A one-day conference, designed to help create a harmonious road environment in the City of London, will now take place on 4 July at the Guildhall.
Author Archives: James Parker
Road designers should pay more attention to motorcyclists: LTP
A leading independent transport consultancy is calling for a greater focus on motorcycling when roads are being planned and designed. (Transport Network)
Hackney to host media training course
Working in partnership with the Road Safety GB Academy, Hackney Council is to host a media training course for road safety professionals in September 2017.
RoSPA joins LRSC in achieving 100-year milestone
The London Road Safety Council (LRSC) was represented at a recent garden party, hosted at Buckingham Palace, to mark 100 years since the formation of the Royal Society for Prevention of Accidents (RoSPA).
Bexley’s SCPs remind drivers that ‘Stop Means Stop’
Bexley’s school crossing patrols (SCPs) took to the Broadway in Bexleyheath on 25 May to promote their ‘Stop Means Stop’ campaign.
TfL to host ‘celebration of cycling’
Image: Breast Cancer Care. To mark the ‘Women’s Tour’ arriving in London for the first time on 11 June, TfL is hosting a day of activities to celebrate and promote women’s cycling.
The future of road safety – what do the manifestos say?
On 8 June, the United Kingdom will head to the polls once more, electing a new Government to lead the country.
Vehicle restrictions at Bank junction come into effect
As of today (22 May), vehicle access to the City of London’s Bank junction is now limited to buses and cyclists, Monday to Friday (7am to 7pm), for a period of up to 18 months.
Final call for London Road Safety Award nominations
With a week until the deadline, the London Road Safety Council (LRSC) has issued a final call for nominations for its annual road safety award.
Urban authorities urged to make school routes safer for walking
Living Streets is calling on urban authorities to prioritise making school walking routes safer, after publishing new figures which show that 30% of parents living in the UK’s biggest cities believe their city is ‘too unsafe’ for children to walk to school.









