Inspired by a scheme introduced in Paris in July, Ken Livingstone has ordered a feasibility study into a ‘pay-as-you-go’ bike scheme for London. Since cycling is being heavily promoted by Transport for London as both a healthy and congestion beating way to travel around the capital, having a ‘pick up a bike’ system could help convince people to adopt peddle-power.
While no-one disputes that cycling is one of the most eco-friendly ways to travel, the heavy-duty bicycles that might soon be available at hundreds of pick-up points are unlikely to come with helmets, security gear or a crash course on the Highway Code.
Do cycle networks need to be improved, and cyclists trained and licensed at the dawn of an era where picking up a bike could be easier waving down a bus? .
Should this project be implemented in London? Would it be safe or is cycling too hazardous in a city as big and busy as the capital?
Here is your chance to ask the experts about the ‘pay-as-you-go’ bike scheme for London.
Participants
Philip Ingham, 41, is a life-long cyclist and communications manager for British Cycling, the internationally recognised governing body of cycling in the United Kingdom. The organization underpins cycling with programmes focusing on facilities, major events, coaching, volunteers, club development and grass-roots participation. In conjunction with its funding partners, British Cycling has a five year strategy for the development of cycling, and is also committed to broadening participation in leisure cycling in the UK.
Richard Tomkins is consumer industries editor and chief feature writer of the Financial Times. He recently wrote a feature-length article about the need for 'proper rules for cyclists', in which he explained why he thinks it is time London punishes the abuse of peddle-power. 'I do not want to stop people cycling but I do want them to realise that the green halo hovering over their helmets does not put them in a special category of road users to whom no laws apply', he wrote. Richard was born in Walsall, England, in 1952. His formal education ended when he left King Edward's School, Birmingham, at the age of 17. Before becoming a journalist, he was (among other things) a factory worker, a truck driver, a restaurant cashier, a civil servant and an assistant private secretary to a government minister.