Thursday, February 22, 2007

Shi*s that pass

After all that and I missed it! The webcast, I mean. That's what happens when you hold events when most folk have work to do (or kids to pick up). But I guess it's too much to expect any 'we're listening' consultation to take place when the majority of folk you in theory should be listening to, and may be interested in hearing what you have to say, are free.

Fortunately, technology has come to the rescue.

For a start, the full text will is on the website at http://www.pm.gov.uk/output/Page11046.asp

But here it is anyway. I've decided to cut&paste and go through as if I was taking part. Of course I can comment, but I can't get any answers (let's see if any of mine - or those of major concern to the many misguided fools who signed the petition - appear), so I'll have to simply offer a commentary.

Moderator says: Hello and welcome to our road pricing webchat. We've had over 5000 questions so far. The minister will be with us for an hour or so from 1600 GMT and we'll get through as many as we can. Clearly, with so much interest in this webchat, many people will not get their questions answered. But we have tried to select questions which best represent the concerns people have. The full, unedited transcript of the session will be posted on www.pm.gov.uk as soon as it finishes.

Dr Stephen says:
Hi. Thank you for taking part in this web chat. Unfortunately we've had about 5000 questions so I can't answer them all but I'll do my best to pick questions that reflect everyone's concerns. Also if I don't answer your question don't worry because we will read it later and take on board your comments.
Steve Ladyman

Why does 'pick questions that reflect everyone's concerns' not fill me with confidence. Come to that, 'take on board' gives me a sinking feeling, too. The first can be probably be translated as 'mainly mine that I get pinned down on anything, especially porkies', and the second '... and push off into the sunset, Viking-king style, to burn and sink without trace'.


M Davies: I remember Brian Clough once saying that when he had an issue with a player, he sat them down, had a chat and then after 5 or 10 minutes they decided that Brian was right. Isn't this exactly what is going to happen with your "debate"? We'll all sound our reservations and then you will decide you were right all along.

Dr Stephen replies: I promise this is a real debate. If we don't convince the public then road pricing simply won't happen. But if it doesn't then we have a real problem because we know congestion is going to get a lot worse despite all the 'conventional' plans we have to deal with it and so far no-one has come up with an affordable or practical alternative - but perhaps the debate will throw up some ideas.

So far, I'm not convinced. A good one to start with, coincidentally.

: Most people do not travel out of choice - they travel out of necessity. Surely the existing figures quoted for what congestion costs are already a "congestion charge" - if the congestion is too much people will look to alternatives, and if there isn't an alternative will people reconsider if the journey is actually worth making e.g. people don't and won't sit for 4 hours each day to get to and from work - they will look for an alternative.

Dr Stephen replies: In fact the research we've done shows that about a quarter of people who drive in the rush hour on the worst congested roads have choices but often end up sitting in traffic jams! But still people do - that is exactly what we have found. At present they just don't feel there is sufficient 'incentive' to change their behaviour and travel earlier or later or car share etc. That's why we say road pricing will give them that incentive and our models show we only need 4% of people to change their behaviour to get a 40% improvement in congestion.

'Research we've done shows...' Hmn. Without seeing it it's hard to comment. It's also hard to see why people would sit in a jam if they have choices, unless those choices are worse or do not fit their needs. Pricing is not an incentive to do something, it's a penalty for not doing it by my way of seeing things.

Claire: As an infrequent motorway user I am always stunned that I am met by the same problem- Lorries. I used to visit my sister in Wales quite often and the only delay ever was due to lorries overtaking other lorries blocking two lanes.Has anyone else thought of tackling this issue? Many other countries have freight on rail only and this seems to work.This will not negate the need for haulage companies- just make them a bit smarter about how they work.

Dr Stephen replies: There is a trial going on restricting overtaking by lorries on certain stretches of road. We also have a grant system in place to encourage freight onto rail and water. Again it is part of the solution, but not all of the solution.

Where did Lorries come into it? But they are part of the problem; just not one that has cropped up in anything I've seen before. In a volume jam I can't see how their overtaking or not makes much difference, but if things are moving it is an issue. I seem to recall it was a requirement that they are speed restricted caused this problem. Actually sticking them on the inside lane sounds fine to the Clarkson in me. I just don't see how it will get policed effectively... like mobile phones. For that you need bobbies on the beat, not robots.

Liz Cooper: Could consideration be given to encouraging companies to encourage their staff to work more from home, thus reducing journeys during peak hours?

Dr Stephen replies: You are right - flexible working is a must and encouraging more of it is already part of our plans and has been taken account of in the sums we've done. We help companies have travel plans, we even insist on this type of plan before new developments go ahead. It is part of the solution but only a part and road pricing will give people an incentive to take advantage of flexible working when it's offered.

I'm encouraged. And having decided to work form home how do I get compensated when I do have to travel from the place that has no alternative means of transport to my car? There is promise here, but the devil is in the details. What is pain, and what is no gain other than tax per mile revenue to the Treasury.

ken sidwell: Will motor cyclists be exempt from road pricing as they do not cause congestion and the emissions are considerably lower than cars and commercial vehicles? Also, as motorbikes help cut down congestion and enviromental damage will this be an area that the government will look at promoting and help dispel the negative image given to the motorcycle fraternity?

Dr Stephen replies: Certainly they should pay a price that reflects the fact they take up less room. Whether that is a discount or an exemption is a subject for debate.

That's a no then. Sounds pretty firm for things just being considered.

Dan McIntyre: In his email response to people who signed the road pricing petition, the Prime Minister explains that investment in public transport has doubled since 1997. This seems a sensible way forwards to me. However, despite all this investment, trains are *still* notoriously unreliable, crowded, uncomfortable and expensive. I can't recall a single journey I've made in the last year that was not delayed. As for buses, it costs me double to come to work on the bus compared to what it costs me to drive. Surely if the government wants to cut congestion it should make public transport affordable, reliable and comfortable. I have a feeling you're going to say that's what you are doing, though from my perspective (and that of many others) I can't see any noticeable improvement at all. I would be interested to hear your response to this.

Dr Stephen replies: We are planning to spend £140bn of central govt money in the 10 years up to 2014/15 on transport. We spend £2.5bn a year subsidising buses. £90m a week on trains. We have spent £8bn upgrading the west coast main line. We are spending £200m on fast trains for the CTRL Domestic Service. This is paying off - we carried 1bn people on the trains last year, bus patronage is higher. We are also working with operators to make bus and train services more reliable and comfortable.But despite all this we still predict congestion will be 25% worse by 2015.

Fudge vs. facts. So the last 10 years were doing what, how and why should the next 10 be any different?

Mr G Brook: I would have thought one of the more practical answers to road conjestion is to quadruple the price of fuel. This would remove the need to have all the technology solutions and civil servents to manage it. It would promote fuel efficient engines and biofuel engines, and would effect by proportion those who use the roads more. It could be implemented over night and the additional revenue could be used for public transport. Simple! What is the minister's view?

Dr Stephen replies: I think the petition that would follow the implementation of this idea would get even more signatures!

Not exactly an answer. But I tend to agree with Dr. L. If it were that simple it would hit those who have to use a car and drive major distances much harder than those who do not. And I'd hazard most congestion is on 10 mile trips into cities and not 100 mile round trips in the country or on motorways.

Marlene Murty: I live in the city but work in a rural NHS area that can have difficulty recruiting in some specialities (daily commute 80 miles + business milage ). Is key worker assistance planned in road pricing; or do I have to choose between my job and my home?

Dr Stephen replies: The system hasn't been designed yet so issues like how health and other key workers would be affected haven't been decided either - but this will be an important part of the debate. Also if you live / drive in rural areas you could well be better off under road pricing.

