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TfL to remove pedestrian crossing on Purley Way

There was a time, not so long ago, when pedestrians were supposed to be the top priority for the Mayor of London, Boris Johnson.

No longer, it would seem: as well as Croydon having some of the capital’s most dangerous pedestrian crossings, now Transport for London wants to spend public money to remove a pelican crossing from the busy Purley Way.

The crossing, used by anyone who might be going to or from Waddon Ponds, is on one of the busiest stretches of road in the borough, situated just past a major T junction, sited between Waddon Park Avenue and Alton Road. Even youthful, able-bodied and swift of foot pedestrians would take their lives in their hands if they dared to try to cross the road without the use of a crossing.

The TfL reasoning for spending public money to take away a life-saving crossing?

So there we have it… TfL would prefer not to uphold the law and prosecute law-breakers in cars who drive through red lights, rather than provide pedestrians with a place to cross the road conveniently and safely.

TfL's map of the location of the Purley Way crossing they want to remove

Not mentioned in the proposal from TfL is the cost of the works in removing the crossing, nor the presence near to the crossing of two bus stops. Clearly, bus passengers may well need to use the crossing to get to the stop, and their journeys may well be rendered a good deal more dangerous, even deadly, if they have to cross the Purley Way without the benefit of a crossing.

“The proposed removal of the crossing does seem to be a good example of the Mayor’s commitment to ‘traffic smoothing’ conflicting with making London’s roads safer, more accessible and greater used by pedestrians,” a Liberal Democrat spokesman at City Hall told Inside Croydon.

“Some cyclists are waking up to the fact that Boris doesn’t really represent many cyclists – he certainly doesn’t get walking!”

It would be helpful if the three ward councillors for Waddon would get in touch with Inside Croydon (insidecroydon@btinternet.com, in case you’ve forgotten, Clare…) to outline what they are going to do in the interests of their residents.

Waddon councillors include Simon Hoar, the Croydon Council cabinet member for “Community Safety”, so you’d hope he’d have a view.

Perhaps all three could take up the matter with someone at City Hall, such as Britain’s most overpaid local councillor, Steve O’Connell, for whom one of his jobs is on the Greater London Authority Transport Committee.


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