Hayes & Harlington Gazette

Were London’s buses cleaned properly?

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A WEST London man who drove a moped along a pavement, causing several pedestrian­s to jump out of the way, has been jailed.

Eduards Dedovs was spotted driving the vehicle dangerousl­y on Ruislip Road East, Ealing on Saturday, May 9.

The33-year-old was seen by police officers mounting the footpath and forcing people to jump out of the way to avoid injury. Dedovs, of Osterley Park Road, Southall was then seen turning into a side road before parking up. On seeing the officers approach, Dedovs attempted to escape by running into a flat but was quickly detained.

A check by the officers found he was disqualifi­ed from driving and held no insurance for the moped. He was arrested for the above offences, as well as dangerous driving.

When interviewe­d by police he admitted to riding on the footpath but said he “didn’t see any pedestrian­s”.

Dedovs was charged with the offences and pleaded guilty to all three on May 11. He was jailed for six months.

A FORMER TfL board member has accused the organisati­on of failing to protect staff, following the deaths of 43 transport workers.

Michael Liebreich called Transport for London “institutio­nally unsafe” and blasted its contracted bus companies for failing to provide PPE. In mid-May, TfL said that 32 of the 43 staff, whose deaths have been linked to the virus, were “bus workers”.

Mr Liebreich criticised the transport body in an open letter to Professor Sir Michael Marmot of University College London, who TfL has hired to carry out an investigat­ion into the deaths.

His letter reads: “During my time on the board, I became increasing­ly concerned that TfL Surface Transport runs an ‘institutio­nally unsafe’ system: contractin­g out services in a way which puts extreme pressure on operators to deliver services on time or lose money, but which places safety a distant second priority.”

The Mayor of London’s office called the accusation­s “entirely untrue” and said safety has been an

“absolute priority”. A spokespers­on said: “TfL have delivered a range of measures… an enhanced anti-viral cleaning regime across the network, applying a protective film to the Perspex screen of bus driver cabs to seal off holes, and preventing passengers sitting next to bus drivers. All frontline staff have also been offered simple face masks.”

Mr Liebreich was on TfL’s board between 2012 and 2018, a time spanning both Boris Johnson’s and Sadiq Khan’s periods in office. He is a Conservati­ve supporter, and it was reported in 2014 that he had ambitions of becoming London Mayor.

His letter to Professor Marmot says: “Should you find that many drivers became infected at work (which I think is almost a given), I would expect you to investigat­e why they were working in such manifestly unsafe conditions for so long.

“For months PHE’s (Public Health England’s) advice was that workers who could not socially distance from potential carriers… should be issued with PPE. Why were bus drivers and other public transport workers not issued PPE by their employers?”

Mr Liebreich then questioned whether TfL had undertaken checks of bus depots “to ensure bus companies were policing social distancing”.

He wrote: “Did they undertake spot checks of toilet facilities to ensure they really were cleaned, and that soap and hand sanitiser were freely available? Did they ensure that enhanced cleaning of vehicles and depots was actually carried out? Did they issue instructio­ns that cabs must be properly cleaned between each driver’s shift?”

Aside from the number of deaths among bus drivers that have been linked to COVID-19, Mr Liebreich said tiredness has been a major factor behind bus crashes.

“In 2019 research undertaken by Loughborou­gh University… showed that 36 per cent of bus drivers had a close call due to fatigue in the previous 12 months, 17 per cent had actually fallen asleep at least once while driving,” he said.

The Mayor’s spokespers­on added: “Last year TfL published its worldfirst driver fatigue report which includes a variety of tough measures to tackle the issue, including rigorous fatigue risk management systems for all new contracts.”

Mr Liebreich now runs a clean energy and transporta­tion consultanc­y, Liebreich Associates, and works for Bloomberg New Energy Finance.

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Eduards Dedovs

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