A key worker would be someone employed by the Government then? One of Mr. Brown's extra 700,000 dependent voters. And so far, the phrase 'could well be better off' could well as easily mean 'could well not be better off' for all it's worth.

Paul Grant: I drive a Smart car, one of the more environmentally friendly cars, I also car share for travelling to work, for those making a concerted effort to reduce pollution and congestion does the government plan any kind of incentment / reward?

Dr Stephen replies: That has to be part of the debate. In the London congestion charge zone clean cars don't pay. However, we have always said that road pricing needs to be primarily about congestion - it is complex enough to get it right with only that focus. However, if in designing the system there are obvious ways to also incentivise cleaner cars then we'll need to take that on board.

I'm on a roll: '...has to be part of the debate' & '... take that on board' means 'No, but we'll let these ones die in the wilderness with a few other dodgy questions'. I have to say I can't see how a Smart car assist congestion much, though. It's a car with four wheels. Lack of 3' in length helps how?

Hugh Lazarus: "our models show we only need 4% of people to change their behaviour to get a 40% improvement in congestion" - so why not only charge on certain strips of PROVEN congested roads at peak hours only. It seems a bit extreme to charge everyone to penilise 4% OF US.

Dr Stephen replies: That is exactly what we want to do - the highest charges would be on the most congested roads at the busiest times. Far from penalising everyone - you could find you are not paying as much, and perhaps even less, than you do now.

Well at least it was live. Note that not getting charged at all is not an option, though.

steve aitken: I'm in favour of congestion charging and road tolls - it's used in every other European country. However on it's own it's simply insufficient and will lead to a minimal decrease in traffic - we need both congestion charging and better public transport to solve the problem. I queue across the Forth Road Bridge each day and don't do this out of choice - the public transport into Edinburgh is poor and it's less hassle by car. Will you be combining both congestion charging and targetted public transport improvements in the future because currently it's not working? Can't we take a lead from the Dutch?

Dr Stephen replies: Absolutely! That is exactly the plan.

... thanks, Steve. The promotion is in the post.

Miss Adams: If it is to focus on travelling at "peak times" how can this be fair on those of us who have children to get to school, and can only work during school hours, as our journeys will always fall in "peak times" and there is nothing we can do to change this. Surely this would be penalising working parents?

Dr Stephen replies: We have to look at this, and it is a challenge. Staggered school opening may be one way. Plus people who travel to schools can consider car share / walking/ cycling etc. just as anyone else can. In Kent we have 60 walking buses (where children are escorted and walk in a crocodile to school along an agreed route) that are very popular with kids and we have just announced £15m to encourage walking to school. But as I say, identifying these sort of issues and deciding how to handle them is part of the debate.

I like the fact that 'Miss' Adams is a parent. Oh, Puritan me! You go look at it Dr. Ladyman. I'd like to see half the kids at our school use a walking bus. But then, we don't live in London. I know Kent is the country, too, but how urban are the catchments for these systems? Does he walk to Westminster?

raj saini: It would be helpful if illegal motorists were removed from the road, those who avoid paying road tax, do not MOT their cars or are banned, this will reduce congestion. Why can the government not enforce their existing policy to "clamp-down" on these people rather than creating a new policy that will effect the honest motorist who pays enough through fuel duty anyway?

Dr Stephen replies: These people are a menace. The police have got new powers to seize illegal vehicles and we've just doubled funding for removing and crushing these cars. I'm with you - some people would say the only question is whether one or two of these people are left in their cars when they go in the crusher :-)

Helpful! Essential! Answer the question. Why is it not happening? if you can catch a person who forgets to renew their tax for one day, why can't you catch those who are really breaking the law:(!

April Heard: I am a single parent who struggles to work full time with two children. I do not get tax credits or anything else other than the basic child benefit. I have already moved to rural Lincolnshire as I cannot afford house prices in the south east on public sector pay. Public transport outside the major towns is minimal here and does not support shift work. Road pricing could be the final straw and tip me over the edge of just not being able to keep going. What provisions will there be for those in my position doing shift work and living in rural areas. My job have the right to send me in anywhere in the county where I work and can expect me to attend at any stated time day or night. Why are people like being penalised when we serve the community and the public wants us to be there in their time of need.

Dr Stephen replies: We have to carefully consider the impact of road pricing on all sorts of people. You might well be better off under road pricing, particularly if you are travelling in non-peak times, as a shift worker. People living in rural areas could also pay some of the lowest charges - and remember that we are also investing in public transport and providing better bus services to give people alternative travel options.

I trust she 'might be' suitably reassured.

Nigel Smith: A great deal of the present rush hour congestion is caused by mothers on the 'School Run'. During the school holidays, traffic flow increases substantially.

In some areas, parents have organised 'snakes' or 'crocodiles', supervised by adults that walk the children to school. Not only is it safer and healthier, but it reduces the local traffic congestion. Where this is not practical, school minibuses (similar to the American yellow buses) can collect the children safely and deliver them to school. The reduction in emissions and congestion is again substantial. Each minibus can remove as many as twenty cars from the roads at peak times. This can dramatically improve traffic flow.

Already covered, so why the repeat at the expense of other questions, as if I didn't know.

Why is the Government not doing more to encourage local authorities to start 'walking snakes' where practical or minibuses where it is not? Rather than pricing the poor off the road, the Government should be encouraging people to leave their car at home by providing cheap and efficient public transport for their children.

Dr Stephen replies: As I said in an earlier answer these walking buses are great news - I join them now and again in my own constituency - the kids have fun, it's healthy - and we've just provided £15m more to encourage them.

Already covered, so why the repeat at the expense of other questions, as if I didn't know.

Mr M McEvinney: How do the government intend to protect article 8(1) rights in any road pricing system that necessarily monitors vehicle and thereby driver location? Will other agencies have access to this information and how do the government intend to protect this information and prevent its abuse in respect of both article 8(1) and article 6 of ECHR?
"our models show we only need 4% of people to change their behaviour to get a 40% improvement in congestion"Does the government therefore consider road pricing, affecting all motorists, proportionate in its inevitable interference with article 8 rights?

Dr Stephen replies: We can guarantee that we will respect privacy in a road pricing system. We are looking at ways to do this and one way is to have the money collected by a trusted third party. Most people have a mobile phone these days and the mobile phone company can track your movements from your phone but they are trusted not to. Other ways to guarantee privacy will emerge if we go ahead. What I can also promise is that privacy laws will apply to this as they do to all government actions. As for your concern about article 8 rights - the figure I gave for a 40% improvement if 4% of people change their behaviour was an illustration of what can be achieved. It is proportionate because to get that behaviour change we need to offer the incentive to everyone to change their travel habits.

That... does not tally what has been said before. I am sure I heard they would not be tracking us. Trust is not something this mob have in great supply.

Ian Denham: You have suggested in an answer given to Marlene Murty's question that 'if you/drive y tin nrural areasyou could well be better off under road pricing Please would you back up tha statement by explaining how?

Dr Stephen replies: Because road pricing is about changing from the way we pay to use the roads today to a new way of paying to use the roads. In other words reviewing the current taxes on motorists would be part of the package. If we decide to go for a national system then it wouldn't be in place until at least 2015 and I have no way of knowing what decisions the chancellor might make in 2015. None of these decisions are made yet - that is why we are having this debate.

In other words, 'no, I can't explain how. Once it's a done deal, you'll find out, like it or not'.

Brian Duffy: If road charging is not a stealth tax then what present tax shall it be replacing to balance things out. If there are no taxes being replaced then we can assume that the motorist is being ripped off yet again

Dr Stephen replies: I've just answered this one but I want to emphasise this is about tackling congestion. If all we wanted to do was raise money we could just put up fuel duty but that wouldn't change people's behaviour. That is why road pricing will have to be about a new way to pay to use the road.

I am looking for that answer still. Saying you have doesn't mean you did. Where is the money going?

