I’m beginning to wonder if I’m making a mountain out of a molehill. Or, in this case, a pit out of dip. Last February cyclists were alarmed about a stretch of Green Lanes with a combination of potholes and lack of streetlights. Just across the Hackney border, complaints months apart hadn’t resolved it. With a group effort – calls and emails from HoL members, including Alison and Adam – and from me to Haringey staff, the problems were tackled. Potholes filled; lights replaced; tree branches cut back.
What worried everyone, of course, was the risk of a serious accident – especially for a cyclist, motor cyclist or pedestrian. Someone coming off a bike, say, and going under a truck. So, this year, after snow and ice left potholes across the UK, my thoughts turned to accidents. Doesn’t Haringey need to find and fill the most dangerous holes first? Phoning Haringey’s Pothole Hotline I was amazed to learn they didn’t actually ask: 'How big is the pothole? Is it dangerous?' If you mention these facts, they will record them. But it was up to the caller.
So I made a modest suggestion. To avoid danger to life and limb, I asked them to add to the “script” given to the council’s Call Centre; and on the webpage for pothole reports. I then had a most peculiar email correspondence with Haringey senior officers. One wrote that he saw: "no harm in us asking some information about the size of a pothole” But didn’t reply when I asked for an explicit assurance that the question would be added. Another wrote: "I think a sense of proportion in relation to this matter would be greatly appreciated."
Tags for Forum Posts: George Bernard Shaw, cyclists, ice and snow, potholes, roads, triage
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