(Chipping Barnet)
(Con)
I beg to move,
That leave be given to bring in a Bill to amend the Greater
London Authority Act 1999 to give the Secretary of State power to
review and overturn decisions made by the Mayor of London
relating to transport and to air quality; and for connected
purposes.
In my 18 years as MP for Chipping Barnet—I cannot believe it is
so long—almost nothing has provoked such strong opposition as the
Mayor of London’s plan to expand the ultra low emission zone. It
comes up on almost every doorstep and at almost every meeting.
People stop me in the street to tell me how strongly they feel
about it, and over 50,000 have signed the Conservative petition.
That is why I am bringing forward a Bill to give the Government
power to overrule Mayor Khan and stop ULEZ expansion.
Of course, we need to continue to improve air quality in London,
but this is the wrong scheme at the wrong time. The Mayor’s own
integrated impact assessment concluded that ULEZ expansion is
likely to have only a minor or negligible beneficial impact on
air pollution, so it is completely unacceptable for a £12.50 a
day charge to be levied on my constituents who are already
grappling with the worst cost of living pressures for many
years.
ULEZ has been tolerated in inner London because it has one of the
most extensive public transport systems in the world. That is
just not the case in the suburbs. In Barnet, and in other outer
London boroughs, many of us depend on our cars for millions of
journeys every year. For many of us, the nearest train or tube
station is well beyond walking distance. The claim that the
Mayor’s new orbital bus route, which, I would add, barely makes
it into my constituency, can provide a viable alternative to
suburban car travel is simply risible. The Mayor has already
withdrawn vital bus services such as the 384 from certain streets
and he is doing nothing to restore the cancelled 84 route. The
reality is that ULEZ expansion to the Greater London boundary
leaves my constituents facing the cost of buying a new vehicle,
which many cannot afford, or paying an annual bill that could
reach as much as £4,500 a year just to get about their own
neighbourhood.
The scheme could devastate our local town centres in outer London
as their regular customers stop coming because of the paywall
that Mayor Khan is constructing around our capital. Small
businesses will be hit hard. Many are already struggling to find
compliant vans that are affordable. The Mayor’s grace periods,
exemptions and scrappage scheme are narrowly drawn and frankly
barely touch the sides of tackling the problem. Even those who do
qualify find that the payments do not meet anything like the
whole cost of a new vehicle.
Let us take the example of an emergency worker doing a night
shift: they face the double whammy of a charge to travel to work
and another after midnight to return home, meaning £25 just to do
a shift. ULEZ expansion will mean that public services in outer
London, especially the care sector, find it even harder to hire
the staff they need, since so many of the current workforce live
outside London and drive in.
Driver and Vehicle Licensing Agency data indicates that there are
over 690,000 non-compliant cars registered in London. That rises
to over 850,000 when we count all vehicle types. The number will
be higher still when we take into account people whose work or
daily life means they need to come into London from neighbouring
counties. And of course, they have no vote in a mayoral
election—taxation without representation in a particularly
blatant form.
Along with my constituents, residents across the London suburbs
and bordering counties will be paying the price for Sadiq Khan’s
wholesale mismanagement of Transport for London’s finances. He
has been given a £6 billion bail-out by the Government and yet
still, even with that, he wants to squeeze people for more
charges and more fines, cynically disguised as air quality
measures. We in this House have to be aware that if the Mayor is
allowed to push this scheme through, it is only a matter of time
before he hikes up the daily charge and imposes it on an ever
wider range of vehicles as a stepping stone to the pay-per-mile
road charging he would like to inflict on every single driver in
London. That is why we need to stop ULEZ expansion now.
But ULEZ is not the only scheme that the Bill could give
Ministers the power to review and potentially overturn: there are
also streets shut off by low traffic neighbourhoods; road space
lost to poorly designed and wrongly sited cycle lanes;
inexplicable and seemingly pointless pavement extensions; and 20
mph limits on wide main roads. A range of policies are now being
pursued that are manifestly and disproportionately anti-car. Some
are led by the boroughs, but they all have the enthusiastic
backing of the Mayor and many are funded by TfL. Schemes of this
kind can be appropriate in the right setting and following
meaningful consultation, but the Mayor of London just seems
intent on making our capital city harder to get around. It feels
like parts of London are being turned into a hostile environment
for cars, vans and taxis. That damages productivity, prosperity
and quality of life.
I support measures to make cycling easier and safer, but why
remove swathes of road space in Park Lane for a segregated cycle
lane when there is already a far more pleasant cycle lane through
Hyde Park right next to the road? And why did it take two years
of massive congestion on Euston Road for the Mayor to accept that
his cycle lane there was a disaster and remove it? Why ban
licensed taxis from Bishopsgate, one of our most important
transport arteries since the Roman era? There seems to be no
logic in the imposition of the 20 mph limits on major arterial
routes such as Finchley Road and Park Lane, unless it is to soak
drivers for the 1 million speeding fines that the Mayor is urging
the police to issue. Add to that the Mayor of London’s attempt to
build over station car parks and his increasing pressure in the
planning system for so-called car-free developments to be built,
and we have what looks like an ideological anti-car approach. Of
course, there is merit in schemes that support a switch to
cycling, walking and public transport, but the focus should be on
improving services, not piling on new charges or arbitrarily
removing chunks of our road network capacity.
There are also serious equality concerns. For many who are
elderly or those who have reduced mobility, such as parents with
young children, cycling may not be a practical option. The
concerted push to restrict car and taxi access to road space
harms those groups and can also have a negative impact on women’s
safety, because they force more women to walk home after
dark.
In conclusion, I find it hard to believe that I have to restate
this, but the car is a force for good in the world. Huge progress
has been made in recent years in improving road safety and
reducing emissions. Without cars, vans, lorries and taxis, our
transport system would grind to a halt and our economy and our
society would be paralysed. Cars help us live our lives in the
way we want to. They keep us connected to friends and family.
They make possible so much of what we enjoy; so much of what
makes life worth living would be difficult or impossible without
the freedom that driving allows us.
It is time for a reset. It is time to lift the stigma
increasingly attached to driving. It is time to scrap anti-car
ideology. It is most definitely time to stop ULEZ expansion and
elect a Conservative Mayor of London.
Question put and agreed to.
Ordered,
That , , , , , , , , Mr , , and Mr present the Bill.
accordingly presented the
Bill.
Bill read the First time; to be read a Second time on Friday 24
November, and to be printed (Bill 302).