Peter Graham: Firstly can I say how much I enjoyed your appearance last year on Top Gear - good on you. Could you say what percentage of the revenue raised by HMG through fuel tax, road licences and tax on the sale of new cars is reinvested in the transport system? Many thanks

Dr Stephen replies: I enjoyed Top Gear too! I keep hinting they should invite me back so I can have a go in the new car. Perhaps JC can quiz me on Road Charging? I don't have the figure you are asking for to hand at the moment but I can tell you that the taxes motorists pay have not been ring fenced for transport since 1937. They are part of the exchequer's general revenue and they pay for schools, hospitals, police etc and if we didn't have that revenue then other taxes like income tax and VAT would have to go up.

You will never go near JC 'cos he'll nail you on that very question! 'I don't have the figure to hand at the moment...' Odd, I'm sure a lot of others besides me asked for it the day before. I think that means 'You will never know that figure because it will sink me/us...'

Alan Bowling: Why not penalise utility companies that generate massive congestion when work is undertaken - especially when they do not work at off peak hours to undertake the work?

Dr Stephen replies: We have recently passed laws to let us do this and are currently working out with the utility companies and Councils how best to ensure streetworks can go ahead with minimal disruption.

Because none of this congestion has occured until now? A lot from this government is kicking in a little... late?

susan wood: The DVLA has been accused in the past of selling motorist details to other companies. If the road pricing scheme goes ahead using the black box device, what guarantees (not assurances) can the government make that this will not happen to any information gathered through these devices?

Dr Stephen replies: As I explained earlier there is no reason why we would have this information. We would of course make the system as secure as possible, and the information could be held by a trusted third party - the government wouldn't need to see it.

'There is no reason why...' does not sound like a guarantee, for all that would be worth anyway. Did the DVLA sell data?

Paul Hill: Will you consider simple and proven technology for road pricing as an alternative to the complicated and expensive tracking options so far discussed?

Dr Stephen replies: Yes.

Er.... what?

F.A.Shaw: If it is the governments wish to encourage more people to travel by public transport, why are rail companies trying to force passengers off trains back to other forms of transport ,by imposing swingeing price increases on already high ticket costs?

Dr Stephen replies: There are only two places money can come from. The fare payer or the tax payer. If fares don't increase to cover costs the tax payer has to pay. In fact over the last 10 years the average cost to the passenger has only gone up 2.4% over inflation whereas individual wealth over the same period has gone up 26%.

That's OK then.

Rowland Sutton: If road pricing comes in what guarantee have we that it will be applicable to foreign motorists/lorry drivers to pay ,as according to what we read in the papers they seem to be let off paying parking fines, speeding fines etc because it is too costly to follow up.

Dr Stephen replies: Everyone will have to pay a road price - in fact road pricing would be an effective way of ensuring visitors do pay to use the roads. As for fines etc we have new powers coming in this year to make people pay a deposit equal to their possible fine so that if they leave the country we'll already have the money.

So the EU is fixing boxes on all cars as we speak? So it's a done deal? Otherwise how?

Kevin Sines: Thank you for therGovernments reponse. Can you please tell me what provision has been made for disabled drivers who need their cars to live an ordinary life, I personally find it difficult to fuel my car on Income support and would find it nigh on impossible to if Congestion charges or tolls were introduced.

Dr Stephen replies: Of course provision for disabled drivers will need to be considered as part of the design of any scheme and needs to be part of this debate.

'You'll pay mate, juts like the rest of them.'

steve cowles: can you honesly say that the techology will not be used to obtain average speeds for prosecution on speeding offences?

Dr Stephen replies: Yes I can say that - this is about tackling congestion. But I'm sure you don't speed anyway ;-)

What is this technology anyway?

Mark Christelow: Tony Blair made reference to Highway Officers being employed to keep the traffic moving. It seems to me and many others that whenever the Highways Agency get involved in a motorway incident they make the traffic congestion worse. Their main priority seems to be to investigate the cause of the accident often by closing the motorway for excessive periods of time rather than keeping the traffic moving....do they really have this as their number one priority?

Dr Stephen replies: Not true. The new HA officers are really effective. Keeping traffic moving safely is their no 1 priority.The point the Boss was making is that we are building new roads, we are widening key roads, we are doing things like employing people to clear away incidents quicker, we are providing real time info about jams so people can avoid them, we are doing active traffic management and trialling hard shoulder running and we are planning to spend £140bn on transport and still - despite all this - we project congestion will be 25% worse by 2015 if we don't do something more. And so far the only idea on the table that can have the dramatic effect we need is road pricing. That is why the CBI, the British Chamber of Commerce, The Motorists Forum, the RAC Foundation all say we have to explore it.

The Boss!!!! I'd really like the facts on that. How does shutting a motorway for 4 hours to assess a non-fatal shunt count as 'really effective'?

Kathy Clarke: Please don't skip over the fuel tax issue - this is the most valid point, we already have a mileage tax system in place, without the expense of a new system. By the way, how much will this cost US to set up?

Dr Stephen replies: We simply don't know because we haven't designed a system yet. But I am looking at ways we can ensure the cost doesn't fall on the motorist - for example the person who collects the charge from you may provide the equipment at their expense. As I've said fuel tax may affect the total amount of driving you do but not the time you do it. And of course taxes will be one of the things that will be reviewed as part of designing a scheme.

Hmmn. This doesn't compute: I am looking at ways we can ensure the cost doesn't fall on the motorist.

Michael Cowie: Why do we need to have a Uk policy, when the driving force behind the study, is the congestion caused into urban areas? Only 55 % of journeys made are into these areas.

Dr Stephen replies: Congestion has consequences for the country as a whole. A decision on a national scheme will only be taken after we've seen how local schemes work.

'Makes more money, too.'

c.pearson: I think Mr. Brook's idea is excellent but your reply does rather give the impression that your mind is already made up regarding road pricing and that you aren't really interested in any alternatives. Can you convince me otherwise?

Dr Stephen replies: I can assure we are considering all ideas and if an alternative emerges that will work believe me I'll grab it.

Convinced, C. Pearson?

Peter : You say people choose to sit in jams rather than use the alternatives. My alternative is 3 times as expensive, and takes 2.5 times longer so I choose to use the car. Will you force me off the roads too?

Dr Stephen replies: We will be investing in and improving public transport to give people more choices. But choice isn't just about cars versus public transport , it's about when and where you drive.

'Yes, I will. You'll have more choice but still no alterative.'

Ian Denham: In the last 35 minutes 12 questions have been answered by Dr Steven Ladyman, 5,000+ had been posted before the start of this webchat . Over 1.5million people signed the on-line petition against the proposal for this plan/scheme since this on line chat started I have asked 10 questions all different to those answered to date! How are you going to ensure that all views are taken into consideration before any decision is made?

Dr Stephen replies: You've had 2 now!

Proving a valid point I'd say. Who chooses?

As I said at the start we'll read through them all off line and take them into account. And don't forget that we want to have this debate over many years, so there will be lots more opportunities to talk about these issues.

SFX: Groan!

Andy Pearse: If a 'black box' will have to be installed on the car/hgv, how will this work for foriegn vehicles?

Dr Stephen replies: They could 'hire' a box at the port of entry. That is just one of the options we are looking at. Obviously, addressing this issue is a must.

They could, I guess. So there is going to be a box that tracks us then?

Dr Stephen says: Thanks for your questions - but I have to go now to catch a train!!!!

To where? What class? Who is paying? How are you getting to and from the station each end? 'Weeeeeee. I'm a public servant who works in London and gets paid to travel.'

I'll arrange to do another web chat soon and we will read all your ideas and suggestions. This is a debate, no decisions have been made yet and there is time for everyone to have their say.

And don't forget... they are listening.

