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Transport Secretary Louise Haigh gives green light to rollout of more controversial 20mph speed zones

Labour will support the rollout of more controversial 20mph speed zones and low-traffic neighbourhoods, the Transport Secretary has said.

In comments set to irk drivers, Louise Haigh said she would allow local areas to decide whether to install what critics dub ‘anti-motorist’ measures.

She said she wanted to ‘end the culture wars’ over transport policy, and hoped ‘unprecedented’ levels of financial backing for active travel would be announced in the Budget.

Low-traffic neighbourhoods (LTNs), which include pop-up cycle lanes, wider pavements and closing streets to cars, have been hailed as a success by many councils.

But they have divided communities – with critics saying they are often imposed with little consultation and push traffic elsewhere, worsening tailbacks and increasing pollution.

Louise Haigh (pictured) said she would allow local areas to decide whether to install what critics dub ‘anti-motorist’ measures.

Low-traffic neighbourhoods (LTNs), which include pop-up cycle lanes, wider pavements and closing streets to cars, have been hailed as a success by many councils (file image)

Low-traffic neighbourhoods (LTNs), which include pop-up cycle lanes, wider pavements and closing streets to cars, have been hailed as a success by many councils (file image) 

In some places, their introduction has sparked violence – with vigilantes dismantling them.

In Labour-run Wales, ministers last year imposed a blanket 20mph limit on ‘restricted roads’ – which are 30mph by default in England – affecting 7,700 miles.

The Tories had pledged to end the ‘war on motorists’ – with plans to stop ‘over-zealous’ councils from unfairly hitting drivers with a growing array of fines.

They also said last autumn that they would change Government guidance so town halls would have to ‘properly listen’ to local opposition to LTNs.

But Ms Haigh told Bloomberg that traffic speed limits would now be ‘entirely up for local areas to decide’.

‘It was completely wrong for the previous government to say that they would dictate that from Whitehall,’ she said.

‘There’s no way me, sitting in my office in the DfT, can say, ‘This road in Chester should be a 20 mile per hour road or not’. It’s completely ridiculous.’

She said if local authorities want to adopt 20mph speed limits then ‘that’s got my support’.

A woman holds a sign during a protest against 20mph speed limits in Cardiff, Wales on September 23

A woman holds a sign during a protest against 20mph speed limits in Cardiff, Wales on September 23

But shadow transport secretary Helen Whately said Labour seemed unable to take a ‘common sense approach to transport’.

She said: ‘There’s a time and a place for 20mph speed limits. But Labour don’t seem to get that not everywhere is a town centre.

‘Walking and cycling simply aren’t feasible for millions of journeys people take every day, and punishing drivers won’t change that. Labour’s blanket 20mph speed limit in Wales has been a disaster. People hate it and it’s often just ignored.

‘Labour seem unable to take a common sense approach to transport. Unions are good and drivers are bad seems to be their mantra.’

It comes after a poll this week found seven in ten (72 per cent) of Welsh people oppose the default 20mph speed limit.

The YouGov survey found only a quarter support the policy, and four in ten drivers admitted to exceeding the limit ‘most’ or ‘all the time’.

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