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Letters to the Editor
 
School parking phase out is well planned

• I feel compelled to address some of the points raised against Camden Council in the article “Jamie’s knives out over school-run clamp down” (February 23).
Stag (Schools Travel Action Group) claims that the council’s decision to phase out school-run parking permits was imposed without proper consultation. This is incorrect.
In 2002 Camden Council held a public inquiry into the school-run issue following residents’ concerns that the volume of traffic and illegal parking during the school run was blocking up the roads and making the streets dangerous for pedestrians and cyclists.
The council subsequently, in a cross-party decision, decided to gradually phase out the school run parking permits by 2008.
The School Travel Plans, developed in co-operation with teachers, parents and the council, have proven to be vital in providing parents with viable solutions to car transport. The travel plans present a series of measures to reduce school-run traffic such as walking groups/buses, car sharing and cycling and have reduced Camden’s school-run traffic by 12 per cent over the last year.
Camden Council has given schools a great deal of support in producing and implementing their plans. Camden Council has also continued to review public transport options. But schools must take responsibility for preparing parents for the phasing out of school-run parking permits. Since 2003 the council has advised schools against issuing permits to new starters, as these would not be available during the entire duration of a child’s stay at their school.
A lack of communication on this issue has caused parents, who now stand to lose their school-run parking permit, additional distress.
The aim of phasing out school-run permits is not to stop all parents from driving their children to school, but to encourage parents to think about healthier and more environmentally friendly alternatives.
Cllr John Thane
Executive Member for Environment
Camden Council

• I was at the very peaceful and calm demonstration against the council’s “school-run” policy on March 1 (Rival Parents Fight over School Run, March 2).
With around 300 parents and young children (the police’s estimate) turning out on a snowy, cold evening, it was in the words of some councillors “the most impressive and biggest demonstration ever seen outside town hall”.
Your headline was highly inaccurate and unbalanced and the way you have cropped your photo means that it does not give a true picture of the event at all.
Two men certainly turned up with banners towards the end, highlighting their concerns about pollution and the environment. There were no fights at all.
Since when do two men make a “rival group” compared to 300 parents?
In fact, the Schools Travel Action Group (Stag), made up of both state and independent sector parents, who organised the event and presented a 1,500 signature petition to the council, specifically aim to “cut the school-run traffic” and are asking for the council’s help to do so.
What the group objects to is the complete removal of permits by the council before workable green transport alternatives such as a network of safe cycle lanes around schools, more pedestrian crossings, improved public transport and ideally school buses with set aside drop-off points are in place to make it possible for parents to ditch their cars and make the journey to school a pleasant and environmentally friendly experience.
I greatly look forward to reading a full report next week in your newspaper, which I hope will be up to your usual high standards of balance and accuracy.
Jackie Orlik
Ingham Road, NW6

• I think Jamie Oliver should think back.
He tried on his TV programme Jamie’s Kitchen, with some success, to motivate young people to work in his restaurant.
One of the biggest problems was getting them out of bed and off to work. If his wife cannot get herself the short distance from the family home to the school in Fitzjohn’s Avenue what example is she showing her children?
Ironically, Jamie travelled most of the time through London on his scooter to avoid the traffic, much of it caused by the multitude of SUVs.
Subsequently though, he further endeared himself by campaigning to get children off junk food and motivate them to improve themselves. But less junk food is only part of the package, exercise is essential too. It would have been good to read that privately his family were keen to see their children get some exercise too, rather than try to use their status to gain publicity for basically a selfish use of valuable road space not to mention the attendant pollution caused.
As for the other “names” living in Primrose Hill and wanting to traverse the borough twice daily, they chose their homes and then their children’s schools. If the conditions imposed by the rest of society are too onerous they still have the freedom to change either home or school.
Camden Council must be backed in its stance to reduce wasteful journeys.
L Freitag
Heath Street
London, NW3

• I happened to be cycling past the demonstration outside the Town Hall about the school run. I went over to talk to one of the rival protesters who held a placard about pollution and children needing exercise.
I was verbally attacked by one of the mothers who accused me of being a “do-gooder.” As a governor of a primary school and a cyclist I am incensed by the selfishness and arrogance of these parents.
Outside my school there is a constant problem of an, albeit small, number of large 4x4 vehicles which are a danger to our smaller children. As a cyclist I need to be extremely vigilant near school gates at arrival and departure times to avoid being hit by cars manoeuvring to park.
There is a constant danger to children while these “do-badders” continue to use their cars for the school run.
Mick Farrant
Oak Village, NW5

• Mrs Jools Oliver says: “Not everybody has the luxury of living close enough to walk to school” (Jamie’s knives out over school-run clampdown, February 23).
I would love to tell her that not everybody has the fortune of sending their children to a private school in Hampstead. My advice to her is “send your kids to a local school within walking distance”.
Name supplied
Phoenix Road, NW1

Send your letters to: The Letters Editor, Camden New Journal, 40 Camden Road, London, NW1 9DR or email to letters@camdennewjournal.co.uk. The deadline for letters is midday Tuesday. The editor regrets that anonymous letters cannot be published, although names and addresses can be withheld. Please include a full name, postal address and telephone number. Letters may be edited for reasons of space.
 
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