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SCHOOL RUN
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It's 8.50am in a prosperous corner of north
London and the weekday routine of the school run is under
attack. A man dressed as a lollipop attendant is charging
at a Range Rover stationary at a zebra crossing,
brandishing his placard at the stony-faced woman driver.
As might be expected, she is none too pleased. "Why
do you need such a big car to take your child to
school," he demands, as she races to wind up the
window. Seconds later, the top-of- the-range,
four-wheel-drive is surrounded by a gang of demonstrators
who attempt to hand her a fake parking ticket admonishing
her for her poor choice of vehicle.
"Look at that monster. It's a leather-lined Merc
with one child perched in the back. It's probably never
gone off-road in its life," says Laura Mackenzie,
one of the protesters. The "monster" is
followed by a snaking queue of 4x4s, whose owners are
clearly irked at the disruption as they drive to deposit
their children at the five nearby schools in Hampstead,
including the private girl's school opposite the protest.
"You'd drive one too if you had three
children," says one well-dressed mother, with
another one chipping in, "Mine isn't as bad as the
really big 4x4s."
Welcome to the Alliance Against Urban 4x4s protest.
Campaigners in teachers' robes hand out "bad school
reports" to the agitated mums, targeting parents
using four-wheel drives for delivering children to
schools. Their action is part of a wider campaign against
the "Chelsea monster", named after the area in
London, that has, they say, become the scourge of city
life. They accuse 4x4 owners of causing excessive
pollution, clogging roads and posing a danger to
pedestrians and cyclists in urban areas. Drivers in
Birmingham and Nottingham were also confronted by
campaigners.
Suzy Edwards, one of the alliance's founding members,
says this was the first of many actions against 4x4
owners in a campaign to make them liable for a higher
rate of congestion charge and road tax, as well as a ban
on mainstream advertising. The alliance's activists, made
up of the Green Party, Friends of the Earth and Transport
2000, have raised concerns after figures revealed that a
record number of off-road vehicles were sold in 2004.
Sales grew by 12.8% to a total more than twice the number
sold 10 years ago. Fewer than one in 20 of the 4x4s sold
are used off-road.
Ms Edwards accuses some owners of using their vehicles
like giant, environmentally damaging prams. "How
much off-road action have these cars had? They have seen
about as much action as a pram. They are an unhealthy
danger to the streets," she says. The 4x4
controversy has been raging in the US, where research has
shown that someone struck by a sports utility vehicle
(SUV) is more than twice as likely to die as someone hit
by a saloon car travelling at the same speed. The New
York Times reports that one person a week accidentally
backs over and kills one of their own children because of
the poor design of some of these vehicles.
In London, the Mayor, Ken Livingstone, stopped short of
doubling the £5 congestion charge for off-road vehicle
owners, despite describing them as "complete
idiots". Activists have campaigned against 4x4s in
Paris, and pressure is mounting for a ban in some parts
of the US. In 2003, California's state treasurer, Phil
Angeledis, sponsored a bill to outlaw SUVs. In Britain,
4x4s have been deemed "unsuitable for city and town
use" by the Royal Society for the Prevention of
Accidents (Rospa), which says that vehicles such as
hatchbacks and people carriers have been found to
outperform bigger four-wheel drives in crash tests.
Kevin Clinton, Rospa's head of road safety, says,
"They are not suitable for ... the school run.
Hatchbacks and people carriers were found to protect
occupants in accidents as well as causing less damage to
pedestrians and cyclists." Research by Churchill
Insurance also showed that SUVs were 25% more likely to
be involved in accidents than an average family car. But
for many in Hampstead, the message fell on deaf ears. A
smartly dressed father wound down the window of his
silver Mitsubishi Shogun and shouted insults at
protesters. "What about buses? They're not great for
congestion either," he shouts, adding, "You're
the ones blocking the roads, not us. Fuck off,
greenies." (Source: The Independent)
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