Attention: Please take a moment to consider our terms and conditions before posting.

ULEZ Checker

1484951535464

Comments

  • cafc999 said:
    She won't abolish it
    Eh?

    it’s her published pledge should she win to scrap the extension - and which is all I comment on (I doubt she will win) so not sure why you say that?
  • Eh?

    it’s her published pledge should she win to scrap the extension - and which is all I comment on (I doubt she will win) so not sure why you say that?
    How many published promises have been broken in the past?

    Do you honestly think she will abolish something that brings in money?
  • cafc999 said:
    How many published promises have been broken in the past?

    Do you honestly think she will abolish something that brings in money?
    Well purely because she says she will scrap on Day 1 without any caveat I doubt she would have a legitimate choice not to. 

    Likewise on the other side of the coin we are told by Khan it’s not a revenue based initiative. 

    Probably a hollow promise as unlikely to get the win but I don’t see how they could not follow through at least initially given the public pronouncements. 
  • IdleHans said:
    Politicians tell more than their share of lies but as far as I'm concerned Khan was absolutely spot on about one thing in an interview the other day: "The day after the election, people won't want to wake up with a conservative mayor".
    I'm still shuddering at the idea now.
    In all honesty I’m not 100% convinced the mayor (of any political shade) has that much power and influence to really influence things given the dependency on central government and broader economic climate beyond their control. These constraints mean there is limited wriggle room to do notable schemes and enforce local policy at variance to elsewhere. 

    I see their role as ‘selling’ London to create advantages whether that be in terms of generating tourism or accessing more central funding etc. 

    They are limited and ULEZ is one of the few policies that stand out. 
  • Since Ken Livingstone onward there have been some significant Mayor led improvements in transport.
    Arguably the best improvement (even if flawed in a practical sense in some places) has been the introduction of Bus Lanes.
    London used to be (necessarily?) dominated by the car to the detriment of every other road user.
    If the Bakerloo line is extended through, say, Camberwell and Peckham to Lewisham, maybe on to Bromley or up to Eltham it would be great.
    I won’t live to see it mind you, but it is a step towards more clean air and less dependence on the motor car.
  • Susan Hall won't be mayor, and the froth around ULEZ is mainly gone apart from some odd radicalised nutters
  • Sponsored links:


  • TFL have refused a Freedom of Information Request  on how much it has cost to repair/replace damaged cameras. Stating that if they release the cost it might encourage more damage.
  • Red Ken, Boris the Liar and Sadiq Kant - such a low bar
  • edited March 2024
    seth plum said:
    Since Ken Livingstone onward there have been some significant Mayor led improvements in transport.
    Arguably the best improvement (even if flawed in a practical sense in some places) has been the introduction of Bus Lanes.
    London used to be (necessarily?) dominated by the car to the detriment of every other road user.
    If the Bakerloo line is extended through, say, Camberwell and Peckham to Lewisham, maybe on to Bromley or up to Eltham it would be great.
    I won’t live to see it mind you, but it is a step towards more clean air and less dependence on the motor car.
    Bakerloo line will terminate at Lewisham thank you very much! Hopefully i'll still be alive to see it!
  • Jints said:
    It's been suspended rather than scrapped. I live near by and there's a lot anger about this in a solid Labour area. It was always a terrible idea, pushed through in complete contravention of the results of consultation by a Councillor and an officer with no relevant qualifications in traffic management and without proper discussion with TfL or teh bus operators. They are now about to do the same in West Dulwich again despite overwhelming opposition from locals. LTNs can work but they need to be carefully thought through. Some are beng imposed on communities who don't want them for ideological reasons - and I say that as someone who cycles to work.
    Thank the lord RBG didn't behave like this with parking around Charlton.
    Oh hang on a minute...
  • Billy_Mix said:
    Thank the lord RBG didn't behave like this with parking around Charlton.
    Oh hang on a minute...
    Plans to introduce a part-time low-traffic neighbourhood have been challenged by Greenwich’s Conservative opposition leader – meaning that a panel of councillors will have to hear concerns about the scheme. 
    Three Labour councillors — Lakshan Saldin (Charlton Hornfair), Leo Fletcher (Blackheath Westcombe) and Maisie Richards Cottell (East Greenwich) — have also called in the plans. They are raising worries about specific aspects of the scheme, which would cover much of Greenwich and part of Blackheath.
    https://greenwichwire.co.uk/2024/03/15/greenwich-ltn-plan-to-be-challenged-by-tory-councillor/
  • Ulez won't be a massive thing come Mayoral election, I've heard more people grumbling about council tax (the GLA element) which is up considerably.
  • Rob7Lee said:
    Ulez won't be a massive thing come Mayoral election, I've heard more people grumbling about council tax (the GLA element) which is up considerably - AGAIN
    Fixed
  • Council tax pays for stuff. If you don’t like what happens vote the council out. If you have solutions write to your councillor or MP suggesting them or stand for election yourself.
    It is however quite cathartic to complain endlessly about those who achieve power, there is no compunction to accept defeat without complaint.
    If the form of complaining is illegal, then accept the full force of the law if you’re caught, including surrendering some of your DNA for reference and future use.
    Council tax pays for stuff.
  • seth plum said:
    Council tax pays for stuff. If you don’t like what happens vote the council out. If you have solutions write to your councillor or MP suggesting them or stand for election yourself.
    It is however quite cathartic to complain endlessly about those who achieve power, there is no compunction to accept defeat without complaint.
    If the form of complaining is illegal, then accept the full force of the law if you’re caught, including surrendering some of your DNA for reference and future use.
    Council tax pays for stuff.
    Nobody is complaining about council tax, but they are complaining about the ever rising element that goes to the GLA 

    we all know council tax pays for stuff seth
  • Sponsored links:


