Tuesday, 22 July 2014

Correspondence with Walsh

My original email:
Dear sir/madam,
I write to you concerning an incident when two Walsh lorries close passed me.
The facts:
Yesterday 5 September 2013, at approximately 9:10 am, I was travelling eastward on Prince Albert Road (A5205) by bicycle, on my way to work. Traffic was light and I was riding slightly to the left of the median line of my traffic lane (see link to approximate location below). There was no oncoming traffic.
https://www.google.co.uk/maps/preview#!data=!1m8!1m3!1d3!2d-0.156865!3d51.536921!2m2!1f64.83!2f90!4f75!2m4!1e1!2m2!1slKuM7KAgc74LsA4DESAiQQ!2e0&fid=5
You can therefore understand my surprise when the lorry I had heard was catching up with me passed me at speed with at most a metre of space. Shaken by the experience I wobbled a little bit, when another lorry passed me, also very close. I saw the Walsh sign on both of them and a couple hundred metres later caught up with them stopped at the lights, where I stopped and took the photos attached (note date and time stamp in the photos’ EXIF data). Lorry number 13 (EU06 HPK) passed me first, closely followed by lorry number 39 (EU61 CZL).
The law: Highway Code rule 163 (https://www.gov.uk/using-the-road-159-to-203/overtaking-162-to-169) states that drivers should "give motorcyclists, cyclists and horse riders at least as much room as you would when overtaking a car", illustrated by a photo where a car is overtaking a cyclist by moving into the right hand lane and giving him approximately his height in space.
As I stated above there was no oncoming traffic, there was nothing stopping the Walsh drivers from moving into the right hand lane and overtaking safely. Instead, your drivers took no notice of me and, as indicated by Highway code rule 163, might very well have broken the law by overtaking a vulnerable road user dangerously. Please note that I have attached to my carrier rack a large, brightly coloured and very visible child seat at all times, it is impossible for your drivers not to have seen me on a beautiful late summer day, unless they were looking elsewhere than right in from of them. Had I wobbled a bit more, or swerved to avoid a pot hole, I would now be dead and my widow would be writing to you. I am sure you are aware that a TfL study showed construction lorries are responsible for about 50% of cyclist deaths in London (http://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2013/feb/01/construction-lorries-cyclist-deaths-report), which is not surprising if the standard of driving displayed by your drivers is common in the industry.
Information requested: I would like to know if your drivers are given cycle awareness training, as the two I had the misfortune to encounter clearly either were not trained, or cared not for the safety of another road user in which case they should be reminded of their training. I also would like to know what measures will be taken to avoid this kind of behaviour. Your drivers on that day could easily have killed someone.
I will look forward to your response.
Best regards,
Dr Nicolas Fanget
His reply:
Dear Mr Fanget
Sorry its taken time to get the full picture but I have now completed my investigation.
I spoke to both drivers separately and they both confirmed that they remember your bicycle and deny that they were speeding or driving dangerously, they stated they gave you plenty of room as the traffic allowed.
You stated that they passed you at speed if you see my GPS tracker report they were travelling at no more than 9 mph for less than 1 minute, also they could see the traffic and lights ahead and they had a better view of the road as they are higher up than a cyclist and considered it unsafe to pull over fully into the on coming traffic lane.
You stated that the traffic was light but you caught them up after “a couple of hundred metres” this suggests that the traffic was a bit heavier than you implied as it only  took 3 minutes to clear the lights.
On the training front all S Walsh driver are full trained to Crossrail spec on Urban driving and cycle safe awareness driving, also they have 7 hours extra training every year they hold a driving licence.
We also supply a wagon and drivers to the Metropolitan Police Cycle safe scheme which promotes cycle safety from a HGV and Cyclist point of view.
We park a wagon in a selected area and work with the met to allow cyclist to sit in the driver’s seat while a met police office sits in the passangers seat and a officer rides up the near side to show the cyclist the dangers of the near side of any HGV or bus, this has been documented as a successful eye opener to the cyclists.
All our vehicle are fitted with as much safety equipment to prevent accidents see attached scanned document from Crossrail, all our vehicles are fitted with all this equipment but not all wagon around the city are.
You quoted the Guardian report, what this report cannot state is what proportion of the unfortunate deaths are Lorries or Cyclist fault.
I can only go by the evidence I received from your self and the drivers plus the tracking data and cannot state that the drivers could or could not have been more careful.
This is not meant to be patronising but the drivers and vehicles have had extensive training and a lot of extra equipment fitted to assist in keeping all vulnerable road users and pedestrians as safe as possible.
Could you tell me if you have had any training on the safe ridding of a bicycle as you stated if you swerved to avoid a pothole you could have been killed, as a cyclist myself I was always taught not to swerve to avoid obstacles’ but to slow down and look over my shoulder to ensure it is safe, if this is not possible then you would be going to  fast and putting yourself in danger.
I have also included some of the cycle events dates covered by the Met it would be good idea for you to go along as you can inter act with the drivers and the police and get both cyclist and drivers views of the problems out there.
If anything like this happens again please stop the drivers and speak to them about your concerns
If you need any more info off me feel free to get in touch.
Dereck
My final reply:
Dear Dereck,
