Olympic Parking Zone starts 16 July

The Olympic Parking Zone comes into effect on 16 July.

Parking restrictions will operate in Waltham Forest in all streets south of Lea Bridge Road.

Period covered: from 16 July until 9 September 2012

Days of operation: Monday – Sunday

Hours: 8am – 1pm and 3pm – 9pm

This includes both existing controlled parking zones (CPZs) and streets with no existing parking controls

All parking arrangements return to normal after 9 September 2012.

Existing controlled parking zones (CPZs):

If you live in an existing CPZ (south of Lea Bridge Road) your current parking permit will allow you to park on-street in your zone during the Games. You will not be able to park in the temporary event zones.

New temporary event zones:

All vehicles which use on-street parking will need a 2012 Games parking permit to park during the Games. Parking permits in this area will be free of charge and ‘virtual’. This means that you will not be issued with a paper parking permit.

VISITOR PERMITS:

Every household will be able to register for free visitor permits during the Games. The allocation per household includes:

  • one regular visitor who will be able to visit at any time

  • four half-day visitor permits per week

  • eight half-day visitor permits per week between 13-26 August

The permit week runs from Monday – Sunday, with your new allocation available every Monday.

Unused permits cannot be carried over into the following week

A half-day permit can be used to cover either the morning restrictions (8am-1pm) or the afternoon restrictions (3pm-9pm)

Visitors will also be able to park without restriction outside the hours of control

IMPORTANT – the usual CPZ visitor permits will not be valid during the Games

REGISTERING FOR PERMITS:

Vehicle owners – will need to check that your vehicle has been automatically registered through the website at:

www.2012gamesparkingpermits.com

or by calling:

0300 111 2012

VISITOR PARKING PERMITS

Vehicle owners can apply for permits at the same time as they check their registration

Non vehicle owners need to register their address and set up an account before applying for permits. This can be done on-line or by phone as detailed above.

HOW TO USE VISITOR PERMITS

Login to your account at the web address or call the telephone number – you will need to quote:

  • your permit number given when you registered

  • your visitor’s vehicle registration number

The permit will be activated instantly

Copies of the Parking During the Games booklet can be found in the publications section of london2012.com

It is also available in other languages and formats by quoting ref LOC2012/TRA2180 –

Email: info@e4nquiries.london2012.com

Phone: 0845 267 2012

Night-time road closures along the A12 East Cross Route (Hackney – M11 Link Road) for resurfacing works

TfL News Release

Transport for London (TfL) has appointed Amey to carry out carriageway resurfacing works along A12 ‘Hackney to M11 link Road’, between Green Man Interchange and the Lea Interchange.

The works will bring benefits to all road users by renewing the existing road surface to help eliminate cracks and potholes. Once completed, these works will also reduce the need for future large scale maintenance of this carriageway.

The works are scheduled to start on Sunday 20 May 2012 through to Sunday 26 May 2012 or when works are completed.

Work will start at 21:30 through to 05:00 for the duration of the work, working only Sunday to Thursday’s only.

As with all works on the Transport for London Road Network, we must balance possible disruption to residents with disruption to traffic.

Working at night provides us with the best chance to complete these works as quickly as possible with as little disruption as possible.

The resurfacing works will be completed in four phases:

Phase one, starting on Sunday 20 May 2012

  • A full closure of the A12 southbound (on-slip road at the A12 Green Man interchange only) for carriageway resurfacing works. There will also be lane one and two closure of the A12 southbound carriageway between the Green Man interchange to Lea interchange for carriageway resurfacing works.

Phase two, starting on Monday 21 May and to Tuesday 22 May 2012

  • Lane one and two closure of the A12 southbound carriageway between the west side of the Green Man interchange to the Lea interchange for carriageway resurfacing works.

Phase three, starting on Wednesday 23 May

  • Lane two and three closure of the A12 southbound carriageway between the east side of the Green Man interchange underpass to Lea interchange for carriageway resurfacing works. The A12 southbound underpass will be closed, and will be carried out in conjunction with a scheduled TfL Structures Team closure, and require traffic to use the off-slip road to the Green Man roundabout, the south-eastern part of the Green Man Roundabout, and then the on-slip back onto the main A12.

Phase four, starting on Thursday 24 May and Sunday 27 May 2012

  • Lane two and three closure of the A12 southbound carriageway, between the west side of the Green Man interchange to Lea interchange for carriageway resurfacing works.

