The Jewish Chronicle

School heads fume over plans to introduce no-traffic zones

- BY MATHILDE FROT

JEWISH SCHOOL leaders in Hackney have opposed plans to set up cycle and pedestrian zones in the area, warning the proposal would “divert traffic” – and the pollution it brings – to nearby Jewish schools.

Hackney Council is hoping to make it safer to walk and cycle to school by closing roads surroundin­g schools in the borough at peak times.

The local authority has set up 42 “school streets” in the borough and is planning to ban motorised traffic outside Sir Thomas Abney and Holmleigh Schools at drop-off and pickup times.

But nine local Jewish schools have hit out against the plans for Fairholt Road and Dunsmure Road, in a letter published by local outlet Hackney Citizen on Wednesday.

The proposal would “create extra pollution for more than 4,000 children attending the nine schools on Amhurst Park as the traffic will simply be diverted to our children,” they wrote. The school leaders also stressed they had encouraged pupils to adopt other modes of

transporta­tion, and “anyone walking through Amhurst Park at the beginning and end of the school day will see thousands of children walking to school”.

Signatorie­s included leaders at Talmud Torah London, Beis Yaakov Girls School, Yesodey Hatorah School, Bnois Jerusalem Girls School and several

other Jewish schools.

Councillor Mete Coban told Hackney Citizen that he “would expect any traffic displaceme­nt to be minimal” and that he would welcome the opportunit­y to “work with the signatorie­s of this letter to help rebuild a greener Hackney”.

A Hackney Council spokespers­on said the plans for Sir Thomas Abney and Holmleigh schools “would see the roads outside these schools closed for an hour at school opening and school closing times, supporting children to walk and cycle to school.

“These two schools have a history of road-safety concerns arising from a concentrat­ion of vehicles and pedestrian­s outside of the school gates.

“Previous School Streets have shown that these safety issues are not simply moved from one place to another as the concentrat­ion of vehicles and pedestrian­s near the school gates are dispersed rather than displaced.

“Evidence from similar schemes suggest that when the road environmen­t promotes walking and cycling, there can be traffic reductions across the wider area, following an initial settling in period.”

The council added that “almost 90 per cent of children in Hackney walk, cycle or take public transport to school, School Streets are a way to protect them from poor air quality and road danger”.

These schemes ‘promote walking and cycling’

 ?? PHOTOS: TWITTER / STAMFORDHI­LLSTREETS ?? Congestion outside Sir Thomas Abney School in Stamford Hill
PHOTOS: TWITTER / STAMFORDHI­LLSTREETS Congestion outside Sir Thomas Abney School in Stamford Hill
 ??  ?? Nine Jewish schools have hit out against the council’s proposals
Nine Jewish schools have hit out against the council’s proposals

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