Carte blanch

Published: Wednesday, 25 February 2015

THERE is growing opposition to the way that the towpaths appear to have been taken over by cyclists, now that the towpaths are being used as a place where cyclists can carry out various kinds of racing and time-trial activities, writes Mick Fitzgibbons.

Not permitted

Under British Waterways there was a requirement to hold a permit to use the canal towpath. British Waterways also included cyclists with a permit in the Waterways Code rules. It was actually explicitly prohibited for the towpath to be used as a race track or as a place where time trials could be conducted. Such a sensible set of rules that you would think would be enshrined by the Trust.

However, changes have been made in two main areas. The first is with the relaxation of the requirement to even hold a cycling permit to use the towpath. The permit needed to be purchased and terms and conditions were set as a result of the permit being granted. So as well as a funding stream the issuing of the permit tied the recipient to have agreed with the provisions of the terms and conditions. The second change is the disappearance of the prohibition to conduct racing and time-trials on the towpath. I can't help but think that it must have been a cyclist who enjoys such activities who drafted the changes.

Better Towpaths for Everyone

The actual replacement for the Waterways Code has been emasculated to the point where it is worthless. The new Better Towpaths for Everyone has dropped any reference to any kind of restriction being placed upon racing and time trialing. The Better Towpaths for Everyone does not even have at a minimum a sensible maximum speed. The Trust's answer to the problem of groups of cyclists racing and conducting time-trials is education, which has so far been done by handing out a few leaflets in a few places.

Now, unfortunately for pedestrians on the towpath the time-trial genie is out of the bottle. The cyclists have been given a carte blanch nod to do as they wish. Anyone can turn up on the towpath and proceed at any pace they think is suitable. Get knocked down by a group of cyclists conducting a time-trial, and I bet they will claim that they were proceeding along at a sensible but indeterminate speed, when the children threw themselves under the wheels of the cyclists.

A paper exercise

First of all there is a very significant difference between informing and educating. Handing out a leaflet is a piss-poor method of informing—never mind actually educating. I have said it before—call me old and cynical with regards CaRT—but first of all how do you identify who needs to be educated. How can you differentiate between those who have even seen, or read, absorbed and understood the requirement of the Better Towpaths for Everyone?

In what form will the education take place? Like all good educational systems, what measures are in place to ensure that the education is working? How will the Trust test the validity of its educational system as being fit for purpose other than in a coroner's court?