Labour has approved a rollout of “Stalinist” 15-minute cities across the UK. Camilla Turner in the Telegraph has more.
Ministers
have said that they will allow councils to use driver licence databases
to impose fines on drivers who fall foul of “traffic filters”, which
restrict driving in certain areas.
The controls on motorists,
which are to be implemented for the first time in Oxford city centre
later this year, have been described as “perverse” by motor groups.
The
15-minute city is based on the idea that a person can access amenities
within a quarter of an hour by walking or cycling. In some cases, this
could result in traffic restrictions being brought in for drivers.
The
most high-profile example of such a plan is in Oxford, where the
council put forward proposals to divide the city into six “15-minute
neighbourhoods”.
Under the scheme, drivers would need a
residents’ permit that allows 100 days of free travel per year through
six traffic filters during operating hours.
Meanwhile, a
separate permit allows 25 days of free travel per year through six
congestion charge locations during charging hours, and after this,
drivers face fines if they travel without the relevant permission.
Greg
Smith, Shadow Transport Minister, said: “This is the blueprint for a
national rollout. Labour has given the green light for draconian
councils like Oxfordshire to police how people live, move and drive,
using cameras and fines backed by DVLA data.
“Oxford is the test case, but this is Labour’s blueprint for the country.”
Duncan White, Director, of the Alliance of British Drivers said 15-minute cities were an “abomination”.
He
said it was a “perverse” and “Stalinist” approach to social control,
adding: “It is an encroachment on civil liberties, and it is a page out
of the East Germany playbook.
“With the 15-minute city, you will
have to, in effect, apply for an internal passport to go and visit your
granny. From a civil liberties perspective, it is nonsensical. From an
operational point of view, it is bizarre.”
Jack Cousens, head of
roads policy at the AA, said: “What local authorities sometimes
struggle to remember is that the car remains and continues to remain the
main method which people use to travel around our country.
“Cars
coming into the town centres generate a huge amount of parking revenue
for local authorities, and the local high street is dependent on strong,
consistent footfall, and cars are probably the easiest way for people
to get in and out of town centres.
“We don’t want barriers that harm the national economy and the local economy.”...<<<Read More>>>...
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