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Meeting with Chris Boardman, Active Travel Commissioner, Active Travel England

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Chris Boardman, Active Travel Commissioner, Active Travel England

 

Key Themes

  1. Government Spending Review & Opportunity
    • First zero-based spending review in years.
    • Chance to reconfigure funding priorities and ensure active travel is valued across departments (health, housing, transport, welfare, etc.).
  2. Active Travel England’s Role & Progress
    • Arms-length body improving local authorities’ capability to deliver schemes.
    • Reduced delivery times for infrastructure projects by half in 2 years.
    • Introduced capability ratings for councils (helping weaker ones improve).
    • Strong backing from the Department for Transport.
  3. Cross-Departmental Impact
    • Active travel touches multiple agendas: decarbonisation, public health, welfare reform, housing delivery.
    • Push for a national inactivity strategy involving multiple agencies (Sport England, DCMS, NHS, etc.).
    • Chief Medical Officer supportive; roundtables being organised across government.
  4. Devolution & Local Authorities
    • Strong role for mayors and combined authorities (e.g., Andy Burnham in Manchester).
    • Active travel framed as a cost-saving solution (e.g., reducing collision costs, NHS burden from inactivity).
    • Councils being trained and upskilled; some resistance but progress seen.
  5. Policing & Safety

Police should focus on those causing the most harm, but intimidation (including from cyclists) must be addressed.

 

  1. Social Inclusion
    • Need to design with disabled users and vulnerable groups in mind.
    • Consultation with RNIB, Transport for All, and disability reps on ATE’s board.
    • Recognising barriers like inaccessible kerbs, missing dropped curbs, and poor countryside access.
  2. Cycle Training & Pay Issues
    • Desire to make bike riding a universal life skill (like swimming).
    • Problem: low pay and retention of instructors.
    • Responsibility currently lies with local authorities, but issue flagged as serious.
  3. Data, Evidence & Narrative
    • Government wants economic growth framing – need to present active travel as delivering returns:
      • More productivity
      • Reduced sick days
      • Lower GP visits
    • Communication should focus on personal/family outcomes (e.g., kids’ independence, safer streets, lower car insurance), not just health/decarbonisation.
  4. Future Vision
    • Push for national inactivity strategy to unify efforts.
    • Mentoring between advanced and new combined authorities.
    • Broader culture change so active travel becomes “how we do streets” by default.

 

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