  • edited March 2024
    seth plum said:
    Council tax pays for stuff. If you don’t like what happens vote the council out. If you have solutions write to your councillor or MP suggesting them or stand for election yourself.
    It is however quite cathartic to complain endlessly about those who achieve power, there is no compunction to accept defeat without complaint.
    If the form of complaining is illegal, then accept the full force of the law if you’re caught, including surrendering some of your DNA for reference and future use.
    Council tax pays for stuff.
    As per usual 2+2 = 5 and lets make up/misinterpret what someone's said.

    "I've heard more people grumbling about council tax (the GLA element)" - I'm sure you know what the GLA element is (the precept) and who and how it is set.

    I'm quite happy in the main with Bromley Council and how and what they spend their money on. Services are much better than when I lived in Greenwich or Lewisham (perversely the council tax is also cheaper).

    Was up 2.99% this year, the GLA element up 8.58%.
  • Eh?

    it’s her published pledge should she win to scrap the extension - and which is all I comment on (I doubt she will win) so not sure why you say that?
    The Department for Transport insisted on the extension as part of the TfL financial settlement. Not in her power to remove it.
  • Crusty54 said:
    The Department for Transport insisted on the extension as part of the TfL financial settlement. Not in her power to remove it.
    Incorrect. The expansion to outer London was not conditional. 

    You may be thinking of the previous expansion to the south and north circular. 
  • For everyone saying ULEZ is now not an issue or 90% of vehicles are fine just remember the goal posts can easily be moved just like that. If it's currently loss making all that needs doing is moving the goal posts from any vehicle pre-2006 onwards by say 2-3 years to start getting the revenue in again.
  • So odd that on ‘X’ many of the vehemently anti ULEZ (and anti Khan) types don’t live in London. 
    Being selfish, and living near the south circular, ULEZ Is fine by me. 
    I suspect historians will have the policy down as something we should have done a few years earlier. 
  • edited March 2024
    JamesSeed said:
    So odd that on ‘X’ many of the vehemently anti ULEZ (and anti Khan) types don’t live in London. 
    Being selfish, and living near the south circular, ULEZ Is fine by me. 
    I suspect historians will have the policy down as something we should have done a few years earlier. 
    They might have to drive into London / within the zone?
  • JamesSeed said:
    So odd that on ‘X’ many of the vehemently anti ULEZ (and anti Khan) types don’t live in London. 
    Being selfish, and living near the south circular, ULEZ Is fine by me. 
    I suspect historians will have the policy down as something we should have done a few years earlier. 
    Why read that stuff at all?

    I‘m still waiting for some facts and figures and neutral analysis to learn impact on our London funding, attributable air quality gains (as there will be some) and compliance v non compliance. 
  • Rob7Lee said:
    As per usual 2+2 = 5 and lets make up/misinterpret what someone's said.

    "I've heard more people grumbling about council tax (the GLA element)" - I'm sure you know what the GLA element is (the precept) and who and how it is set.

    I'm quite happy in the main with Bromley Council and how and what they spend their money on. Services are much better than when I lived in Greenwich or Lewisham (perversely the council tax is also cheaper).

    Was up 2.99% this year, the GLA element up 8.58%.
    Yep, and all elements of tax pays for stuff.
  • seth plum said:
    Yep, and all elements of tax pays for stuff.
    and a stopped clocked is right twice a day  :o

    Everything between your first, and repeated, last sentence had nothing to do with the precept. I can't work out if you really didn't know the difference (which is how your response appears) or are being purposely obtuse for the sake of it. Either way, I must get back to the 'do not engage' 
  • edited March 2024
    The precept is not relevant.
    Money comes in under the guise of a lot of different names, there used to be something called Road Tax which wasn't only spent on roads, the essential thing is that if anybody moans about being tax overburdened then pay up or change the system.
    Moaning about it is welcome, I moan about a lot of things myself, but I don't tend to moan about tax rates however they're labelled because it seems clear to me we all ought to be paying much more to start to fix the destruction since 2010, and the extra destruction since 2016, and the long standing ongoing destruction of the environment.
    There are elections in May. I suspect there are those amongst us who accept that we must all pay all sorts of taxes and charges if we want there to be things, the structures are details.
    Money comes in, money gets spent.
Sign In or Register to comment.

Roland Out Forever!