I have to say that it was all I could do not to change 'Dr Stephen says' to 'Minister Says No'.

Where you convinced?

ps: The questions I asked here. I guess they were not so vital as these.

Times - Revealed: the e-petition ‘prat’

Following my receipt of Mr. Blair's Message from the Bunker, I turned on Thursday to the webcast to see if Dr. Ladyman would address any of my questions following his mime performance (so much spun; so little said or answered - I still await the progamme's reply as to the factual discrepancy between the Minister's recollection of what is or isn't on record and the Sun columnist who challenged him) on Monday's Newsnight.

Did anyone else find it a tad wanting in the promised further clarity?

As with the petition, it was still an interesting excerise in looking like you are listening when in fact you are still only telling.

1.8M people signed the petition. 5,000 asked questions on the webcast. Less than twenty were carefully selected. Oddly, one questioner got to ask twice.

Hmnn.

Telegraph - Poll blow for road pricing plans fuels dissent in Labour ranks - The sahme of it is that soemthing is necessary. They have just screwed any chance of anything happening rationally.

All that's print to fit

For the sake of integrity, keep the PR meisters at bay

I clicked on this simply to find out how integrity and PR got in
the same sentence. Then I found myself hooked by a piece
that was simply interesting - and I think honest - journalism (another
two words not often placed together these days) about an area that
it would be a lie to say does not interest me, but is quite low on my
order of the day. So I took it for what it was.

And then, there at the end was something that was grist to my
churning mill: the environment. My website is more than a tad 'green'.

So I have pondered the question your student has posed via you,
and my answer is, 'I don't know but would be happy to discuss.'

Just like Kate Silverton being air-flown - with or without crew... and
entourage? - to the Oscars by a cash-strapped and newly eco-aware
BBC, it is the media's role to entertain and her 'job', but they do have
on-site correspondents, no?

So I am erring on yes, it would benefit me, and the story, plus planet
if it were found
and not supplied via a jolly.

Fly me to the moon. Or Not.

I have no problem with reasonable expenditures of pretty much anything in the cause of science.

Get a rich lard-a**se a better view... less so.

I’d like a ticket to New York by hypersonic space rocket, please

"The two organisations would research hybrid rocket motors, which
use both solid and liquid fuel and are safer and more efficient than
solid fuel rocket engines."

Just asking, but by 'more efficient' what is meant by that?

Will it mean a kilo of person or cargo will get to the destination
for a lower carbon commitment?

Or not?

And if not, this is a commitment to global warming how exactly?

Gush, gush journalism at its best.

Today... save planet. Tomorrow.. write about it

Not the other way round!

Global capitalism now has no serious rivals. But it could destroy itself


That subhead is dead posh, but has the benefit of brevity.

Basically it’s saying ‘There are too many of us. There are getting to be more and more each day. Most are getting richer. And they have few other outlets for their money than buying stuff that screws up the planet in the making (and using, in the case of airplanes, etc, because most rich, and not so rich, folk spend so much time working they have to rush about the planet in the few moments spare just to find more ways of blowing the excess dough).

This is the second time that elephant has been trumpeted this week. The last was a shrill lady from Transport 2000 (London, not-yet-parent, doesn’t cook much at home branch... ‘who needs cars?... we can all cycle!) on Newsnight, who the government and hence BBC seems to think represents all who care about our fair planet.

But you know what? I agree with you.

It is a pretty Pyrrhic victory if, having triumphed, you, or perhaps your heirs, don’t have much left to enjoy it in.

And there, to me, is the rub.

Time. And what ‘we’ do with it.

Our future is in our hands, but we do leave most of it to a rather odd, even unholy, alliance of government, business, various ‘groups’ and... the media to ensure it’s all going to work out OK in the end.

And at any one time they all hook up and fall out on various tribal, selfish and self-interested (with the odd smidge of altruism every so often) lines, such that historically one bloc has been pre-eminent until it isn’t.

Leaving aside nuclear Armageddon, we have now for the first time a potential global threat which rather demands that all these groups, in all their separate bases of operation, with all their various associated nuances (race, religion, etc)... cooperate.

I’m not feeling too encouraged at this point.

Most ‘isms’ are not really designed to cope with much on a planetary scale. It’s just competing to win locally. Trouble is, Mother Nature’s evolutionary design has hit a snag: there’s no more space to expand, and an awful lot of us are none to keen on dealing with that problem the old-fashioned Serengeti way. And having just hit fifty, I’m not too keen on them addressing it even locally, by making me today’s Soylent Green additive.

Personally, I think that little lot needs to be higher on the agenda by now than 4x4s, or even the terms of the next Kyoto’s location, but moving on....

I have to say of the ‘isms’ I actually think capitalism is in with the best chance, because it is most likely to throw up those with the desire and the means to act. I have to assume there are some squillionaire supermarket chiefs who do have kids and do worry about their futures almost as much as shareholder returns. Let’s just hope he or she is not the next Hugo Drax (no beard if it’s a her).

Speaking of beards there are some glimmers of this happening already, but I’m still trying to reconcile Mr. Branson saving the planet with Big Al at the same time as spending his next Bank Holiday in space (unless that tourist rocket is propelled by rubber bands).

And at least most capitalist systems are sort of democratic (for now), with sort of free - if no longer very effective, or trusted - presses (for now).

So if a bloke, or a lady, or a very small mixed bunch do start doing stuff for their own short-term personal interest at the expense of others, we can often still find out and try and stop them. In many cases, at least in the West (but not always), it can be without getting banged up or done in.

Davos has been mentioned, and here I must play my own devil’s advocate to the cause of ‘BIG’ business helping much at all - http://junkk.blogspot.com/2007/01/enjoy-today-tomorrow-is-looking-lot.html

But compared to the alternatives, in other countries and indeed our own political classes (who can see no further than their career and the next election, if that far – I do believe in a sorry twist that allotments are being dug up for someone’s next Olympian concrete folly), I’m afraid they are the best of a very bad lot. I just wish more would see fit to act while they are still establishing their power bases by raping the planet first, and not just once they have had their go and are seeking other outlets.

But there are those keen to DO something about it, and a little less of the talking.

It would indeed be good to get a few more.

How about you?

Beggar Me

The sexlife of head lines

An interesting trend, which warrants further development, may I suggest?

At least these terms still function, roughly, as qualifiers.

I am interested in how such headlines (or utterances in the case of broadcast) get derived from the words issued from a politician's mouth, ranging from almost estate-agent levels of stretch to out and out porkies.

So when something 'will get looked at', this is, at best, from a very long way away and for a very long time, so as to vanish, if possible. Which really means 'will be ignored'.

And when a Minister says on BBC Newsnight 'I didn't say that', and a challenger says 'it's on record that you did', the public remains none the wiser.

I don't know what that has done to my belief in holders of high office, and indeed my faith in the abilities of those in the major media tasked to keep them vaguely on the straight and narrow, but for now I'll have say 'beggared' isn't too bad.

A matter of definition

Resistance is 4x4 futile

'...we need to be encouraged to stop using our cars'

The point has been made by others, but I'm guessing as I read this in Ross-on-Wye that this 'we' don't get much beyond Islington/Westminster/Fleet St/Canary Wharf/where Ken taxi (what does he use?) rides to & fro, and where the BBC meets their mates from the preceding places?

And while I'm here I just wonder how an electric car prevents congestion?

Or indeed, how a petrol car that does, say 10 miles a day, is worse for the environment than an electric (I do believe there is still an exhaust pipe. It is just in another place) or hybrid that buzzes about all day, emitting away.

All marf 'an no trawsers

I was in Asia when a Newsweek cover pronounced 'Cool Britannia', and I knew the country's cultural decline was now assured. The minute the pols believe their own PR and, worse, try to spin it themselves, they are on the long slippy, slope that only trying to be the first to be second can confer. You are not cool if you say you are. You are cool by being it.

