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Mayor's Oral Update (Supplementary) [6]

  • Question by: Andrew Boff
  • Meeting date: 20 November 2013
Can I ask you, even though, as you have accepted, the number of fatalities has reduced, that the actual number killed and seriously injured (KSI) has remained stubbornly the same - a little worse, a little better - but it is actually stubbornly the same, and that needs to be addressed. One of the expectations I think of the public is that safe cycling in London should get safer, not just be capped at the current level. I would ask you to attend to that and that you be driven by evidence.

Mayor's Oral Update (Supplementary) [5]

  • Question by: Valerie Shawcross
  • Meeting date: 20 November 2013
Mr Mayor, I want to follow up on John Biggs’ point about CS2. Cross-party, the leads on Transport Committee here have just met the London Cycling Campaign and they basically advised us that you should now have over 10,000 emails in your inbox. London’s cycling community want you to respond very urgently and speedily on the specific problems of CS2 and on the need to revisit and refit some sections of the Cycling Superhighway network because quite frankly they are confusing, they are weak, they very often let cyclists down just at the moment when they need protection. I think...

Mayor's Oral Update (Supplementary) [4]

  • Question by: Richard Tracey
  • Meeting date: 20 November 2013
Mr Mayor, I do not know whether you know, but in the last half‑an‑hour or so Chris Boardman, the well-known Olympic cyclist, has actually said that he thinks you are taking very positive steps to deal with this problem, but he also asks when or how you are going to proceed to the idea of perhaps limiting heavy lorries and tippers particularly during the peak hours when of course the maximum number of cyclists are on the roads. There are two other things: one is when are we going to see far more lorries with audio warnings on them such...

Mayor's Oral Update (Supplementary) [3]

  • Question by: John Biggs
  • Meeting date: 20 November 2013
Following from Jenny Jones’ point, I think there is an underlying problem, which is that too much of our cycling policy is written by what I call ‘gung-ho alpha males’ and it is at risk of creating road conditions that are not safe for people who are not of that disposition. For the record, the safest Cycle Superhighway, which runs through my constituency - in my experience, I may be wrong on this - but it is Cycle Superhighway 3, which was built under your predecessor and when you were elected, you have changed the colour of the tarmac, and...

Mayor's Oral Update (Supplementary) [2]

  • Question by: Jenny Jones
  • Meeting date: 20 November 2013
You keep talking about the deaths but you are ignoring the figures on the seriously injured and the fact is cycling is not getting safer in London. These are your figures, Mr Mayor, in 2008 - when you were first elected - on average a cyclist could do over 400,000 cycle trips before being killed or seriously injured. In 2011, three years after your smoothing traffic flow and changing traffic lights and so on, the average cyclist could only make 364,000 trips before being killed or seriously injured. Cycling is not getting safer. You have been asking me to apologise...

Mayor's Oral Update (Supplementary) [1]

  • Question by: Caroline Pidgeon
  • Meeting date: 20 November 2013
Mr Mayor, at the Cycling Vision launch last week, Transport for London (TfL) explained how they took just 18 months to install a cycle lane on a really straightforward bit of road; 18 months. London cannot wait 18 months for you to correct some of the issues on Cycle Superhighway 2 (CS2) and some of the other dangerous junctions in London. What are you going to do to speed up this urgent work on the highway?

Advice to London pensioners (Supplementary) [3]

  • Question by: Andrew Boff
  • Meeting date: 20 November 2013
Mr Mayor, would you not agree that taking advice from a Labour politician about health and the A&Es is not dissimilar to taking investment advice from that other famous Labour politician, the Reverend Paul Flowers?

Advice to London pensioners (Supplementary) [2]

  • Question by: Fiona Twycross
  • Meeting date: 20 November 2013
I just wanted to go back to the point about older people and their access to food. During the investigation into food poverty in London that I led on behalf of the Health and Environment Committee, we found that two‑thirds of organisations taking part in a survey on food poverty in the over-65 age group thought that the older people they worked with were finding it harder to access food. Meals on Wheels probably needs reinventing for the 21st century, but there are 10 boroughs in London who have now completely withdrawn the service. Touching on Onkar’s point, the biggest...

Advice to London pensioners (Supplementary) [1]

  • Question by: Onkar Sahota
  • Meeting date: 20 November 2013
Mr Mayor, we have heard the difficult decision pensioners will have to make this winter between heating and eating and there already is a group of people who are at increased risk of unnecessary winter deaths this winter. We already know that too many older people are admitted through accident and emergency departments (A&Es) in London, putting even more pressure on overworked doctors and nurses and understaffed hospitals. The elderly are a big reason why we have long waiting list and that half the time we have failed to treat patients within four hours. That is almost 200,000 people who...

London Energy Costs (Supplementary) [1]

  • Question by: Navin Shah
  • Meeting date: 20 November 2013
Mr Mayor, do you think the big six companies are right to blame the green levies for the latest round of price rises proposed on Londoners?
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