Assembly News

Next Meeting

For details of the next London Assembly meeting click here


Watch recent meetings

Click here to see list of recent meetings


Issue of the week

Should the Mayor remove pedestrian crossings on London roads?

Yes
No

Subscibe to our Newsletter

Please complete the form

Your name:

Email:

HTML emails?

Already subscribed? Unsubscribe or edit your profile here.

Contact Us

Questions or queries? Then get in touch!

News Story

05/11/08 10:15

No vision and no ambition: London shifting into reverse gear.

 

Labour group response to Boris transport launch

The London Assembly Labour group have slammed Boris Johnson's transport plans as lacking in any vision or ambition. Labour's transport spokesperson, Val Shawcross, says this rambling and incoherent document lacks either common sense or future direction.

Speaking as the Mayor launched his transport strategy, 'Way to Go', Val said:

"Any serious transport strategy for London would include a commitment to additional major transport schemes and a clear aim to shift people from private cars to public transport, walking and cycling.

"He talks about investing in major projects yet only lists a few schemes, Crossrail for example, which were underway before he was elected. There is no discussion of how transport will support economic regeneration in London. He avoids any discussion of the proposed Cross River Tram, the Thames Gateway Bridge, the Docklands Light Railway, transit schemes, or the Croydon Tramlink extensions. He is indecisive and dithers on the congestion charge.

"There is nothing about how the Mayor will encourage people onto public transport, but plenty about giving back road space and speeding up traffic lights in favour of the 'oppressed' motorist. He is openly hostile about children using the bus service. He seems to have no view on which areas of London are currently lacking in good, fast transport links and there is no attempt to indicate where he feels public transport passengers are particularly disadvantaged. There is no linkage in this document to any plans for an economic or housing growth plan for London. Creating the links between people's homes and jobs should be fundamental to any transport strategy.

"He talks briefly about clean air but suggests no mechanism for ensuring that London has a clear and decisive programme to reduce pollution and carbon dioxide from traffic.

"This document represents a shocking failure to understand the importance of transport to Londoners and fails on every single level to provide London with a 'direction of Travel' on our future transport needs. It is utter drivel."

"This is a huge disappointment for London's travelling public. In his six months as Mayor this drivel is all Boris has managed to come up with.

LATEST NEWS

07/07/10 11:00

Split congestion zone in two

Labour's transport lead on the London Assembly has called on Mayor Boris Johnson to split the...

02/07/10 15:47

Boris Johnson proposes to remove pedestrian crossings

Labour urge caution as Mayor wants to take out 145 traffic lights across London

17/06/10 15:01

Boris urged to re-think giant World Cup screens

Labour's leader at City Hall writes to Mayor Boris Johnson asking him to re-think his decision not...

16/06/10 15:19

Dangerous motorbike experiment "should not be repeated"

London Mayor Boris Johnson today ordered a new trial of his dangerous proposal to allow...

15/06/10 13:47

Scrapping LDA "cover for cuts"

Labour's deputy leader on the London Assembly warns against undermining economic support for the...

Valid XHTMLDesign und Implementation by Jon Worth | Powered by Typo3 | Hosted by Adept Hosting Ltd
© 2008 London Assembly Labour | Terms & Conditions | Published and promoted by Ken Clark, Greater London Labour Party, 39 Victoria St, London SW1H 0HA