Calls for car-free roads and higher parking prices in Glasgow to cut traffic levels
The Glasgow Centre for Population Health says on-street parking spaces should be reduced and parking prices increased.
Last updated 11th Feb 2022
A new report is calling for a radical approach to reducing traffic levels in Glasgow, including making more roads car-free.
The Glasgow Centre for Population Health says on-street parking spaces should be reduced and parking prices increased.
It also says a proposed reduction of the speed limit to 20mph should be brought in as soon as possible and enforced by police.
The recommendations, first reported in The Herald, are part of a submission to the city council's active travel consultation.
The submission says: "Much more could be done by reducing parking capacity, particularly on-road parking, increasing pricing for parking and via road space reallocation approaches, such as the Avenues programme and the recently announced proposal to remove cars from a large part of Glasgow city centre.
"A far more radical approach than is suggested here will be needed to support achieving net-zero emissions by 2030.
"The proposal to reduce the speed limit on the majority of roads in Glasgow to 20mph should be brought in rapidly.
"Enforcement will be important and the support of the police will be vital."
It also says the pace of change in redesigning road spaces in Glasgow has been "extremely slow", adding: "We should also be looking to permanently close other streets to motorised traffic as has happened with the closure of Kelvin Way."
A spokesman for Glasgow City Council told the newspaper: "The active travel strategy is part of a wide-ranging effort to create a sustainable transport system for Glasgow that supports the economy, tackles poverty, creates thriving neighbourhoods and is central to the fight against climate change.
"The strategy complements the overall Glasgow Transport Strategy, which sets out 144 basic policy goals but also includes the crucial target of reducing car kilometres travelled in Glasgow by 30% by 2030.
"An overall aim of all this work is to rebalance our transport system so that travel is easier, more affordable and fairer for the near 50% of Glasgow households without access to a private car."
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