And so it is with innovation.

This - UK falls from innovation elite - saddens, but does not surprise me. And it may make an interesting study for Mr. Brown to commission. First create a few thousand more (750,000 on his watch, apparently. All index-linked and gold-plated) unproductive, public-service, but grateful, beholden voters. Then get them to look into the relative rise of quangos and initiatives supposedly designed to promote innovation, creativity and entrepreneurship, plus the amounts that get spent on admin and doling out the money, and what actually gets anywhere helpful. Then relate to the above fact.

What's the opposite of a Green Corner?

Buying organic food ‘can harm the planet'

This article, and the posts in response, highlight the problem the poor average consumer faces when they want to do the 'right' thing. For a start, 'ethical', 'environmental' and 'organic' often get lumped together, when in fact it seems they can often be mutually exclusive.

My greatest concern is the establishment of camps at various extremes, who will inevitably stake claims on the profile high ground of a media industry thirsty for such positions.

But in pandering to these, moves to a slow but steady supply of validated, accurate information, and encouragement to engaging with proven 'better' practices get sidelined and overwhelmed. And to most who have other things to worry about than chewing over the minutiae of such issues may just not bother and carry on with what they know. Which serves the future poorly. And I criticise 'green is good no matter what' advocates and especially profit-orientated bandwagon jumpers for giving a rich source of counter ammunition to those who wish to maintain wasteful or polluting ways for whatever reason (usually profit, though to be pragmatic an expanding population does require intensieb farming techniques to be used)

Just remember: green cannot be viewed in back and white.

Good Effort. But is it just a token one?

PC World plans to offer carbon-neutral PC

It's a lot better than nothing, but I do wonder about the actual value in
e-totality about 'A' carbon-neutral PC in the great consumer choice
scheme of things. Is this going to be a range at least? So I can be 'eco'
and have choice on a par with those that, one presumes are not so
'carbon neutral'. Otherwise it might be of limited appeal.

Frankly one would hope all PCs would nowadays be made using the
'most energy-efficient components available'

ps: My website is trying to save the planet.. and I use a Mac:(

Told you so. Sorry.

I take no pleasure from it, but...

Public ‘feel powerless’ over green issues

I find the explanation '..mixed messages about the environment are putting people off' a bit vague, and while accepting solutions are not easy would wish the media stopped just reporting the problems and leaving it at that.

Wednesday, February 21, 2007

It's driving me insane.

Drivers to be red-faced if they don’t choose a green car

All they could be doing, and their first thought* is to throw how many
£million of my money at an ad agency and more than happy media
world to persuade me not to do buy something they permit to be sold?

Barking!!!!

I demand my money back.

*Assuming this report to be true.

Webcasting Nasturtiums

Qu: In the exchange on Newsnight with the Sun's 'representative', there was an argument about matters of fact on comments made once the petition became a hot political issue. Who was accurate in their statements?

Times - Nations unite to join a boycott of congestion charge - Well, at least something has brought 'em together at last.

Times - Without road pricing we face gridlock, says Blair

Right message. Wrong person and team to try and sell the solution.

If you can't, or won't, answer key questions with anything other than
defensiveness, denial, hype, spin and 'looking at it' nonsense waffle,
you will not get past the necessary trust levels to allow it to get where
it needs to go.

I await with interest the webcast Thursday pm with Dr.
'Ladymano a 1.8M manos' to see how this little exchange gets carried
out sensibly and then reported.

I'm still trying to figure out who you charge fairly and accurately
without tracking individual vehicle movements as they progress, by
the '2 to 3 ways' alluded to.

Times - Oh, unhappy me. I’m a car owner

Times - Pedal Power

'Road proceeds should be invested in repopularising the bicycle'

I couldn't agree more. However I rather fear as, say with unhiring 750,000 extra civil servants (quoted in these pages I think yesterday), the theory is good but the practice may prove less so.

I'd also like to ensure we are talking here of congestion charge proceeds in London, and not national road proceeds. You see there is a difference.

You may wish to cycle to avoid the smell and overcrowding and performance of an urban transport network that involves minute by minute buses and tubes. Plus the option of heavily subsidised (never understood why such a private enterprise is exempt from charges to carry just one person (ex: driver) in a not very clean diesel emitting all day and night long - maybe it's because the non-car brigade in power still need to get about without the hassle and hoi polloi?).

However, when it's freezing, heaving down, you have a large load and/or two kids, or an urgent appointment well, the trusty Raleigh is the very thing. Especially if the nearest anything is 15 miles away up hill and down dale as the tractor chugs.

And as statistics are a favoured tool of persuasion, may I simply ask (as I don't know) how far affordable housing is from the main urban places of work in the European examples cited? And ignoring the admittedly woeful current support to encourage it in London, what are the geographical challenges. Last time I looked, Amsterdam was pretty flat. I used to live in Wandsworth and there were a couple of hills there alone that would have done for me.

Or is this advocacy solely for young, single, non-parent, fit types?

Guardian - E-petitions: Marketing, or e-democracy?

While I appreciated the opportunity to make my case in London while not having to suffer the irony of drive there to do so (note that one, placard wavers), I'd have to say that what came back was not marketing.

As I do not think any alternative views will gain access to this valuable database, I'd say it falls more under propaganda.

Josef would have been proud.

Guardian - That email


The Charity Business


I may seem like I am always down on charities, but I'm not. Well, I'm OK with charity, but not so much the business most major 'charities' brands' have become.

My unease is typified by this poster in our local street. And it's worth noting there are about a dozen such shops competing with rate-paying commercial sales outlets.

WE DON'T ACCEPT OLD BOOKS.

That was what I liked about such shops. Old stuff reused and the money going where most needed. Now they are flogging new stuff (see the poster behind?) to send what % after deductions for admin and marketing?

Time 2 Chill


As words fails me at this guy's comedic/satiric genius, I won't say anything more:

Minsiter says no

He knows who he is. I mean the guy who told me; not the Minister (though if they have a modicum of brain or shame left, most might have a flicker that this is what they have isolated themselves from in their bunkers, with entire sub-level after level of no people (for outgoing) and yes-mench(for incoming and and up where de sun don' shine).

I was called to calm me down after a day's ranting and rolling online.

And in the course of the conversation I was told an anecdote about some Ministry consultancy work carried out that, upon completion, was flushed (but paid for) without being seen, used or acted upon before it ever got presented, with the immortal words 'The Minister Won't Like It'.

Well, that is an interesting way to run a department, and a country.

And while I personally think it's also a daft one, it doesn't seem to be working awfully well, if we look at, well, pretty every aspect of society and how it is being (mis- depending on your view) managed at present. Hmnn.

One final thought. Are our public servants, at any level, not surely tasked and paid to do what is right for the country and its population, not what a minister may or may not 'like'?

Answers on a voting slip, please, as soon as we can.

Repitition for effect, the sequel

Newsnight - Tuesday, 20 February, 2007

I'm repeating this as Newsnight is stretching the issue of the Petition over a few days (Very amusing Mr. D Ringer). And there are related matters on the environment to follow (cars do use oil right?)

As it has come up again here (6. Mr. G Edwards) , I'd like to add one more to my list of questions I posed yesterday, as it is a good one and I don't seem to have heard one word by way of an answer on this throughout the 'debate' (that's where people answer other's questions and not just those they fancy, right? And moderators ensure they do, and are truthful, right? Not deny, misinform or stay silent, right?).


Qu: The claim is made that this is not a stealth tax. Without waffle and 'it will be looked into', what % of every £ will go from the tax directly to environmental-related improvements, how much to creating a whole new level of salaried and pensioned administrators, and how much to unspecified other government expenditures. With no guarantee or fair idea on the first we will assume the last two.