first of all I wish to thank you for your response, it is comprehensive and I welcome the inclusion of all the data you had to hand. I have disagreements regarding the interpretation of these data of course, but they are welcome nonetheless. I also welcome the fact that Walsh is clearly seriously trying to improve the safety of their vehicles and give good training to their drivers. I respond to the points you made in your email below.
both drivers […] deny that they were speeding or driving dangerously, they stated they gave you plenty of room as the traffic allowed
1. Well yes, of course they would.
2. “as the traffic allowed”: they are not supposed to give me room as traffic allows, but following Highway code rule 163 they are supposed to "give motorcyclists, cyclists and horse riders at least as much room as you would when overtaking a car" (emphasis mine), irrelevant of other traffic. In other words if they can’t overtake safely, they wait behind.
You stated that the traffic was light but you caught them up after “a couple of hundred metres” this suggests that the traffic was a bit heavier than you implied as it only  took 3 minutes to clear the lights.
They cleared the first set of traffic lights first, at the junction of Prince Albert Rd and St Mark’s Sq, but they got caught up in traffic at the second set of lights, at the junction of Prince Albert Rd and Gloucester Gate, which is where I caught up with them and took the photos attached in my first email.
they were travelling at no more than 9 mph for less than 1 minute
1. My own GPS tracker (see attached, relevant time points highlighted) shows that I averaged 19 km/h (i.e. 11 mph) for the same distance, quite how they managed to overtake me while travelling slower than me is clearly a violation of the most basic laws of physics. More seriously, it shows that we cannot rely on GPS average speeds to assess whether driving was safe in this situation.
2. Those are average speeds, the time spent waiting at lights, which was around 50% the time posted and stationary, is taken into account. Their peak instant speed was therefore at least double that posted by the GPS report, and could easily be quite higher still when taking into account the time taken to accelerate to peak speed and then decelerate to stop at the lights.
3. I note from Detailed Report CZL that at the 9:14 time point the lorry travelled at an average speed of 35 mph, again meaning the peak speed attained was higher, in Albany street. Glass houses come to mind.
You quoted the Guardian report, what this report cannot state is what proportion of the unfortunate deaths are Lorries or Cyclist fault.
1. “More than two thirds of all crashes between drivers and cyclists in Central London are the fault of the motorist”, according to research by Westminster council http://www.thetimes.co.uk/tto/public/cyclesafety/article3758677.ece. Granted this covers all motorists and not specifically lorry drivers.
2. Here you are trying to blame me for the incident. I will not have this, I was the vulnerable road user put into danger by drivers of two large lorries. Nothing I did at that point was dangerous, reckless, ill-advised or illegal.
This is not meant to be patronising
Yes it is.
Could you tell me if you have had any training on the safe ridding of a bicycle
Irrelevant to the point at hand, I was riding in a safe manner at that precise point in time, and was endangered by your drivers.
you stated if you swerved to avoid a pothole you could have been killed, as a cyclist myself I was always taught not to swerve to avoid obstacles’ but to slow down and look over my shoulder to ensure it is safe, if this is not possible then you would be going to  fast and putting yourself in danger
1. Since you are a bicyclist yourself, you should therefore be well aware that sometimes potholes are hidden and visible only at the very last second. When this happens, the reflex of any cyclist is to swerve. This is why the Highway code specifies that overtaking vehicles should do so with extreme care and giving a large amount of space.
2. I fail to understand how a bicycle could travel “too fast” on this stretch of road, I am unfortunately no Bradley Wiggins.
As you stated in your response, “I can only go by the evidence I received from your self and the drivers plus the tracking data”, and I agree that this comes down to my word against that of your drivers. Note that I would not have bothered sending you an email if they had passed me safely, or not too close; believe it or not but I have better things to do with my time. I contacted you because I genuinely was frightened for my life. All this conversation has highlighted to me is that, absent a physical separation between cyclists and motorised traffic, I should get a camera on my bike and record evidence that can be upheld in court.
Best regards,

Nicolas Fanget

Tuesday, 19 November 2013

Letter to Boris Johnson

Dear Mayor,

I'm shocked that five ordinary Londoners have died cycling on our city's streets in the last nine days.

Those deaths are the sign that, contrary to election promises, you do not care about cycling in our city. 

Why has no progress been made toward increasing cycling and cycling safety by "the cycling mayor"? Paris and New York, Chicago and Barcelona, Berlin and Copenhagen, the list of cities both small and large that manage it grows by the day, yet there is nothing but inaction, or inappropriate action and victim blaming, from both yourself and TfL.

And that is only the immediate threat of death or maiming by collision with motor vehicles. When we add to this your inaction towards air pollution, which kills thousands every year, your  behaviour is very close to criminal neglect. You are in an extraordinarily powerful position, yet you do not use that power to make the life of the people you represent any better.

However, you can change all this. If you cannot do this yourself, have your advisers and TfL's planners go to the Netherlands, see what is best practice in cycle lane design. Create real Cycle Superhighways, safe for all to travel on from 8 to 80, separated from HGVs and fast traffic. Show the world that London can be, and will be a cycling city. So far you are failing, and in doing so you are failing all Londoners.