simultaneously. Mr Jones said: "There has been no explanation why they most be done at the same time."
Andrew Parkinson, who was assisting the claimant, raised campaigners’ concerns that the gyratory section would increase traffic elsewhere in the route.
Meanwhile Timothy Straker QC, representing TfL, said the council’s "sudden" withdrawal was "politically motivated." He alleged that Westminster’s backing of the plans was dropped after May’s local elections.
The Conservative-run authority jettisoned support for the Oxford Street works at around the same time.
As TfL officers ferried information to him from the back of the court, he said: "If you look at Camden’s response to the consultation, they say they welcome the scheme because Swiss Cottage is so awful."
Throughout the hearing, Mr Justice Holgate aired his frustrations.
At one point he accused Mr Straker of "grandstanding" over the accusation Westminster City Council’s actions were politically motivated.
He also said one authority taking the other to court was "like nothing I’ve seen before".
"Why is the court being troubled by this?" he said.
He urged the two parties to have informal mediation talks, and said they should be working together to agree the scheme.
The approval means work beginning on July 30 is delayed, and a full judicial review hearing will take place on September 6.
It is expected to last one day.
Following the hearing, campaigner Jessica Learmond-Criqui told the Ham&High: "We are obviously delighted that the judge expressly acknowledged and recognised the concerns of residents about ran running and traffic displacement into Hampstead and St John’s Wood.
"We were very ably assisted by the brilliant planning barrister Andrew Parkinson and couldn’t have done it without him.
"TfL will not be able to start work before the final decision of the judicial review full hearing."
She added: "The judge also mentioned there is a real prospect of an error of law in TfL’s decision [in March to begin work on Swiss Cottage]."
Ben Plowden, TfL’s director of strategy and network development, said CS11 was "a vitally important addition to London’s cycle network" and that work at Swiss Cottage would "make it a better place to live and work while reducing road danger for pedestrians and cyclists".
Of the hearing result, he said only: "Construction was due to begin on July 30. This will now be delayed pending the outcome of a judicial review."
Westminster’s environment chief, the rather more jubilant Cllr Tim Mitchell, said: "We are pleased with the High Court’s decision today which supports the council and residents’ right to be heard on CS11.
"We are worried that CS11 will cause traffic displacement, increase congestion and lead to poorer air quality.
"We are glad that the court has granted our injunction to stop works at Swiss Cottage until the very legitimate concerns with this scheme are addressed via a judicial review."
And he insisted: "Westminster City Council fully supports safe cycling and we are making major investments for cyclists within Westminster."
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