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Last week the Metropolitan Police were on Bourne Hill and The Bourne to carry out an operation designed to dissuade drivers from failing to pay due care and attention to people riding bicycles.  Clare Rogers was with them and reports what happened.

met cycle team on bourne hillGood news for anyone who cycles in Southgate: the Met Cycle Safety Team on The Bourne N14. In the centre is team leader Rob; PCSO Antony is second from right

This week the Metropolitan Police Cycle Safety Team came to Enfield to carry out a ‘close pass operation’ on The Bourne, Southgate. Their mission: to pull over and educate people who drive dangerously around people on bikes.

The team came thanks to lobbying from Better Streets / Enfield Cycling Campaign member Hal Haines and Winchmore Hill Community Support Officer (CPSO) Antony Rivas. As Hal was unable to go on the day, I got to go with PCSO Rivas to see the action.

It was hugely significant day for me personally. For three years I rode my tandem to school with my daughter along The Bourne. On many of those days we were close-passed, often at speed, by inconsiderate drivers. So it was very gratifying to stand on that street and watch the Met team pull over driver after driver and politely educate them. I was there for an hour and in that time they caught six drivers – even the police were surprised at the number.

This is how it works. A plain clothes officer cycles back and forth along the road.

bourne hill cyclist

If a driver passes him too closely – i.e. leaving less than 1.5 metres between car and bike – the cyclist radios a description of the car to the team waiting further up the road. The driver is then pulled over, either by an officer at the side of the road or (if the driver is heading the other way) by a police motorcyclist.

bourne hill motorcycle cop

One of the police officers speaks to the driver, carrying out various checks (e.g. sight test, insurance), before talking them through what the Highway Code says about passing someone safely on a bike.

Below is some of the information the officers show the driver – how to overtake, how to follow and how to turn.

How to overtake, how to follow and how to turn.

highway code rule 163Highway Code Rule 163: Leave as much room as you would a car

highway code rule 126“Only a fool breaks the two-second rule” – stay back!

why is the bike in the middle of my laneAt times you have to ride centrally – e.g. at pinch points in the road, to prevent dangerous overtaking. Some ill-informed drivers abuse cyclists for doing this

do not overtake just before turning leftDrivers have to take special care when turning – a frequent cause of collision with bikes

space for cyclistsAnd finally … the legal underpinning for the close pass operation

I posted the details of this operation on Better Streets for Enfield’s Facebook page and was overwhelmed by the reaction – more than 100 likes in less than 24 hours and a dozen shares. This the most attention one of our posts has received, suggesting that many of us are relieved to see dangerous driving tackled on our roads.

Is this a good use of police time?

Yes. The first close pass operations in the country were carried out by the pioneering West Midlands Police, and resulted in a 20 per cent reduction in cyclists being killed or seriously injured in the first year. Many police forces around the country are now following suite. This action is much needed in Enfield. We have something of a reputation for our Wild West driving. Very few drivers seem to know that they need to give cyclists a 1.5 metre berth, or hang back patiently until it is safe to pass, or that people need to cycle in the middle of the lane in certain conditions. This ignorance is not just dangerous to those who currently cycle  – it’s also a  reason why so few of us ride bikes as transport in Enfield in the first place (only 0.7% of our journeys in 2014). The attitude of a significant minority of drivers makes riding a bike on the road feel far too intimidating.

Changing the street design

the bourne google streetviewThis image from Google Streetview shows how much room there is to add safe space for family cycling

As well as carrying out these operations, the Cycle Safety Team recommends changes to road layouts where necessary for safety. Team leader Rob told me that The Bourne needs need separate space for people cycling – perhaps on a shared-use footway – rather than having to mix with traffic on this busy road.

We wholeheartedly agree. Southgate is outside the scope of the Cycle Enfield funding, but separate funds should be found to make The Bourne and Bourne Hill a safe route for anyone not in a car. Bikes could be accommodated either on widened shared use footways away from the road, or segregated cycle tracks – that would mean even families would feel safe to cycle instead of drive the school run. The carriageway should be narrowed to encourage drivers to slow down, limited to 20mph, and given formal pedestrians crossings rather than traffic islands. Traffic islands create dangerous pinch points – most close passes are here, as drivers try to squeeze through them with or ahead of anyone on a bike.

How you can help

Do you drive in Enfield? If so, thank you for reading this post – now you know how to overtake anyone on a bike safely and courteously! Your good driving will hopefully set an example for others.

Do you cycle in Enfield? Are you aware of trouble spots for close passing? If so, please do two things:

  1. Tweet @metcyclecops with the name of the road – if they get several messages about the same road they will come and do a close pass op when they can. The three cycle safety teams are massively stretched, covering all of London’s 32 boroughs, but if we don’t ask they won’t know where to come.
  2. Take part in London Cycling Campaign’s #StayWiderOfTheRider campaign – you can drop a pin in a map to show where you were close-passed, helping to build a picture of problem locations. You can also get a free #StayWider sticker for your car or bike. Watch their great video below.

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PGC Webmaster posted a reply
17 Oct 2018 23:29


Every police force in the UK is to be offered a free ‘close pass’ virtual reality film and headset after a successful Kickstarter campaign by Cycling UK. The cycling charity has met its fund raising target of £15,000 in eight days and now plans to start distributing the film, which will allow drivers to see how it feels to be ‘close passed’ by a vehicle, by the end of November.

The video above is a 2D version of the film.

Read the full story on the Transport Extra website
David Hughes posted a reply
22 Oct 2018 23:55
Speaking as a fairly recent returner to cycling - 40 years or so ago I brought my rural habit of cycling to London, but had to give up because my bikes were stolen so frequently that no one would insure me - I think that close passing is now the most frightening of all the bad driving habits. Much worse even than the risk of being squashed by lorries turning left at traffic lights. So I'm very grateful for the organisers of the police intervention on Bourne Hill described above, and to Clare for being there and writing it up. Thank you.

However I'd like to change the setting. The Bourne is quite a wide road, and clearly the best road locally for the police to carry out/demonstrate their intention of reducing close-passing and pointing out the dangers. On the other hand drivers often have space to overtake on such a road, but on narrower roads like the A1004 (High Street), and even on the A105 (Green Lanes), the temptation of a driver to pass dangerously close is high. I've had all my nasty experiences on such roads.

The drivers at fault may not have known the minimum clearance because cycling has faded since my 40 years-ago-experience, and worse, current-day drivers might not have cycled personally and therefore may not be aware that cyclists wobble (because they are riding slowly, or hit a stone or hole, or simply because they are new to cycling). Education is needed all the way round, and drivers must learn to share. They are not Kings/Queens of the road; the law gives cyclists the right to be there. And many drivers seem to have developed a sense of entitlement: my need to use the road is paramount. It's an attitude which has to be challenged in discourse or on paper, but not on the roads.

Yesterday Myrna (my wife) and I were approaching the pedestrian crossing on Cannon Hill (A1004) as a line of traffic also approached. The first car stopped for us and the second car ran into the back of it; "You stopped so suddenly." the driver the second car said to driver of the first car. Perhaps, but I think that the driver of second car expected to cause she and me to pause rather than the traffic. If so it was that sense of entitlement at work again.
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