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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Better Streets for Kensington and Chelsea & Anor, R (On the Application Of) v Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea [2023] EWHC 536 (Admin) (14 March 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2023/536.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 536 (Admin) |
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KING'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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THE KING On the application of (1) Better Streets for Kensington and Chelsea (2) Justin Abbott |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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The Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea |
Defendant |
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Mr C. Streeten (instructed by Head of Legal Services) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 8 December 2022 , 13 January 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Lane:
A. CYCLE LANES ON KENSINGTON HIGH STREET
"Option 1. Install temporary cycle lanes in full
This would allow the Council to carry out further monitoring of cycle lanes, but would still not be conclusive while traffic patterns continued to be atypical as a result of the current and any future lockdown restrictions required due to the pandemic. Conditions for cycling would be similar to those during the time that the temporary scheme was in place.
Option 2. Install parts of temporary cycle lanes
This would involve providing segregated cycle lanes in the outer sections of the route, where the road is widest. It would not provide a continuous route in either direction but would assist people to cycle to and from the area of the sections of road where traffic tends to be faster.
Option 3. Do not install temporary cycle lanes but consider an alternative scheme in the longer term
Do not install temporary cycle lanes but develop plans to commission research into transport patterns in the post-Covid world in partnership with local residents and local institutions including academic partners. The research could begin in the summer and lead to a feasibility study in the longer term. A non-exhaustive table containing a high-level summary of some suggestions that have been put to the Council and could be considered further is in Appendix A.
Option 4. Do not install temporary cycle lanes
This would maintain the current levels of traffic capacity along the High Street for general traffic. Conditions for cycling would remain as they are today."
"1.5 In practice, the temporary scheme in Kensington High Street was not implemented until 14 October, when the second wave of the pandemic was just developing. The scheme was abandoned some seven weeks later and was fully removed within nine weeks of being implemented. Plainly and with hindsight, the scheme was not implemented in a timely manner in respect of the waves of the pandemic.
1.6 The decision faced now is whether to introduce a temporary cycle lane in Kensington High Street as we begin to come out of the third lockdown, over the next few months.
1.7 The lesson of the past year has been that all plans (including experimental local transport plans of this type) are subject to major contingencies and may need to be urgently adapted. The case for, and against, implementing an experimental cycle lane in Kensington High Street involves balancing considerations of design, safety, transport congestion as well as the Council's overall aim of encouraging walking and cycling. The case also requires the Council to have regard to the full variety of attitude and opinion from residents, businesses, public agencies, visitors and other stakeholders.
1.8 There has not been a formal consultation on the scheme, neither prior to its original implementation nor since. The attitudes and opinions about the temporary cycle lane are mixed, with very strong views held by some residents and organisations.
1.9 This report presents the evidence collated both during the period when the temporary scheme was in place, and since it was removed. Whilst the evidence does not point to a firm conclusion, it is sufficient to enable an assessment of the options presented in section 3, all of which it has helped to inform. All of the options are feasible and there is sufficient evidence rationally to justify them."
B. THE CLAIMANTS' CHALLENGE
"Ground 1- Failure to consult. The claimants argue that prior to reaching the 17 March 2021 decision, the defendant carried out a consultation which failed to comply with the applicable legal principles and/or failed to carry out a consultation in circumstances in which there was a legal duty to do so;
Ground 3 – Irrationality: This can be divided as follows:-
(a) The defendant framed the impugned decision as being whether to install the cycle lanes, whereas the claimants had been assured that the defendant would reconsider the decision taken in 2020 to remove the cycle lanes;
(b) The defendant did not properly inform itself and/or weigh up relevant considerations;
(c) The OR disclosed no rational basis on which the impugned decision could have been reached, bearing in mind the evidence that had been gathered and the limitations of the data as a result of the removal of the cycle lanes."
C. DECIDING THE CLAIM
Ground 1
Consultation: legal principles
"A consultation exercise which is flawed in one, or even in a number of respects, is not necessarily so procedurally unfair as to be unlawful. With the benefit of hindsight it will almost invariably be possible to suggest ways in which a consultation exercise might have been improved upon. This is most emphatically not the test. It must also be recognised that a decision-maker will usually have a broad discretion as to how a consultation exercise should be carried out."
Ground 1: discussion
Ground 2
Ground 2: discussion
D. DECISION