A COUNCILLOR who called for the temporary Old Shoreham Road cycle lane to go has offered to paint out the lines herself.
Work is expected to start on removing the lane early next month although Brighton and Hove City Council said that this would depend on having people available to remove signs and carry out repairs.
Conservative councillor Dawn Barnett, who was the first member of the council to speak out about the lane, said that she was frustrated by the delay in restoring the road.
The Hangleton and Knoll councillor said that she wanted the wands marking the lane edge to be removed straight away.
Cllr Barnett said: “I’m sorry it’s not being removed quicker than that after it went in overnight. I’ve offered to go along there with a tin of black paint to cover up the white lines.
“I understand highways have got to remove the high signs and burn off the white lines but I don’t want it dragging on.
“The council could go along there and get the posts out. It shows willing and lets people know it is happening.”
The council said that there was no fixed date other than early September, adding: “We are working towards removing the temporary stretches of the Old Shoreham Road cycle lanes as quickly as possible.
“This involves a considerable amount of planning to make sure we fulfil legal requirements in terms of removing the road markings and wands, reinstating the carriageway and repairing it where necessary, removing or changing the signage and adjusting traffic signals in a safe and co-ordinated manner.
“It is also dependent on our highways contractors, who tend to only have limited availability at this time of year.”
The temporary lane between The Drive and Hangleton Road traffic lights will definitely go after Labour and Conservative councillors voted for its removal at a meeting on Tuesday.
It was one of a series of “active travel” schemes introduced across Brighton and Hove during the first national coronavirus lockdown at the behest of the Conservative government.
The emergency active travel schemes were introduced when the government was urging people not to use public transport.
The Old Shoreham Road cycle lane was created in May last year, in place of a lane of other traffic on each side of the road. It joined the existing cycle lane between The Drive and Dyke Road.
At the time, Labour was the biggest party on the council.
On Tuesday, councillor Gary Wilkinson, who speaks for Labour on transport, said that the government had pushed forward active travel in “challenging times” when public engagement was not possible.
The council had to work “within weeks”, Cllr Wilkinson said, and he quoted a transport minister as saying: “We have no interest in requiring councils to keep schemes which are proven not to work.”
The council received more than £3 million from the government in the first two tranches of “emergency active travel funding”.
A report before councillors on Tuesday said that almost £280,000 of funding was immediately at risk because of the vote to remove the cycle lane.
The council could face the same fate as neighbouring West Sussex County Council which lost funding opportunities after it took out cycle lanes.
Green councillor Amy Heley said that the decision to remove the cycle lane was “shameful”.
She said: “I’m scared for the future. This is the tiniest thing we could have done, a step in the right direction, but they just don’t care. It’s very disappointing.”
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