The "too many cooks" problem of British Cycling (primarily a sports body) and Sustrans (primarily route makers) and their supporters arguing with Cycling UK and the various local cycling campaigns has been a problem, but even if all current cyclists agreed perfectly, that would still only be 15% of the population, according to the last Active Lives Survey. I think it's important to remember that the Dutch revolution kicked off when the shouting spread far beyond just those then cycling.
How do we do that here and now? I don't know. We're living in a country where loads of politicians wibble about "cars are essential" and "a car is a lifeline", where
killing someone on a bike in broad daylight only gets a one year driving ban and community service and where
babies are run over and killed on cycleways resembling pavements and a grieving parent told that the road doesn't deserve safety improvements and most of those cases only make the local news, not national, because it's so widespread. This awful situation seems to be tolerated, with attempts to improve it banging into the Great British "won't do" attitude.
So we keep on, lobbying politicians and contacting designers. I spoke at a council hearing a few weeks ago. One of my friends is asking questions of a different council meeting this evening. We keep on sending messages to MPs and councillors. I bumped into a councillor at an exhibition yesterday and tried to explain the problems with a recent project (she asked - I went for the exhibition, not in hope of lobbying!). Later today, I'll be formally objecting to a proposed car-brained industrial estate where the developer cheekily claims that it's something like "only 7 minutes cycling" from suburbs, without mentioning that most of that is on a straight National Speed Limit A road along a former airfield perimeter with thousands of motor vehicles a day, which only the brave, foolish or desperate cycle on. Using the nearest cycle route adds 20 minutes to the journey, making it 3½ sides of a square. Anyone know how we could get developers to propose nice things instead of this car-brained junk? Then the politicians wouldn't matter so much. Should cycling campaigns start to call out the likes of PDG Architects and Hudson Architects that are linked to this rubbish? Or restrict our fire to Elm Hall Investments, UBS and Hopkins Homes that own the developments?