Scarily there were two separate car accidents on Green Lanes on Friday, both involving the vehicle mounting the pavement;
(1). Before 8am a car somehow managed to smash into the pedestrian lights on opp side of Effingham Rd (on Green Lanes). Two pupils from HSG were injured as the the pole (holding pedestrian lights) hit them.
(2). Before 10pm car somehow mounted pavement and smashed into doorway of upstairs accommodation, next to Snug cafe, opp St Anns Rd.
All very scary and somewhat odd.
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Hey! Women too!!!
I've never seen a woman speeding dangerously up Green Lanes, but I'm happy to be proved wrong. It seems to me to be almost exclusively young men.
i just walked passed a person (woman) chatting on her mobile phone while driving down green lanes, and have almost run over a couple of pedestrians on my bicycle when they've been crossing the road while talking on mobiles.
p-iss poor behavior is neither gender specific nor limited to a single mode of transport. See all the uber cyclists who jump lights.
There will soon be a 20 mph speed limit on most of Haringey's roads, including Green Lanes (though I can't find the start date). How about pushing for 20 mph speed cameras with an aggressive enforcement policy?
Islington (well the Met Police therein) started enforcing their 20mph limit with speeding tickets (previously 'words of advice') a couple of years ago, though how closely I don't know (check press reports). And within Hackney, the existing speed camera on Green Lanes southbound by Clissold Park now has new road markers, closer together, which suggests a recalibration from 30 mph to 20 mph.
As for Haringey, this was an item at the Transport Forum last October - according to that:
Community Speed (Road) Watch update
Council officers are in discussions with Met Police regarding proposals to undertake a joint launch of Community Road Watch programme, in conjunction with the implementation of the 20 mph speed limit, in mid February.
Sat Nav companies have been contacted to update their network data bases.
Details of Community Speed watch set up requirements including speed gun calibration, volunteer recruitment and training, data collection criteria etc to be summarised in briefing. Enforcement will initially be a ‘stop and advised’ approach.
If any drivers remain to be convinced about the need for 20mph limits in built up areas, they should try reading this:
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/the-day-i-hit-a-chil...
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