I live in the UK and my town has not got transport that allows mobility for all. No bike lanes (and if they exist they’re just painted on the road), no bus lanes (buses get stuck in the same rush hour traffic and everyone else which doesn’t incentivise people to take them) and these buses are also unreliable and infrequent. What makes it worse is that my local council is right leaning. How do I hold my local council accountable to implementing even the cheapest solutions to traffic and transportation? How can I lead to public transport change in my community?

  • nbailey@lemmy.ca
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    9 months ago

    Honestly, just go to every council meeting and every chance you get tell them what you want. That’s how all the parking lots and stroads got there, from people stomping their feet and making a scene at council. Get organized, get like minded people involved, and apply pressure on your local politicians.

    • rynzcycle@kbin.social
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      9 months ago

      Exactly, it sounds like your town is big enough to have/deserve decent transit, but small enough that a small vocal group could have a big impact.

      Get involved, show up, campaign for/against politicians that support/oppose improvements. If you can find a friendly counselor (don’t discount anyone, you never know who might already quietly support a special interest like this) to meet with you, get their help to make a list of practical improvements that could be enacted now/quickly, focus your activity around these (for now). Work to mobilize other bus takers/cyclists/young people/older pensioners who are more reliant on transport. Contact local press, write letters to the editor, befriend a local reporter. Consider planning a small demonstration, but keep the tone very friendly, you are trying to convice and even befriend people who maybe didn’t care or know about the issue. Frame the debate in an inclusive way (i.e. rush hour traffic is terrible, wouldn’t bike lanes and bus lanes improve things for everyone, even car users?)

      You don’t have to do all of the above, just what you can to move the needle. Local politics can actually be a lot more rewarding than national, because you have a chance of seeing a real impact.

  • JoBo@feddit.uk
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    9 months ago

    Do you have a local paper which might be interested in launching a campaign? There’s plenty of good material for a journo there. People who don’t want a car but need one to get to work. Buses which take an hour to go 5 miles. Cyclists endangered by traffic. People with restricted mobility being stuck in their homes. Older people who can’t actually use their free bus passes.

    If you have any kind of creative talent, or friends who do, you could make some vids about specific local problems and stick them online. Not because you expect to get a big audience but because you can promote the link in local area groups and send them to the paper.

    More effort than turning up to council meetings and collaring candidates when they’re campaigning for elections. But likely more effective if the issue is not already on the local agenda.

  • Narrrz@kbin.social
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    9 months ago

    step 1: give them money.
    step 2: make them think you’ll give them more money. this may involve repeating step 1 several times.
    step 3: let them know that if you don’t get what you want, the money stops.

    then it’s just a matter of whether the money you were giving them is significant enough to make them care.