A councillor has claimed the majority of people in his ward now support a 20mph speed limit — but enforcement issues mean any change is unlikely.
Paul Haslam, who represents Old Bilton on Harrogate Borough Council, raised the issue with Zoe Metcalfe, the North Yorkshire Police, Fire and Crime Commissioner.
Speaking at a meeting of Harrogate Borough Council’s overview and scrutiny committee last week, Cllr Haslam asked Ms Metcalfe:
“In my area, Bilton and Woodfield, I would say the majority of residents want the whole area to be 20mph. At what stage will police enforce this?”
Campaigners across the country are calling for a speed limit of 20mph to be normal on residential streets and in town and village centres as part of the 20’s Plenty initiative.
Ms Metcalfe said the police and the council “don’t have the resources to be constantly enforcing a 20mph zone”, adding:
“I don’t necessarily agree with 20’s Plenty because for every one person that says they want 20mph there is one who says they don’t.”
She added she could see 20mph limits working “in certain circumstances, like outside a school,” but not as a general measure.
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Tom Thorp, assistant chief executive at the commissioner’s office, said “police enforcement of 20mph limits is difficult”. He said:
“The types of road that want to go 20mph are very residential urban roads and it’s simply not possible necessarily to do the enforcement on those roads easily.”
Mr Thorp and Ms Metcalfe agreed that although police enforcement was problematic, local authorities could introduce more targeted speed restriction measures, for instance speed humps and chicanes, in specific areas, such as near schools. Mr Thorp said:
“There’s an awful lot that we should be doing around prevention before we get to actual enforcement.”
He added North Yorkshire County Council already did this through the York and North Yorkshire Road Safety Partnership, which is a partnership of agencies working tp reduce road deaths.
More speed cameras?
Cllr Haslam questioned why Bilton and Jennyfields appeared to have different approaches.
“If you go to Jennyfields you will see the whole Jennyfields estate is 20mph and I don’t see any reason why the residents of Bilton and Woodfield can’t have the same scenario.”
Cllr Haslam said “camera enforcement works” in 20mph zones in London, adding “I don’t see why we can’t look at that”.
But Mr Thorp said:
“There’s a significant cost to camera enforcement and if we were looking to do that across the piece I wouldn’t like to hazard a guess as to what that would cost.
“In terms of managing expectations, sometimes putting in 20mph makes it worse.”