There are no residential premises with accesses on the section of the A12. Any noisy operations will be completed before Midnight to help minimise any inconvenience caused to local residents. However, operational requirements may require some noisy operations to continue beyond this time.

There are no bus routes that use this section of the A12. Coach services will not be affected as the main A12 remains open with a single lane.

Please note:If required diversion route information signs will be provided and placed along the traffic diversion routes during the works. When the A12 westbound on-slip is closed, traffic wishing to access the southbound A12 will be diverted to the A406 / A12 Redbridge Roundabout, and return on the southbound carriageway A12 thorough to the Green Man underpass.

TfL’s London Streets Traffic Control Centre (LSTCC) monitor London’s roads 24 hours a day, 7 days a week with the responsibility of keeping London moving. The operators in the LSTCC will monitor this location during the works and if necessary remotely change the timing of our traffic signals to help ease congestion. TfL has worked closely with the London Borough of Waltham Forest of in order to reduce the impact of these works on road users, local people and businesses as far as possible.

I apologise in advance for any inconvenience that these essential works may cause. Should you require further information or an update during the delivery of these works, please contact our Streets Customer Services department on 0845 305 1234 or via our website at www.tfl.gov.uk/contact.

Brian Paddick expresses support for the Gospel Oak – Barking Line

Brian Paddick, the Liberal Democrat candidate for Mayor of London gave his whole hearted support to efforts to secure much needed investment by members of the Barking – Gospel Oak Line User Group (BGOLUG) when he travelled on the line recently.

 Along with Lib Dem Chair of the London Assembly Transport Committee, Caroline Pidgeon AM, he joined morning commuters from Barking on Friday 23rd  March to see how a recently added relief train had eased the overcrowding for part of the morning rush.

At Woodgrange Park, while waiting for the relief train Brian spoke with a member of the station staff and saw that the line through the station was already electrified, BGOLUG members explaining that the line was already electrified at both ends and in the middle, at South Tottenham, but needed around £30m to “fill in the gaps” and electrify it throughout.

Freedom of Information requests and answers to questions by Caroline Pidgeon show that following a break down in negotiations with the then Secretary of State, Labour’s Lord Adonis, soon after taking office, Mayor Boris Johnson has personally done nothing further to advance the case for electrification and has twice declined to travel on the line see the problems for himself.

 Transport for London (TfL) have included the line’s electrification with 4-coach trains in recommendations to the Government for the next 5-year rail investment period which is to be announced by Secretary of State Justine Greening in around three months time.

The new London Gateway Port at Thameshaven will soon start to come on stream and is expected to generate 30 trains a day, most of which will use the Barking – Gospel Oak Line.

On Board the 07:59 Woodgrange Park to Hampstead Heath relief train, Brian and Caroline noted how the train, running 9 minutes behind the one they had left Barking on was soon standing room only.

 Richard Pout, Secretary of the User Group explained

“Because London Overground has only 8 of these 2-coach diesel units, there are no more trains available to further boost peak services. Evening peak trains are now every bit as overcrowded as in the morning.”

At Blackhorse Road, BGOLUG’s Assistant Secretary, Glenn Wallis explained how the busy interchange with the Underground’s Victoria Line was about to get a ’make over’ from TfL. However, original proposals which included new shelters had now been scaled back to consist of new seating, new signs and a repaint. The existing, open shelters will remain and bicycle ramps, paid for by Waltham Forest Council are being removed from the station footbridge.

“This is the busiest intermediate station on the line,” said Glenn Wallis. “The many passengers waiting here deserve better, larger waiting shelters.”

At Harringay Green Lanes Caroline Pidgeon commented, “While there have been clear improvements in the service since I last travelled the line with User Group members in 2009 further improvements are still needed.  Above all we must keep up the pressure to ensure that the line is finally electrified.   This would deliver better services for passengers as well as making a useful contribution to reducing air pollution.” 

Brian Paddick said,

“The Barking to Gospel Oak Line User Group has done a great job in campaigning for improvements in train services. This is an increasingly popular line and that must mean improvements to it have to continue.”

Church Lane Car Park – UNDERUSED?