I'm afraid to answer a previous poster I am having trouble with the current administration's abilities and record in translating revenue into result without 99% going on logistics.

Qu: The other night on Newsnight, Stephen Ladyman claimed 2 to 3 methods for charging an individual vehicle traveling, one presumes, from A to B, without needing to track its location. How, exactly, do you monitor and charge something accurately without knowing where it was, is and how it got there?
(I was a tad concerned that the interviewer seemed way out of her depth and frankly allowed anyone come out with any accusation or fact they liked without check (see my last post no. 251 in my personal review of the 'debate' yesterday)

Qu: What substantive consideration will be given to the situation and needs of those in non-urban (the bits outside Westminster, Islington, Fleet Street, Canary Wharf, where the BBC lives and Ken pedals to work) areas that are... fair?

Qu: How does Dr. Ladyman propose to answer questions from 1.6M people in tomorrow's webchat?

Will the questions be vetted to provide the best set of answers to suit an established agenda?

If so, and in the absence one presumes of dissenting sides being able to put their case(s) in the same way as the No 10 email, how is this anything like sensible debate, or simply further propaganda?

Qu: Who put Transport 2000 in charge of representing moderate, practical and fair environmental advocacy?
Such organisations seem to get funded to drive even greater wedges between protagonists rather than bridge them.

Qu: Where is the place that says that by signing the email I would be exposed unilateral responses by what is, in essence, unsolicited, unanswerable (would I get a reply) mass email methods? Was this not a major critique of the methods used (without the benefit of a single database) by the pro-'lobby' as this played out over the last few weeks.

It's very hard to trust anything... when you don't believe anything any more.

I want sensible, fair, open, practical, cost-effective, fully future-proof enviROI steps taken to secure my kid's and their kids' lives and livelihoods. If road-pricing is part and parcel, so be it.

But not organised from a bunker in, for and by London.

On other matters....

ps: Interesting the comment/critique in the Ethical Man slot: 'What have you learned in the last year?'. It rather begs the next few:

1) With all the support (free kit, per diems, ex's etc) to get set-up with much that will save money as well as planet if capital costs are ignored (and most of us likely can't, when all's said and done), what have those of us without BBC-cred access to the Green Room at Climate Aid/Global Cool learned?

2) And as it seems you are on the last stretch, what will be retained, by way of capital kit and ongoing 'do-without' practices?

For instance, it sure helps a bit that the Bishop of London is taking over the mantle of one-year no-flying zzzzz-oh-how-good-an-example-izzat?, but it's really not so effective if the UK population does it as an annual relay (or does this just apply to celebs and green elites?).

pps: I was about to groan as Mr. Miliband went into full 'Oh golly, it's a question... duck and dive mode, now' when cocktail-stepped on Big Oil, and the 'It depends, we'll need to look into it..' defence brought out was looking typical, if tired. But I thought he recovered well.

Just... was his answer accurate? Maybe the bosses of Shell and BP, etc could provide an answer every bit as slick as the one they did to John Humphrys at Davos, to the same level of journalistic challenge and insight

Pretty please:)

ADDENDUM:

I guess it has passed from media interest already, and don't know how many revisit these pages over subsequent days, but following Newsnight's piece earlier in the week I was wondering if anyone else watched Dr. Ladyman's webcast on the road petition this day?

Actually, in addition to a few other questions that seem a bit shy on coherent answers, I am still wondering who of the two guests were correct on the matter of what was or what was not said by Dr. Ladyman at the outset of this issue: him or the Sun chap?

When the latter says it is on record and the former says it is not, I really like to know.

Telegraph - Blair to defy 1.8m who signed road petition
(Didn't feel like adding my 2p as it has been a long day, there are 147 at last count and they are a tad selective)

Telegraph - What have the past 10 years of Blair been for?
Just for this: 'But the extra taxes we have paid have been wasted, not least in putting 700,000 socially unproductive people on the public payroll, where they can gratefully vote for Gordon Brown in perpetuity'.

Buying votes? That's like buying positions in roles in the process of government.

Surely this is not possible in a democracy, with an effective opposition... er...oh.

Will the last person who trusts this leadership please switch out the.... click....

Telegraph - What's the real cost of congestion?

I'm already limbering up with all my questions for tomorrow's man-to-1.8M 'webcast' tomorrow.

Now, what are the odds?

I see a few more things getting busted tomorrow, along with a few - as you have pointed out - still unanswered 'myths'.

I would just be happy to know how you charge someone fairly, in London or out, for a journey that 'will not be tracked'.

But then, I am just a poor tool in the sway of those evil petitioner-pushers and am unable to understand what lies... er.. behind the self-evident truths and less evident between-the-lines fudges of 'the mighty email', which in no way is a spam campaign trying to twist the result.

If that was the best the finest brains in the Dept. of Hype 'n Spin under Wee Wully MacGoebbels (why are they all Scots??) could manage in the weeks they have had to prepare, then gawd help them as the revolution comes.

Guardian - That email
Telegraph - No 10's road toll reply ducks tax cut guarantee - there's a wonder. A few other areas dodged, too.

We are not alone

Is the BBC losing the plot?

Just as I send off my less than satisfied viewer/licence payer missive, I get this in my in-box:

Special request from Sophie Chalmers of Better Business
-------------------------------------------------------
Would you do me a favour? There was a section on
radio the Today Prog about working from home (8.50
for five minutes
):


It was a ditzy piece with a writer and a journalist
saying how great/horrid it was to work from home.
Their conversations were unreal for most people.

Would you follow this link and write a couple of lines
about your experience/thoughts about working from home.

Solidarity!

Agree. It seems the BBC is not too keen on news journalism any more.

Shame it is just London luvvies and mates from the other media who they can drag in for a cosy 'are we not soooo 'in' chat', and even more so it gets to what was serious news shows like Today, Newsnight, etc, as well.

I won't write as I dread to think what they will choose to feature from my text. Nice to be mis- or at least poorly informed, and then stiffed in the edit suite by the guys whose salaries you pay. Not.

Repitition for effect

Newsnight - Monday, 19 February, 2007

Well, I got my email. If this is the best the PM and his bright young things could come up with, I’d suggest they stick with the day job. Oh, wait a 'mo...

Here are some questions back (I am holding my breath). I posed them this morning via Breakfast TV to Douglas Alexander, but they ran out of time to ask more than, oo, two from the whole country, before having to worry about one' of their mate's dresses.

Qu: The claim is made that this is not a stealth tax. Without waffle and 'it will be looked into', what % of every £ will go from the tax directly to environmental-related improvements, how much to creating a whole new level of salaried and pensioned administrators, and how much to unspecified other government expenditures. With no guarantee or fair idea on the first we will assume the last two.

Qu: The other night on Newsnight, Stephen Ladyman claimed 2 to 3 methods for charging an individual vehicle traveling, one presumes, from A to B, without needing to track its location. How, exactly, do you monitor and charge something accurately without knowing where it was, is and how it got there?

(I was a tad concerned that the interviewer seemed way out of her depth and frankly allowed anyone come out with any accusation or fact they liked without check (see my last post no. 251 in my personal review of the 'debate' yesterday)

Qu: What substantive consideration will be given to the situation and needs of those in non-urban (the bits outside Westminster, Islington, Fleet Street, Canary Wharf, where the BBC lives and Ken pedals to work) areas that are... fair?

Qu: How does Dr. Ladyman propose to answer questions from 1.6M people in tomorrow's webchat?

Will the questions be vetted to provide the best set of answers to suit an established agenda?

If so, and in the absence one presumes of dissenting sides being able to put their case(s) in the same way as the No 10 email, how is this anything like sensible debate, or simply further propaganda?

Qu: Who put Transport 2000 in charge of representing moderate, practical and fair environmental advocacy?

