UK reform fulfills guarantees to cancel LTN in its council area because there is no | UK reform

After 10 local authorities said they didn’t have any scenes, it seems to be a record-breaking move toward the UK’s commitment to canceling all low-abor communities in the council area it controls.

British reform chairman Zia Yusuf said last week that the existing LTN would be "a massive reversal" in 10 regions across England, and the party won control of parliament in local elections on May 1.

"We think these programs are the same as mass immigration and net zero people," Yusuf told the Telegraph, adding: "If you live in the Reform Commission, you can expect a higher LTN proposal, as well as any suggestions for a massive reversal of these existing LTNs."

The Guardian has linked to the reforms now - Derbyshire, Doncaster, Durham, Kent, Lancashire, Lincolnshire, Northamptonshire, Nottinghamshire, Staffordshire and Northwestamptonshire - they all say they have no such plans.

LTN is a traffic intervention that uses physical obstacles like column cloths and seeders or digital identification cameras to filter smaller residential roads to prevent cars from using them as routes.

Although the broader idea of ​​using so-called modal filters to make residential roads safer for walking and cycling has been intermittently used for decades, the brand often refers to LTNS, which is often the introduction of plans from 2020 in 2020, when the Conservative government encouraged the council to install them.

Some of these LTNs were quickly put into use, causing complaints about displacement of traffic to border roads and some congestion. However, research on LTNs, including one commissioned by Rishi Sunak's LTN sensory government, often found them to work well and be popular.

Asked about the lack of LTN in the areas where they operate, a reform spokesperson noted that mapping data showed that the proportion of roads within the Council area was not open to flow of people. However, this will also calculate long-established non-LTN roads without passing traffic such as Cul-De-Sacs and Housing Estates. It is not yet known whether the reform plan will open it through the route.

The reform also promises to fire Council staff for diversity issues or work related to clean efforts, although it is unclear how many employees this will actually involve. Some councils, such as Lincolnshire, say they do not have diverse staff.

A Liberal Democratic source said: “Reforms are totally unreasonable for how to host a council. From members who do not occupy non-existent plans, it is obvious that they do not understand the needs of the community.

"Now they have some strength and they need to learn how to search Google first. The Liberal Democrats will step on the fire to stand up for our community."