Church Lane Car Park - only two vacant disabled=

The report into Parking Provision across the Borough indicated that the Church Lane Car Park was underused, and recommended that measures be taken to improve occupancy. It seemed strange, at the time, that this report should also include the provision of a multi-use games area (MUGA). Surely not a practical way of improving use by drivers!

FOCUS Team campaigner Mahmood Faiz believes that ideally a town centre car park should not necessarily be full every day, as it is a facility to encourage motorists to patronise the smaller local shops that do not have off-street parking of their own.

The photograph was taken on a normal weekday morning, and shows just two disabled bays vacant – hardly underused!

Call for Safety Improvements

Gainsborough Road footbridge in the background taken from the road bridge

At a recent visit by Caroline Pidgeon, Leader of the Liberal Democrat Group on the London Assembly, the FOCUS Team took up concerns expressed following the tragic recent event on the Gainsborough Road footbridge, urging her to press Transport for London (TfL) for urgent action to make the bridge safer.

FOCUS also proposed that the height of the sides of the road bridge should be increased.

It is understood that Liberal Democrat councillors in Redbridge have also raised similar concerns about other bridges spanning the A12 as it runs through their area.

To date, TfL, responsible for the A12, has agreed to look at what measures may be possible on the bridges.

FOCUS will keep you in touch with developments.

Bus and Tube Fares Hike in January!

Caroline Pidgeon and Simon Hughes MP, with local campaigners Mahmood Faiz and Suleman Ahmed

From January, prices are set to go up sharply, well above inflation. In fact, on current inflation forecasts our fares will be going up by over a third more than inflation. This is a very unwelcome New Year present waiting for us!

Yet, at the same time, Mayor Johnson has failed to tackle fraud and waste – the sort of waste that led Transport for London to spend £39 million on two lift shafts at Shepherds Bush Station, which have now been abandoned. Two expensive holes in the ground which will now be left unused permanently.

One-Hour Bus Ticket Campaign Relaunched

Caroline Pidgeon, Leader of the Liberal Democrats on the London Assembly said:

“What the Mayor should be doing is to take real action to stop Londoners being ripped off in Oyster overcharging and give bus users a fair deal by introducing a one-hour bus ticket. That way people could swap between buses for short journeys without being hit for an extra charge. It’s the sensible way to encourage people to use buses without having to pay the earth.”

Your can back our campaign for a fair one-hour bus ticket by signing the petition at:

http://ourcampaign.org.uk/1hourbusticket

Central Line footbridges

The Liberal Democrats have been campaigning for years about the state of the polycarbonate covers on these three footbridges.

Following the latest request for timescale for the remedial works to be completed we have just learnt that Transport for London (TfL) are now intending to include these structures in their preliminary works programme to commence in 2013.

As usual they include the note that this programme is subject to change and to funding being confirmed.

So much for the Council’s trumpeting that Waltham Forest is an Olympic Host Borough – the deplorable state of these bridges is in no way a welcoming advert for our area.

The Liberal Democrat FOCUS Team has contacted Liberal Democrat London Assembly member Caroline Pidgeon, Chair of the Transport Committee, asking her to intercede with TfL and impress on them that this work needs to be completed before the 2012 Olympic Games to avoid presenting a very poor impression of our borough.

The FOCUS Team will keep you informed about any developments.

Parking nightmare for Waltham Forest residents

Liberal Democrat Leyton Ward Councillor Bob Sullivan reports that parking in Leyton has reached a point where residents’ are continually unable to park in their road or in some cases near their road.

Meanwhile the Labour Council continues to agree plans for multi flats that have little or no parking facilities and seem reluctant to consult with residents about a residents’ parking scheme.

Supposedly the Council has a policy of encouraging family housing, but the Council seems obsessed in agreeing to developers building more and more flats – what hypocrisy!

Residents of Leyton and Waltham Forest do not want more flats – they need family housing with adequate parking included in developments.

It is about time the Council listened to them!

The Plaza/Church Lane – revised plans

The above link shows the revised proposals

Following concerns raised by Leytonstone FOCUS Team member John Howard and London Buses the Council has revised their proposals.

THE PLAZA – The road layout has reverted the existing design. It was agreed that the proposals did not allow sufficient space, and access to the public car park and the LT vehicle entrance has been reinstated.

CHURCH LANE – Church Lane now divides into two spurs. One terminates at the emergency barrier while the other leads directly into the car park.