Such organisations seem to get funded to drive even greater wedges between protagonists rather than bridge them.

Dear Peter... Love Tony

Well, I got mine.

I also decided to email BBC Breakfast (as requested), but out of the couple (!) they probably got to pose to Minister Douglas Alexander, they managed about two. Nice one, BBC (and if anyone can tell me where the 'Your Comments' button on the homepage is to see if they were logged at least online, I'd be grateful).

I have popped in mine within the text of Mr. Blair's email to me:

The e-petition asking the Prime Minister to "Scrap the planned vehicle tracking and road pricing policy" has now closed. This is a response from the Prime Minister, Tony Blair.
Thank you for taking the time to register your views about road pricing on the Downing Street website.

This petition was posted shortly before we published the Eddington Study, an independent review of Britain's transport network. This study set out long-term challenges and options for our transport network.

It made clear that congestion is a major problem to which there is no easy answer. One aspect of the study was highlighting how road pricing could provide a solution to these problems and that advances in technology put these plans within our reach. Of course it would be ten years or more before any national scheme was technologically, never mind politically, feasible.

That is the backdrop to this issue. As my response makes clear, this is not about imposing "stealth taxes" or introducing "Big Brother" surveillance. This is a complex subject, which cannot be resolved without a thorough investigation of all the options, combined with a full and frank debate about the choices we face at a local and national level. That's why I hope this detailed response will address your concerns and set out how we intend to take this issue forward. I see this email as the beginning, not the end of the debate, and the links below provide an opportunity for you to take it further.

But let me be clear straight away: we have not made any decision about national road pricing. Indeed we are simply not yet in a position to do so. We are, for now, working with some local authorities that are interested in establishing local schemes to help address local congestion problems. Pricing is not being forced on any area, but any schemes would teach us more about how road pricing would work and inform decisions on a national scheme. And funds raised from these local schemes will be used to improve transport in those areas.

Qu: The claim is made that this is not a stealth tax. Without waffle and 'it will be looked into', what % of every £ will go from the tax directly to environmental-related improvements, how much to creating a whole new level of salaried and pensioned administrators, and how much to unspecified other government expenditures. With no guarantee or fair idea on the first we will assume the last two.

One thing I suspect we can all agree is that congestion is bad. It's bad for business because it disrupts the delivery of goods and services. It affects people's quality of life. And it is bad for the environment. That is why tackling congestion is a key priority for any Government.

Congestion is predicted to increase by 25% by 2015. This is being driven by economic prosperity. There are 6 million more vehicles on the road now than in 1997, and predictions are that this trend will continue.

Part of the solution is to improve public transport, and to make the most of the existing road network. We have more than doubled investment since 1997, spending £2.5 billion this year on buses and over £4 billion on trains - helping to explain why more people are using them than for decades. And we're committed to sustaining this investment, with over £140 billion of investment planned between now and 2015. We're also putting a great deal of effort into improving traffic flows - for example, over 1000 Highways Agency Traffic Officers now help to keep motorway traffic moving.

But all the evidence shows that improving public transport and tackling traffic bottlenecks will not by themselves prevent congestion getting worse. So we have a difficult choice to make about how we tackle the expected increase in congestion. This is a challenge that all political leaders have to face up to, and not just in the UK. For example, road pricing schemes are already in operation in Italy, Norway and Singapore, and others, such as the Netherlands, are developing schemes. Towns and cities across the world are looking at road pricing as a means of addressing congestion.

One option would be to allow congestion to grow unchecked. Given the forecast growth in traffic, doing nothing would mean that journeys within and between cities would take longer, and be less reliable. I think that would be bad for businesses, individuals and the environment. And the costs on us all will be real - congestion could cost an extra £22 billion in wasted time in England by 2025, of which £10-12 billion would be the direct cost on businesses.

A second option would be to try to build our way out of congestion. We could, of course, add new lanes to our motorways, widen roads in our congested city centres, and build new routes across the countryside. Certainly in some places new capacity will be part of the story. That is why we are widening the M25, M1 and M62. But I think people agree that we cannot simply build more and more roads, particularly when the evidence suggests that traffic quickly grows to fill any new capacity.

Tackling congestion in this way would also be extremely costly, requiring substantial sums to be diverted from other services such as education and health, or increases in taxes. If I tell you that one mile of new motorway costs as much as £30m, you'll have an idea of the sums this approach would entail.

That is why I believe that at least we need to explore the contribution road pricing can make to tackling congestion. It would not be in anyone's interests, especially those of motorists, to slam the door shut on road pricing without exploring it further.

It has been calculated that a national scheme - as part of a wider package of measures - could cut congestion significantly through small changes in our overall travel patterns. But any technology used would have to give definite guarantees about privacy being protected - as it should be. Existing technologies, such as mobile phones and pay-as-you-drive insurance schemes, may well be able to play a role here, by ensuring that the Government doesn't hold information about where vehicles have been. But there may also be opportunities presented by developments in new technology. Just as new medical technology is changing the NHS, so there will be changes in the transport sector. Our aim is to relieve traffic jams, not create a "Big Brother" society.

Qu: The other night on Newsnight, Stephen Ladyman claimed 2 to 3 methods for charging an individual vehicle traveling, one presumes, from A to B, without needing to track its location. How, exactly, do you monitor and charge something accurately without knowing where it was, is and how it got there?

I know many people's biggest worry about road pricing is that it will be a "stealth tax" on motorists. It won't. Road pricing is about tackling congestion.

Clearly if we decided to move towards a system of national road pricing, there could be a case for moving away from the current system of motoring taxation. This could mean that those who use their car less, or can travel at less congested times, in less congested areas, for example in rural areas, would benefit from lower motoring costs overall. Those who travel longer distances at peak times and in more congested areas would pay more. But those are decisions for the future. At this stage, when no firm decision has been taken as to whether we will move towards a national scheme, stories about possible costs are simply not credible, since they depend on so many variables yet to be investigated, never mind decided.

Before we take any decisions about a national pricing scheme, we know that we have to have a system that works. A system that respects our privacy as individuals. A system that is fair. I fully accept that we don't have all the answers yet. That is why we are not rushing headlong into a national road pricing scheme. Before we take any decisions there would be further consultations. The public will, of course, have their say, as will Parliament.

Qu: What substantive consideration will be given to the situation and needs of those in non-urban (the bits outside Westminster, Islington, Fleet Street, Canary Wharf, where the BBC lives and Ken pedals to work) areas that are fair?

We want to continue this debate, so that we can build a consensus around the best way to reduce congestion, protect the environment and support our businesses. If you want to find out more, please visit the attached links to more detailed information, and which also give opportunities to engage in further debate.

Yours sincerely,

Tony Blair

Further information
Both the 10 Downing Street and Department for Transport websites offer much more information about road pricing.

This includes a range of independent viewpoints, both for and against.

Qu: How were these selected? For instance how is Transport 2000 considered truly representative of the environmental movement? Why are they the only activist group ever featured?

You can also read the Eddington Report in full.

You can reply to this email by posting a question to Roads Minister Dr. Stephen Ladyman in a webchat on the No 10 website this Thursday.

Qu: How does Dr. Ladyman propose to answer questions from 1.6M people in tomorrow's webchat?

Will the questions be vetted to provide the best set of answers to suit an established agenda?

If so, and in the absence one presumes of dissenting sides being able to put their case(s) in the same way as the No 10 email, how is this anything like sensible debate, or simply further propaganda?

There will be further opportunities in the coming months to get involved in the debate. You will receive one final e-mail from Downing Street to update you in due course.

If you would like to opt out of receiving further mail on this or any other petitions you signed, please email optout@petitions.pm.gov.uk

BBC - Could pay-as-you-drive work?
BBC - PM denies road toll 'stealth tax'

We're listening. And then we're selecting what we want to hear.

