Categories
Castle Street cycling

The ongoing saga of Sheffield’s Castle Street cycle lane

Castle Street cycle lane is a contraflow cycle lane on a one way street in Sheffield. It has been here since March 1997 and allows cyclists enter the city centre from the network of cycle paths on the East, avoiding some big arterial routes with no cycling provision.

A great cycle facility, allows cyclists to enter the city centre avoiding the big arterial routes.

For the past 15 years this cycle lane has been plagued by Hackney Carriage drivers parking illegally on this cycle lane, blocking cyclists access and forcing them into oncoming traffic. This has been the case for over a decade.

There is a taxi rank on the pavement side of the cycle lane, taxis often fill up this rank and overflow, parking in the cycle lane, blocking the way for cyclists.

Blocked – The taxi drivers use the cycle lane as an extension of the taxi rank

So, for the past couple of months I have been spending my lunch hour documenting this and trying to change the conditions on the road for the better. I document between 6 and 10 offenses each day, sometimes more, sometimes less, parking in this location is rife and there are very rarely a shortage of taxis to take photo’s of.

I have taken hundreds of photos, some discretely, some openly and some in the face of agression from angry taxi drivers. I have been threatened, the police called, called a racist, I’m just doing this for kicks, to get a buzz, invasion of privacy and have been openly intimidated by large groups of taxi drivers. I have now taken to taking photo’s very discretely, after being driven at by one of the drivers last week (the police refused to take a statement and referred me to the taxi licensing office), I avoid being seen at all costs.

I have reported 145 instances to the local council Taxi Licensing office. They only accept reports in writing so I am unable to phone, I report all of the taxis I see parking illegally via email to [email protected] individually. I attach a couple of photo’s and give the number plate and license number of the vehicle.

To: [email protected]

Taxi Parked on Castle Street – 27/11/2012 approximately 13:08, [SK03 BWE – 974]

Dear Taxi Licensing,

I wish to report a hackney carriage parked on an area of road designated as a mandatory cycle lane and marked with double yellow lines.

The attached photo’s show vehicle SK03 BWE – 974 parked on Castle Street illegally. They were taken at approximately 13:08 on 27/11/2012.I would like this investigated and am happy to be asked to provide a statement if required.

Kind regards,

Matt Turner

SF51 LCC – 621 (2) – 27 Nov 2012

Of my 145 reports I have received 4 acknowledgements, they are all the same and use the exact same wording.

From: [email protected]
Taxi Parked on Castle Street
Thank you for your e-mail regarding the above.
The licensee will be contacted and appropriate disciplinary action considered.
Regards
The Licensing Service

None of the acknowledgements – if you can even call them that – actually acknowledge any of my complaints, they only give the generic message given above. i have received 4 acknowledgements to my 145 email reports.

I report to Taxi licensing in the hope that they’ll actually discuss this with the driver and possibly remove his license if there is repeat offending. I’ve been told though that this is VERY unlikely to happen based on a parking offence alone.

I maintain a spreadsheet of each report, it shows that I have caught the most frequent offender 8 times so far (with another report waiting to be sent from last week). The spreadsheet is available here.

I also call the council Parking Services team about this. They accept phone reports and are very good at sending a parking warden out straight away. I will see them walking up to the taxis, waving them on, the taxis move on and then the parking warden leaves. 5 minutes later the same vehicles are back in the same spot after driving around the block. The drivers are not given tickets, not fined and the enforcement only seems to happen whenever someone phones. I have never seen a parking warden in this area without me first calling them. The department get annoyed when I phone them multiple times each day because their warden has come and gone and the taxis are back.

The police are interested in this matter, but not in a positive way. I have had the taxi drivers phone them on a number of occasions complaining about me taking photographs. The police seem to ignore the illegal parking with the excuse “That is the responsibility of Parking Services at the council”, they ask me to leave because I’m agitating the taxi drivers by documenting their parking. Thanks South Yorkshire Police, you’re a great help!

South Yorkshire Police Blocking Castle Street – Another occasion

The police seem to think that it is OK to park in this lane as occasionally we get photo’s of them parking in exactly the same location. Why not use the South Yorkshire Police Headquarters car park which is opposite?

This issue has been frequently raised at the Sheffield Council Cycle Forum meetings, the response has always been that it is the cyclists responsibility to report these issues. This I find completely disgusting, it is the responsibility of the council to investigate issues raised to them at an official council meeting, they have repeatedly refused to do this and insisted only that we need to report individual offences.

