Transport secretary says government’s strategy for active travel could cut GP appointments by millions.
The new transportation secretary said that the Labour government will invest “unprecedented levels of funding” in cycling and walking as a critical part of plans to improve health and inequality.
A national network of safe cycle routes could cut GP appointments “by hundreds of thousands, if not millions a year” by helping people incorporate more physical activity into their lives, according to Louise Haigh, who also sits on the government’s health mission delivery board.
She added that access to safe cycle routes was “essential” to tackling the country’s carbon footprint.
“We’re in a climate crisis. We’re in a public health crisis; getting people walking and cycling and moving more are essential to solving both of those in the immediate term and the long term,” she said. “There’s lots of evidence to show that will reduce the number of GP appointments by hundreds of thousands, if not millions, a year.”
“We want to make sure that we invest at unprecedented levels,”
Transport is the largest single contributor to the UK’s carbon emissions, and while cycling wasn’t specifically in the Labour manifesto, bar a reference to “active travel” – a catchall term for walking, cycling and wheeling (as wheelchair and mobility aid users do) – Haigh says it will be “utterly essential to developing our national integrated transport strategy”. Almost three-quarters of trips in England are less than five miles.
This strategy will include long-term funding settlements, which Haigh says will save money and improve the consistency of transport networks, particularly walking and cycling routes, including the National Cycle Network, which is run by the charity Sustrans. Historically, cycle routes, unlike roads and rail, have had little to no multi-year funding settlements, making strategic planning and delivery of cycle networks all but impossible, and leaving substantial gaps in the quality and coverage of routes. A bidding system involving tens of different funding pots (up to 45 different funds for active travel) has historically distributed cycling money unevenly across the country and “pitted councils against each other”.
“We want to make sure that we invest at unprecedented levels,” Haigh told the Guardian. “We just want to make sure that the funding is delivered where it’s needed … rather than where they’ve got the best bid writers, and where they’ve been good at hoovering up resources.”
She said: “Cycle lanes and active travel work isn’t properly joined up,” adding that it was an “anomaly” that the National Cycle Network was run by a charity while the government runs roads and rail.
The last government introduced multi-year funding for cycling during the pandemic, only to cut it by more than half. These cuts, a Labour analysis estimated last year, would cost more than £2bn in the long term, through their impact on health and the wider economy. Cycling and walking are considered to have very high returns for taxpayers’ money, at £5.62 for each £1 spent – double the returns of roads. The decision resulted in a legal challenge from campaigners, which was ultimately rejected.
Labour is due to announce the contents of an internal review of transport infrastructure projects. Asked about the £16bn of trunk road projects, which have been called “low value” by campaigners, Haigh said: “We’re looking at all capital projects, and where that money should be best spent. In a world where there’s not much money, we want to make sure it’s spent … [to] get the best bang for our buck.”
Haigh, who is the MP for Sheffield Heeley, calls transport “a liberator” – one that helps other government departments achieve their aims, including education and health. “It has knock-on effects everywhere else: it gets people healthier, it reduces the burden on the NHS because people are living healthier lives for longer,” she said.
“I am here to make sure that education can deliver those educational opportunities and make sure that people from all backgrounds can achieve no matter what postcode they’re brought up in. [Transport is] … essential for delivering growth and net zero and safer streets, safety on public transport networks, safety for women cycling down dark alleyways: they can’t do any of it without transport.”
Cycling and walking are cost-effective means of travelling short distances and an important way for people to get regular exercise. Research shows most people would like to cycle more: however, a lack of safe routes and a fear of sharing the roads with motor traffic puts cycling out of reach for most people, particularly women. Men in England make three times as many cycling trips as women.
Haigh admits she has never cycled in London but would like to try out the city’s growing network of cycle lanes – although government ministers are given a car with a driver, partly for security reasons (famously David Cameron cycled in London while the driver shadowed him). She said: “I’ve not cycled in London. I don’t know why, because it’s super flat. I do want to get into it more, not least because I don’t have time to get to the gym.
So it’s a really good alternative … I’m afraid now I have my ministerial car, I don’t know whether Dennis [her driver] would let me, he might have to drive alongside me or something ridiculous.”
Haigh also said the government would develop a new road safety strategy. Transport in Britain is devolved, and England’s previous road safety strategy lapsed in 2019, leaving it the only country in the G7 without one. In 2023 an estimated 29,643 people were killed or seriously injured on Britain’s roads. While three-quarters of traffic fatalities are men, fear of traffic danger affects women’s transport choices disproportionately. Haigh said the government would use “behavioural science and analysis” to understand and tackle some of those barriers.
Improving and building cycle routes, along with measures to help people use those routes from childhood onwards, “can increase usage [of cycles] by hundreds and hundreds of per cents”, she added. In one section of the Trans Pennine Trail in South Yorkshire, there was a 700% increase in usage after it was resurfaced.
Haigh added: “Rural poverty is a real blight, and it’s not something that’s properly considered. Car ownership now is just so expensive, insurance as a young driver is completely out of reach for a lot of people. So having that access to safe cycle routes is a basic element, is a basic tenet of social justice”.
Xavier Brice, the chief executive of Sustrans, which runs the National Cycle Network, said the charity was “ready to work in partnership with the government, mayors and local councils” to continue upgrading the network.
“Safe, accessible and consistent walking, wheeling and cycling routes will free people up to choose how they travel rather than feeling locked into expensive car use that many can’t afford to access jobs, education or everyday journeys such as nipping to the shops,” he said.
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