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Harringay, Haringey - So Good they Spelt it Twice!

At the risk of sparking a lively discussion - what do people think of the latest sabre-rattling idea by central government in it's fight with Sadiq Khan over transport funding, to extend the congestion charge in line with the extended ULEZ next October?

As someone who has just changed my car for a less polluting one, to comply with the ULEZ, I am naturally unenthused by the idea. Combine this with one of the other demands, to abolish free travel for over-60 and children, it doesn't seem to add up to a coherent transport policy.

Also, extending the zone could easily backfire, with people who have paid the charge driving into central London more often, rather destroying the point. If residents of the zone were given the same discount as at present (90%) it would not make nearly enough revenue to justify the disruption.

On the other hand, as we know, traffic in London is an ongoing serious problem - markedly worse at present it seems to me - and needs addressing somehow. I'd be willing to pay a London road tax, either annually or per use (I don't drive much), but £15 a day seems excessive.

London transport users are massively subsidised - something like £2000 per person per year - compared to a pittance spent in other parts of the country, so this is a political hot potato. But Johnson is wrong accuse Khan of 'bankrupting' TfL, as he has actually reduced the deficit he was left with (by former mayor BJ) by 70%, while keeping fares at the same level. A huge reduction in transport use due to the pandemic is behind the present financial problems, yet other transport companies and airlines are receiving substantial support.

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That's strange, the post I was replying to has disappeared so this is somewhat shorn of context.

I removed it Andrew because it wasn't quite correct, apparently surplus money from CPZs and parking fines go towards roads, transport, free travel etc via the councils, so it does subsidise TFL but indirectly. 

Not forgetting the lack of Enforcement around Our Schools. Even though they have valid Traffic Orders

So much for caring about children's Health. While allowing vehicles to double park and keep engines running 

This is a transparent attempt by the Government to make Sadiq look bad if he accepts this bailout - a deal which, let us be clear, the private Train Operating Companies haven't had to sign up to.

Fortunately, even their fellow Conservative MPs haven't fallen for this. And the leaked report outlining that a driverless Tube, whilst possible, would be a poor investment, hasn't helped the attempt to bash London, presumably to avoid the hard work of actually trying to level up the north of England.

With regard to longer term prospects for road user charging, the ULEZ will soon be expanded to the North and South Circular, so the effect (and infrastructure) of that will inform future options, although some advocate a "pay as you go" model of road user charging which would more accurately consider the externalities of road traffic.

The 90% discount is good news as most of our journeys are within Zone 2 and even they are infrequent.  Like a lot of families we needed the car for transporting young kids, but now they're older it's soon reached the tipping point of joining a car pool.  The congestion charge would have definitely meant scrapping but I missed the bit about 90% discount.  We may be able to limp along for a while 

The residents' discount is currently suspended in Central London for any new applicants. The trouble with 'temporary' changes is that they can easily become permanent - I doubt the CC will go back to weekdays only, as it now covers weekends and daily till 10 pm.

It strikes me that simply enlarging the congestion charge zone would be far too unimaginative (not to mention crude) and poorly focused. I tend to agree with Chris Waller’s reference to pay as you go road charging.  Now that the technology used for the congestion charge zone has been proved in practice, we need more sophisticated modern methods to produce the benefits we seek.  If we are not yet ready for systems that identify every vehicle movement and charges for them accordingly, we could instead introduce local charging zones.  Perhaps, the borough could decide that it needs to discourage vehicles from outside the borough from using the streets it controls (ie nearly all of them) unless they are going to or from a destination within the borough.  We know from the huge Green Lanes Area Transport Study conducted in 2016 just how much of the vehicle traffic through the ladder area is just passing through and it is this traffic that should face prices that are linked in a rational way to the price of using public transport.  At present we have a situation in which for anyone who already has a car, it is cheaper to use it than to consider an alternative.  I don’t mind paying through council tax for local streets to be maintained but I do mind that these streets have to be repaired five times more frequently because vehicles just passing through are using them free while reducing my quality life in the process.

How about a turnpike?, they should have never removed the old one.

This is what I suggested for controlling Wightman a few years back. It was poo-pooed by the Council at the time, but then soon after turned up in their proposals for Crouch End. So, it may now be consderd by Haringey to be a viable idea. 

Not necessarily. It depends on the objectives of a particular implementation. My suggestion was to ANPR Wightman, making no charge for locals within a given radius, a small charge for other borough users and a penal charge to rat-runners. 

This article by Dave Hill explains the current situation far more eloquently than I could:

https://www.onlondon.co.uk/dave-hill-its-hard-to-see-the-government...

In particular the section: "Perhaps more importantly, Johnson needs to make a great display of beating up a supposedly pampered and profligate London as part of what pitifully passes for a “levelling up” strategy – one that so far seems to amount to being beastly to Khan and shifting a few civil servants north of Enfield."

Political wrangling aside, with a massive population increase since Ken Livingstone stuck his neck out and brought in the original CC I think such an implementation is inevitable and will eventually extend to the M25. I'm sure that any 'the more you use the more you pay' technology would not be as unpopular as many may think, especially if it meant much clearer roads.

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