It is not just politicians.

'Today on Breakfast TV, Declan Curry advised that Andy Bond of ASDA would be there to answer questions.

What I submitted was one of those responses featured, but only the preamble and not the question.

Preamble: Supermarkets are improving a lot environmentally. But most initiatives seem to still be either self-serving (alternative energy reduces fuel bills, which is great, but helps the bottom line mainly), or a response to official pressure (recycling is great to provide and meets targets, but still throws the onus on consumers to do the work and dispose of waste).

Question: What is planned to help consumers with reuse, from ways to make more of existing packaging design, to encouraging new designs and stimulating ideas that can find life beyond the additional energy consumption of recycling or, worse, the bin and landfill?

In fact most of what was covered from the public on this topic was more opinion - 'We love your store!' - than questions.

If you ask for questions, I expect the questions to be asked, not the out-of-context, and often more contentious (or hardly newsworthy or troubling to the guest) editted sections.'

He answered.
Is it just me or did he come off a tad defensive? Of course I had to reply:


Dear Declan,

Your question arrived AFTER the interview with Mr Bond. He was here to
answer questions at 0645 and 0745 this morning.

It may have arrived with you after 0745, but it was sent at - 21 February 2007 07:29:39 GMT, and in immediate response to your on-air request to pose questions to him.

If this is a problem, maybe it would help in future at this final 25% of slot run-down period, to clarify that no further questions will be posed on air?

As I thought you made an interesting point nonetheless,

Thank you. And it is true that I have a concern a lot of CSR coverage is on issues that look and indeed are often green...er, but actually serve the consumer less than the business' PR and bottom line.

I decided to include your email in my brief round up of comments at 0825.

Thank you.

The emphasis here is on the word brief. That slot was 60 seconds long, and I
needed to include around 6-8 remarks, so your comment had to be subbed
down because it was, frankly, much too long. But I think I captured the
essence of it.

I appreciate the need to edit for time, but agenda comes into play.

The first section was not a question, but established context.

Re:use was the question, which as opposed to commentary was what was asked for, and was identified by a question mark.

It is a small, but significant aspect of environmental good practice, barely addressed by anyone. A shame, because along with repair it can be the most personally rewarding and likely to get consumers and the general public on board.

Recycling, via government, local authorities, some very comfy contractors and various quangos and their comms budgets gets massive attention and support. But it is low down the re:hierarchy. And getting people to stand at the sink each night as unpaid sorters is not exactly rewarding. Nor is it that carbon neutral as it does require energy to collect and process. Biodegradability of packaging is also often mooted, but I do wonder what the by-products of biodegrading are, in a more immediate global warming gas sense. Reduction is best, but there's a lot of 'looking at' but not much I can see by way of 'doing'.

My reason for writing was because I was disappointed that the editorial preference was more for a commented negative, though constructive criticism (if valid, and nothing new), as opposed to a posed positive question that could have opened up new and worthwhile ways to improve matters.

I'd be interested in how you view news editors', and the BBC as a public service's responsibilities and duties in the way such issues get portrayed. Stir the pot and add spice? Or try and make it acceptable to all tastes at the table, and in so doing bring them closer together?

There wasn't much point in asking the specific question as the man
himself wasn't there any more. I had said many times when the interviews
would take place.

In light of the discrepancy between what I thought I heard and acted upon, and what you think you said and happened, this aspect is moot until we have access to a time-indexed transcript, so I will for now refrain from addressing it further. If I am wrong I will of course apologise.

The comments at 0825 reflected the balance of opinion that arrived in
our mailbox between the end of the previous business update and the
start of that one.

Repeat. In light of the discrepancy between what I thought I heard and acted upon, and what you think you said and happened, this aspect is moot until we have access to a time-indexed transcript, so I will for now refrain from addressing it further. If I am wrong I will of course apologise.

You may not like it that Asda has satisfied customers, but they're every bit as valid as the supermarket's critics.

I am unsure as to where I expressed any such view, and so do still wonder how what was read out counts as a question, as opposed to what was not. Maybe you would be kind enough to clarify?
[Still waiting]

Round 3...?

STOP PRESS - Just heard back from Breakfast to thank me for my original post.
Time: 21 February 2007 14:09:29 GMT. Bless.

24 Feb - A reply from the BBC:

Thank you for your e-mail regarding the 21 February edition of 'Breakfast'.

I understand that you were unhappy that your extensive question on supermarkets and the environment was not featured in its entirety. I also note that you feel that the questions sent in were edited to make them easier for the ASDA representative, Andy Bond.

However, I can assure you that there is absolutely no intention to edit feedback from 'Breakfast' viewers to make life easier for guests like Andy Bond. The BBC does not seek to denigrate any view, nor to promote any view. It seeks rather to identify all significant views, and to test them rigorously and fairly on behalf of the audience. However, it is not feasible to include every message or question sent in by 'Breakfast' viewers on the programme itself.

Further information on the programme and means of discussing the issues covered is available on the following webpage:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/programmes/breakfast/default.stm

Please be assured that your comments have been registered on our daily log for the attention of the 'Breakfast' production team and BBC Senior Management.

Thank you again for taking the time to contact us.

____________

I am drafting my reply, which will be self-explanatory:

Thank you for your reply. It can be no fun having to catch up with such issues at the weekend.

I understand that you were unhappy...

Mr. Curry also made the point that it was too long, though you have done so more charmingly. However I do not recall suggesting at any point that I was upset that it was not featured in its entirety.

I also note that you feel ...

In fact, I think you will note that the reason for my complaint was the exact reverse. I was dissatisfied that the question, which was what was asked for, did not get posed, and the preamble, which was merely an opinion and entirely deletable, was. Also the question was an opportunity for a positive engagement and response by Mr. Bond. The opinion was negative, and that was what was chosen, which if different from editing the distinction will need to be further explained to me.

However, I can assure you ...

I note your assurance. Were all news media so free of subjective influence or ratings driven agenda.

However, it is not feasible ...

And I fully understand this constraint. Hence the need to ensure what is asked for is what gets broadcast in good faith.

Please be assured ...

I note this assurance, but would like to ask what happens next as I do not feel my complaint has been understood properly, which may explain my view on the adequacy of the reply.

I have had occasion to write before, and so far have noticed the procedure does seem to follow a certain path, and one that leads fairly quickly to a dead end. Which begs the questions as to why it exist at all. I will reply to this, but am sure will get a bounce instructing me to return to the start of the complaint procedure again, which raises questions on the structure and sincerity of the dialogue system.

Thank you again ...

You are welcome. It is good to know that a complaint is valued, especially if constructive and in the spirit of improvement. Because it shows the person who made it cares enough to take the time to offer such feedback. And not all have their time funded to do so.

I therefore look forward to seeing how this may be progressed and the answers I sought before, and the new answers I seek may be delivered.


So. Most questions ignored or points denied. Explanations just plain wrong or inadequate. The state of our publicly-funded media today. Round 3???

Bingo!
- 'We are sorry but our email system will not receive your email unless you use one of our pre-formatted webforms. We realise the inconvenience but hope you will understand that this helps us handle the many emails we receive every day more efficiently and makes best use of your licence fee. '

How does me not being able to reply directly to the person who wrote to me make this... more efficient?


Indy - Ads on BBC websites

ADDENDUM:

11 April - Again on the 'Declan does Big Biz' Commercials show', we had a full piece, with commercial, followed by a fawning slot with ASDA's boss about their changing their strapline. Who are the BBC trying to kid?

It's not just the wind that can blow

I am an ad man at heart. I like to persuade subtly and make people want to act. And I like to see it done fairly, accurately and legally.

When it's not, I think it pushes the cause of cooperative environmental good practice backwards.