wiggydiggy
Legendary Member
Our local cycle group clearing overgrown cycleway. The council don't do any maintenance on these.
View attachment 776846
Well done on taking the iniative but why dont the council do it, have they been asked?
Our local cycle group clearing overgrown cycleway. The council don't do any maintenance on these.
View attachment 776846
Well done on taking the iniative but why dont the council do it, have they been asked?
Well done on taking the iniative but why dont the council do it, have they been asked?
Our local cycle group clearing overgrown cycleway. The council don't do any maintenance on these.
View attachment 776846
I'd allow friends and relatives to register their cars in my name for a £50 a year fee.
You can bet your left spherical hairy dangly object that the jobsworth of your local authority will have objections to cyclegroups voluntary doing this,,
Most would argue that they pay for the upkeep of roads via their road tax which cyclists should also be paying 🙄🙄
I doubt there are many cyclists who don't pay road tax for their cars though.
I doubt there are many cyclists who don't pay road tax for their cars though.
I would too if I had his means and storage space, I'd be on Autosh*t* like a shot looking for suggestions as to whatshonky old knackersmodern classics to add to my fleet.
Their official position is "We don't give a sh!t, so just fùck off"
I paraphrase, but only a little
*mounts hobby horse*
I have a bike and a car, I choose to cycle most places and the car gets used about 3 days a month.
if I didn't have a bike I would use the car more. I ride about 8'000 miles a year.
Despite using the car 3 days a month I pay as much VEL, formerly road fund licence, as someone who uses it daily.
Now my bike is much smaller, it needs less road, it's much lighter so the "road it needs" can be constructed more lightly and cheaply, it is considerably lighter so the road it uses needs less maintaining and repairing.
Now my bike is exempt from VEL but the 1500kg car costs £35 a year by virtue of when it was made being seen as a "green diesel".
I would happily pay VEL on the bike on a proportionate scale, but it's probably not worth collecting.
... here is were I get all ideological. VEL in it's current form has suffered mission creep. It's somehow used as a tool to encourage people to buy when is seen as environmentally good cars, but it's blunt tool.
The taxation of motor vehicles needs a top down change, IMHO pay per mile is the only sensible and fair option, but I'd go further and add in a multiplier for vehicle weight, or some sort of damage / wear to roads caused scoring. You'd then encourage manufactures to produce lighter and more efficient vehicles that are kinder to the roads.
Historically it has been argued fuel duty is effectively a pay per mile tax that has encouraged more efficient use of fuel.
EVs are the big disruptor. They have until recently been zero rated for VEL. They are heavier and their torque delivery means they have been known to eat tyres as people take advantage the torque both things for me also equal extra road wear and damage.
My other big bugbear with EVs is that the "fuel" isnt taxed. Not only is it not taxed but it's cheaper or even subsidised. It seems bonkers to me that you can charge an EV at 5p per kwh, or even for free at times with some tarifs, but yet to cook my food, run the fridge or heat my home, pretty essential stuff it's 27p per kWh.
it seems bonkers to me that we are letting people drive EVs around, often on frivolous needless journeys (see the yummy mummy crowd at my kids school all in their EVs trying to keep up with each other while driving half a mile to school) using elecrric at 5p per Kwh while we have people struggling with bills for power for essentials paying five times that to cook and heat .
Time to tax EV traction current?.... but some sort of pay per mile sounds simpler.
And before I sound Anti EV... I'd have one tomorrow, it's just the sums don't add up... yet.
anyway surely I'm due a rebate on my VEL?
VED, not sure where you are getting the "L" from*mounts hobby horse*
I have a bike and a car, I choose to cycle most places and the car gets used about 3 days a month.
if I didn't have a bike I would use the car more. I ride about 8'000 miles a year.
THey will be subject to VED going forward.Despite using the car 3 days a month I pay as much VEL, formerly road fund licence, as someone who uses it daily.
Now my bike is much smaller, it needs less road, it's much lighter so the "road it needs" can be constructed more lightly and cheaply, it is considerably lighter so the road it uses needs less maintaining and repairing.
Now my bike is exempt from VEL but the 1500kg car costs £35 a year by virtue of when it was made being seen as a "green diesel".
I would happily pay VEL on the bike on a proportionate scale, but it's probably not worth collecting.
... here is were I get all ideological. VEL in it's current form has suffered mission creep. It's somehow used as a tool to encourage people to buy when is seen as environmentally good cars, but it's blunt tool.
The taxation of motor vehicles needs a top down change, IMHO pay per mile is the only sensible and fair option, but I'd go further and add in a multiplier for vehicle weight, or some sort of damage / wear to roads caused scoring. You'd then encourage manufactures to produce lighter and more efficient vehicles that are kinder to the roads.
Historically it has been argued fuel duty is effectively a pay per mile tax that has encouraged more efficient use of fuel.
EVs are the big disruptor. They have until recently been zero rated for VEL. They are heavier and their torque delivery means they have been known to eat tyres as people take advantage the torque both things for me also equal extra road wear and damage.
My other big bugbear with EVs is that the "fuel" isnt taxed. Not only is it not taxed but it's cheaper or even subsidised. It seems bonkers to me that you can charge an EV at 5p per kwh, or even for free at times with some tarifs, but yet to cook my food, run the fridge or heat my home, pretty essential stuff it's 27p per kWh.
Their official position is "We don't give a sh!t, so just fùck off"
I paraphrase, but only a little