NEWS RELEASE
I issued the following press release on 19.08.2005
Cycling Provision
Lynne Jones, MP for Birmingham Selly Oak, has called for Birmingham
to give a higher priority to cycling. In letters to Birmingham City Council, Lynne queried
the progress that Birmingham has made in developing the sport in the City and contrasted
it with the promotion of the sport in neighbouring local authorities such as Dudley, Wolverhampton
and Lichfield. Lynne also called on the City Council to mainstream facilities on the
roads for cyclists when carrying out routine road maintenance and programmed improvements.
Lynne said One of the aspects of the sport of cycling that
greatly impresses me is the inter-generational nature of sporting events, involving
children from as young as five or six to veterans in their sixties. No other sport offers
such an opportunity, and of course, no other sport offers the potential to develop an
environmentally-friendly and health-giving form of transport. I am very pleased that there
is to be a Tour of Britain Criterium event in Birmingham on 3 September, and I hope that
this event will be used as an opportunity for promoting cycling amongst young people.
E N D S
Note to Editors: Please also see letter to Brian
Stocks, Birmingham City Council Head of Sport, below, which has also been copied to
relevant Cabinet members.
Brian Stocks,
Head of Sport and International Events,
Department of Leisure and Culture
PO Box 2122
Alpha Tower
Suffolk Street Queensway
Birmingham B1 1TZ
10th August 2005
Our Ref. BL2570/001
Dear Mr Stocks,
Policy for Sport in Birmingham
As you will see from the enclosed letter of 15th June 1998, I
have previously expressed my disappointment at the low priority being given by the city to
cycling as a sport (and also, as a healthy/non-polluting means of transport).
Mr Ellis letter mentions the weakness of the Governing
Body and club structure in facilitating the development of the sport and expresses the
view that the city would be keen to see the sport develop both locally and nationally.
The purpose of this letter, therefore, is to ask what, if any
progress has been made in developing the sport of cycling in Birmingham. From my own
experience, there are strong developments within neighbouring authority areas (Dudley, Wolverhampton
and Lichfield, for example), and I attend many local cycling events throughout the year in
these areas in which many young people participate. It is disappointing that no such
events take place in Birmingham, since the demise of Salford Park. Even Wheels Park seems
to be rarely used.
One of the aspects of the sport of cycling that greatly
impresses me is the inter-generational nature of sporting events, involving children from
as young as five or six to veterans in their sixties. No other sport offers such an
opportunity, and of course, no other sport offers the potential to develop an
environmentally-friendly and health-giving form of transport.
I look forward to hearing of any plans you may have for
promoting cycling in Birmingham.
I am very pleased that there is to be a Tour of Britain
Criterium event in Birmingham on the 3rd of September, and I hope that this event will be
used as an opportunity for promoting cycling amongst young people. I am copying this
letter to Councillor John Alden and Councillor Len Gregory, the Cabinet Members for,
respectively, Leisure, Sport & Culture and Transportation & Street Services.
I note, from a recent edition of Forward, that Councillor Gregory approved over one
million pounds of funding to encourage the Citys cyclists and pedestrians to
get out on the Citys pathways and improve their health, and I would be
interested to receive further details of these schemes and how they are being promoted.
Yours sincerely,
LYNNE JONES MP
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