At the last Cycle Forum on 20th November 2012, Castle Street cycle lane was on the agenda for the first time in quite a while, I assume fuelled by my and CycleSheffield’s attempt at some sort of campaign. Some of the statements from the council and the police were frankly unbelievable.

“You are quite within your rights to take a photograph but dont try to take a photgraph of the person, take a photograph of the vehicle and the taxi licesnse plate.”

“Sorry, why can’t you take a photograph of the person?” – Me, shocked!

“Because that is infringing their rights”

South Yorkshire Police Advice at Sheffield Cycle Forum

This advice is incorrect, I’ve had it confirmed by South Yorkshire Police, the National Policing Website and the Information Commissioner for England.

“We come out of Snig Hill time and time again and they’re parked. And I can totally sympathise with you going back up towards Angel Street, we move them on for two reasons. They’re blocking the cycle path and they stick out that far into the road they stop busses as there’s a bus stop. They have a knock on effect that they hold everything else up behind them”

“That area comes under my beat area and I’ll pay it some attention, I’ll get down there as often as I can. Unfortunately I cant be there 24/7, it’s just not possible for us we don’t have the man power at the moment to be there all the time.”

South Yorkshire Police at Sheffield Cycle Forum

South Yorkshire Police Blocking Castle Street – 1st December 2012

Sorry South Yorkshire Police, but I don’t believe you. You also park in this lane, I took a photograph of one of your vehicles here yesterday. Why not use your car park oposite? (Did I mention that Castle Street is opposite the headquarters of South Yorkshire Police?)

 

“The taxi rank is not in the wrong place, it is in the right place. It is in the right place from the point of view of where people want to be, that is why it has been overranked. So its precisely in the right place, there isn’t another place to put it.”

Dick Skelton, Senior Transport Planning Officer

No Dick, the taxi rank is in the wrong place, its the opposite side of a contraflow lane, the drivers frequently park well beyond it. When you say it is where people wan’t to be, I’m assuming you mean it is where the taxi drivers want to be? This is not a good reason to put a taxi rank in a location! You cannot argue that it is in the right place because there is no-where else for it to go, that is a rubbish argument!

“The taxi drivers, just like many other drivers, just like cyclists I hasten to add, if they can get away with it, they’ll get away with it. I’m not saying this to the cyclists here, I’m sure you’re all perfect just like I’m a perfect driver but if they’ll get away with it they’ll get away with it.”

Dick Skelton, Senior Transport Planning Officer

 

Thanks for that little dig at the cyclists. We really love it when people do that, perhaps your next point will include some more of that bad attitude?

“You cannot legally cycle to that cycle lane, yes Mick’s right that in the longer term you’ll be able to cycle to it. But you cannot legally cycle from Exchange Place, you cannot legally get to the start of that cycle lane without starting the wrong way up a bit of one way street”
“Oh course you can, you can come up Waingate and turn right” – Mick Nott, Chair of Cycle Sheffield
“It kind of goes back to what I was saying where people take advantage where they can or where they think they’re doing the right thing when in fact their not. Now I did say you cannot cycle to that lane, yes you can dismount”
“I’m sorry Dick for using that cycle lane if it’s illegal” – Me, very frustrated!
“No, I’m not saying that you shouldn’t cycle up there, I’m quite happy that you do cycle up there as long as you know the risks. The point I’m trying to make is, yes there are taxi drivers breaking the law but I’m also making the point that cyclists cycling in that lane are also breaking the law.”
“Now it’s quite clear to me which one of is most dangerous, the taxis parking there is clearly the most dangerous because it’s forcing the cyclists into the oncoming traffic. But if a cyclist chooses to cycle those first few meters up to that cycle lane the only person who’s going to get hurt is the cyclist.”

Dick Skelton, Senior Transport Planning Officer

Ah, there is the real crux of Dick’s point, why are we talking about this when cyclists are breaking the law? Why enforce no parking in cycle lanes when cyclists break the law? I have heard this argument before when trying to report a taxi parked in the lane to the licensing office on the phone, they asked me how I’d got to the cycle lane on a bicycle because it was illegal.

Well Dick, as part of the council who designed and installed that cycle lane, the risks that cyclists face when they cycle along this lane have been engineered by your department, not the cyclists using the cycle facility, but by poor placement of a taxi rank, bad cycle lane design and illegally parked taxi drivers.

So, the Transport and Highways department at the council send Dick Skelton to the Cycle Forum, he has some strange ideas about the legality of using this cycle lane and talks irrelevantly about the law breaking of cyclists when we’re supposed to be discussing how to resolve the illegal parking in cycle lanes! How helpful.

