| PRESS RELEASE: City Needs More Room-Room, Less Vroom-Vroom |
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| Written by Administrator | |
| Friday, 16 September 2005 | |
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It's cars, not buses, that are choking Brum, says FoE
The myth that buses are the source of Birmingham's traffic congestion problem will be dramatically debunked this Saturday when Birmingham Friends of the Earth stage a 'sit-down demonstration' in the streets of Digbeth. With nothing more elaborate than a few chairs and some cardboard steering wheels, fifty volunteers will sit for a striking group photograph conveying By spacing themselves out in the road to represent, first fifty single-occupancy private cars, then a single-decker bus with fifty passengers, the fifty sitters will graphically illustrate the advantage of public over private transport in an inner-city setting. Birmingham FoE have called the photo-shoot to draw attention to the issues surrounding local transport and the environment in the run-up to European Car-Free Day, Thursday 22nd September.[2] Birmingham Friends of the Earth Transport Campaigner, Martin Stride said: "We need to put our brains in gear if we are to effectively manage the road transport system. There are 27 million cars on the UK's road network Commenting on the City Council's decision not to formally participate in Car-Free Day this year, Mr Stride added: "Car-Free Day raises awareness of the downsides of our culture of car dependency: worsening traffic congestion, air and noise pollution, global Editor's Notes [1] The number 67 bus lanes on Tyburn Road (A38) were originally suspended in the summer of 2004 to accommodate the expected increase in traffic [2] European Car-Free Day (also known as 'In Town Without My Car' Day) falls every year on 22nd September. Since 1995, the organisers of Car Free Day [3] In 2002-3, 35 per cent of households in metropolitan city areas did not have access to a car. Source: Department for Transport/National Statistics [4] Source: Environmental Transport Association. |
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| Last Updated ( Sunday, 07 October 2007 ) |
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