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I'm sure the Council promised us a holistic study for the whole of Haringey.
I suppose they've asked everyone in the study area. But I wouldn't say what we have is a holistic study. All the options are split into the sub areas - well except the whole area improvements one which is still a group of suggestions made by us locals.
I asked at one of the workshops why the consultants didn't look at the area as a whole and suggest some solutions and they said they didn't want to do something that no one wanted. Which didn't make a lot of sense to me. In my mind they, as experts, should suggest a (or some alternative) holistic solution(s) and then we could feedback.
By the Council's own words they did engage such experts--this is from the section on the matter from the Haringey Council's site:
Steer Davies Gleave (SDG) was appointed in February 2016 to undertake the study, which started in March 2016.
SDG is tasked with developing a series of measures to achieve a number of outcomes including a better distribution of traffic, recognising the specific issues and problems within the area.
Julie, in my experience consultants don't tend to contribute many or even any new ideas to a process. They certainly don't have a magic wand which they wave and leave you with a perfect solution which no one else had thought of.
In practice, the role is more about drawing out your own ideas, providing their knowledge on what has worked or not worked elsewhere, and provide a framework or toolkit to allow the competing solutions to be compared and decisions made.
I don't agree with everything the Steer Davies Gleave consultants have contributed but generally I think they have done a pretty good job on that basis.
Wightman filtering (plus mitigation measures to reduce disruption on the neighbouring roads) is also a genuinely holistic solution, certainly compared to most of the previous ad hoc traffic calming measures, isolated closures or right turn bans etc. Filtering holistically addresses the traffic problem across all 20 Ladder rungs and Wightman Road itself, equitably bringing traffic volumes on these purely residential streets down to the same level.
Thanks Joe, that is interesting. I know the consultants don't have a magic wand, but I think they have more knowledge and experience of town planning and traffic flows than we do. So I would have liked some independent and expert suggestions. But maybe you're right and we have thought of everything.
I don't agree with you that the closing/filtering of Wightman Road is a holistic solution for the whole of the study area. But I totally understand and respect your viewpoint and arguments for it, so I'm happy to agree to disagree.
While I would like to see less and slowed traffic, I am not in favour of filtering. I also live on Seymour Road so am very concerned about proposed increases if Warham's direction is changed.
I had an interesting conversation with a door knocking councillor recently. I don't remember the details but she seemed to imply that it was very political with councillors in adjoining areas not willing to open up their roads to help absorb the ladder's traffic problems. Can anyone expand on this? She also didn't come across as sympathetic about the idea of proposed traffic increase potential on Seymour Road or that it might affect the shops on Green Lanes if they took away parking.
I've felt compelled to write here as I like a lot of people read HOL but it always seems to be the same people posting and I would hate for the councillors and traffic consultants to think HOL was wholly representative. In case people are wondering, its quite intimidating to post here...
Seymour is one of the quiet roads compared to Warham. Every time we do tinkering to fix the "worst road" it just moves traffic onto another rung road. Witness the shambles of the Hewitt no-right-turn (well, from Beresford's point of view it was a shambles).
Yes, posting on the internet is quite daunting, I don't post anywhere else so I get it if you think I'm just being very brave.
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