One good piece of news is that a parking enforcement camera car is coming to Sheffield in the new year, hopefully this means that there will be some tickets given out at this location. I’m not convinced that in the past decade many tickets have been given out at this location but have submitted a freedom of information request to find out. http://www.whatdotheyknow.com/request/parking_offenses_castle_street

So, on a more positive note, we have been lobbying councillors on this issue to try and get some political pressure on this. I’ve been copying in Cllr John Robson and Cllr Clive Skelton who are the chair and deputy chair of the licensing committee at Sheffield Council. This must have been noticed because I received this email below last week asking me to stop.

From: [email protected]
Castle Street Cycle Lane
Hello Mr Turner;

Thank you for your emails regarding the above.

Licensees who are issued with multiple warnings for parking in restricted areas are likely to have their licence reviewed by the Licensing Sub Committee, who will examine the evidence and take any disciplinary action they deem necessary. Options available to the Sub Committee range from taking no action through to the ultimate sanction of revoking a private hire / hackney carriage drivers licence.

I note that you are currently in contact with the Chair and Vice Chair of the Licensing Sub Committee regarding this issue. May I respectfully request that you contact your own Councillor regarding this, as any involvement that a sitting member of the Sub Committee has with an issue may render them unable to sit on the Sub Committee which hears the individual cases.

Please be assured that Members have been briefed regarding the situation at Castle Street, and Officers are currently preparing reports for the consideration of the Sub Committee in respect of repeat offenders.

I trust the above answers your questions, but should you require anything further, please do not hesitate to contact me.

Well, at least I’ve got an email from the taxi office and at least it’s been noticed. I’m slightly worried about this email because it asks me not to contact any members of the licensing committee about these issues. 13 out of 84 councillors are on the licensing committee and two councillors who have been helping me with this sit on the licensing committee. Am I now not allowed to discuss this with them? I’m confused. Why can’t I discuss licensing issues with councillors on the licensing committee?! Crazy!

So, where will this go? It is clear that there needs to be a solution, I don’t know what this will be. There seems to be a lot of confusion, some anti cycling sentiment, some bad advice and very little political will to resolve this.

I’ve got a few ideas up my sleeve, we’ll see how they pan out.

21 replies on “The ongoing saga of Sheffield’s Castle Street cycle lane”

Ugh… quite a depressing situation! Dick Skelton should not be in that job, and the policeman who told you that it’s illegal to photograph people should be knocked down a rank.

He was blatantly lying to you, as he must surely have known that wasn’t true. If he genuinely thinks that people aren’t allowed to take photos of people in public then he shouldn’t be doing that job.

Is the location suitable for a little DIY traffic engineering project? A few relocated traffic cones, or buckets filled with concrete. Even if I don’t like bollards, it looks like they are the only think keeping the cars away.

Sounds like an idea. I’ve heard of similar problems (vehicles straying into mandatory cycle lanes) solved by nothing more than a series of weighted down paper cups acting as traffic cones.

Amazing isn’t it, whenever people complain about poor cycle facilities or driving that is detrimental to the safety of cyclists, all the old cliches come rolling out. It’s like people learnt nothing from the “you dressed provocatively therefore you were asking to be raped” argument.

Start smashing the front windows.
Paint stripper on all vehicles parked there.
Attach bike frames with locks to door handles.
Secure one side doors up with chain and lock.

Fuck ’em.

Uggh, that’s a horrible situation to be in, and unfortunately is the case all over the country. Taxi drivers are a protected species, and you can almost never get them prosecuted.

Maybe the cycle lane should be turned into a track and placed on the other side of the taxi rank. The taxi rank would be moved out to where the cycle lane currently is. Then the cycle track could be fully protected with a kerb.

This is so typical. In my city, Nottingham taxi’s are a real problem. They are a law unto themselves. What you have highlighted is there no integrated clear thinking from city transport, the council or the police on how to protect cyclists. Keep up the good work.

To concentrate their minds, persistent offenders should have their licenses revoked. However, I can’t see that happening, they seem to be able to please themselves.

Yes – I’m also aware of the problem; I just wonder how many cyclists use that stretch or why it was selected as one of the (v. few) protected cycle lanes. I see so few cyclists – in fact I can only remember seeing one or possibly two – who actually use it that I suspect there are more urgent issues, such as motorists occupying the cycle box at traffic lights.

Leave a Reply to Shaun McDonaldCancel reply