Expenses

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mr_cellophane

Legendary Member
Location
Essex
he stopped claiming the allowance because it did not cost him anything to ride his bicycle
I wish riding my bike didn't cost me anything :pump:
 

Mr Celine

Discordian
I occaisionally use my bike for work and claim 20p a mile, but always get paid 45p a mile because no one in personnel knows what to do with a bike claim. The rest of my business mileage is done in an 11 year old Polo 1.2E for which I get 45p a mile, though the marginal cost to me is closer to 20p. The marginal cost to me of using the bike is around 10p a mile, so the profit to me of using the car is double that of using the bike.

I doubt the DM or their numpty readership would understand this.
 

steveindenmark

Legendary Member
That's actually a really good idea. Why didn't the government think of that in their efforts to get more people cycling!

In the UK you have the most terrible cycling infrastructure in Europe with probably the most fatalities every year. Do you really think you need a big influx of cyclists on the road while at the same time giving cyclists more money and taking it away from car drivers?

They would be using you for target practice.

If you got a good cycling infrastructure and then implemented it. Then it would be a good idea.

How you get to that stage is a mystery.

Steve
 

Archie_tect

De Skieven Architek... aka Penfold + Horace
Location
Northumberland
Claims for taxis and car mileage are uncontested, presumably Oyster Cards, bus, Underground and train journeys are also uncontested.... yet claims for cycling generate a witch-hunt. How much more stupid can these people get, are they incapable of any rational thought?
 

4F

Active member of Helmets Are Sh*t Lobby
Location
Suffolk.
In the UK you have the most terrible cycling infrastructure in Europe with probably the most fatalities every year. Do you really think you need a big influx of cyclists on the road while at the same time giving cyclists more money and taking it away from car drivers?

They would be using you for target practice.

If you got a good cycling infrastructure and then implemented it. Then it would be a good idea.

How you get to that stage is a mystery.

Steve

Yes a big influx would be good. The more cyclists there are, the more cars will be used to them and then that follows that the safer it should be for all parties without having to resort to separated lanes. We are traffic.
 

shouldbeinbed

Rollin' along
Location
Manchester way
In the UK you have the most terrible cycling infrastructure in Europe with probably the most fatalities every year. Do you really think you need a big influx of cyclists on the road while at the same time giving cyclists more money and taking it away from car drivers?

They would be using you for target practice.

If you got a good cycling infrastructure and then implemented it. Then it would be a good idea.

How you get to that stage is a mystery.

Steve
I think you may have overestimated the number of people and journeys where work mileage expenses are a factor. I also think in this day and age of austerity and pathetic mealy mouthed politico lip service to promoting cycling that a minor shift in a minor expense wouldn't really be a seismic shock, the knobbers that would use us as target practice (~0.001% - don't believe the negative hysteria) won't be waiting for any sort of veneer excuse for their actions.

as for do we want an influx of cyclists on the roads - hell yeah, it is the only way we'll get sensible serious infrastructure in most of our lifetimes.
 
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