CROYDON IN CRISIS: After spending two years in a High Court battle to defend his decision to make six Low Traffic Neighbourhoods permanent, today Croydon’s Mayor tried to claim credit for their forced removal.
By STEVEN DOWNES

End of an error: council contractors were at work on Friday to cover over signage in Croydon’s six unlawful LTNs
Croydon Council will not be appealing against Wednesday’s High Court decision to quash six Low Traffic Neighbourhoods in the borough.
Inside Croydon has learned that legal advice received by Croydon Council on Friday night made it abundantly clear that, thanks to Mayor Jason Perry’s big mouth, they would certainly lose the case again.
It leaves another gaping hole in Perry’s latest budget, which is balanced this financial year only because of another £119million bail-out from government.
The cash-strapped council has so far refused to comment on the matter, or explain how it might fund the many thousands of claims for refunds of £160 fines from Penalty Charge Notices arising from Perry’s money-spinning LTNs that have been ruled “unlawful”.
After almost two years of legal arguments over whether the Judicial Review ought ever to have been heard, Mr Justice Pepperall handed down the decision that the council’s legal orders from 2024, which made six Croydon LTNs permanent, should be quashed. Continue reading

CROYDON CHRONICLES: An outstanding producer-director at The Old Vic who performed alongside the likes of Sir Henry Irving and Sir Laurence Olivier, and appeared in some of the most notable films of the 1940s and ’50s, Harcourt Williams’ acting talent was first spotted at Whitgift School.





Polling day in Croydon’s local elections, including its second mayoral vote, is on May 7.


CROYDON IN CRISIS: Council bosses were either over-confident that they would win 
Open Our Roads welcomes today’s landmark High Court judgement in Lawrence v London Borough of Croydon, which has quashed all six Low Traffic Neighbourhood Traffic Orders made permanent in March 2024.
The court concluded that Croydon Council acted for an unlawful purpose, finding that the dominant purpose behind making the schemes permanent was to safeguard revenue raised through enforcement rather than to advance statutory aims such as road safety, access and traffic flow. The Road Traffic Regulation Act 1984 is not a revenue‑raising statute.
On this occasion, closures will affect both ends of the 18.5-mile network. Of the tram network’s 39 stops, 30 of them will be without any service for part of this weekend, March 7-8.




The latest episode of our Croydon Insider podcast takes a deep delve into the news behind the headlines, as the borough’s residents face another above-inflation increase to their Council Tax, just as Mayor Jason Perry awards himself and senior council staff massive pay rises.

Tickets for this festival of songwriting go on sale this Friday, March 6. 