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  • Young People and the Olympics

    • Reference: 2005/0349-1
    • Question by: Nicky Gavron
    • Meeting date: 08 September 2005
    How are children and young people going to be involved in the planning and delivery of the 2012 Olympics?
  • Benefits to Children

    • Reference: 2005/0351-1
    • Question by: Nicky Gavron
    • Meeting date: 08 September 2005
    What benefits will the Olympics bring for London's children and young people?
  • Junction dangers in Southwark (Supplementary) [4]

    • Question by: Nicky Gavron
    • Meeting date: 14 January 2004
    I wanted to raise the fact that two-thirds of all pedestrian accident deaths occur at junctions in London, and 60% of our most serious injuries. This is something I have got a lot of personal experience of, because when I chaired the engineers in Haringey, I noticed that all the accident hotspots were at junctions, and I looked carefully and decided that we needed to have all red phases, and we introduced one at Spouters Corner, which dramatically cut deaths. This is something that I think TfL really can do something about, because they control most of these junctions and...
  • Orbirail

    • Reference: 2002/0075-1
    • Question by: Victor Anderson
    • Meeting date: 16 October 2002
    Is the Chair of TfL still committed to Orbirail? .
  • Borough Spending Plans

    • Reference: 2002/0083-1
    • Question by: Nicky Gavron
    • Meeting date: 16 October 2002
    To what extent are decisions on the amount of money to be spent on large schemes coordinated with decisions made on Borough spending plans? .
  • Bus routes

    • Reference: 2002/0093-1
    • Question by: Nicky Gavron
    • Meeting date: 16 October 2002
    What progress is being made in boosting East-West, and North South Bus routes around the outside of London - is TfL investigating introducing more buses along the North/South Circular, particularly in the run-up to congestion charging. If not, why not? .
  • Orbirail (Supplementary) [2]

    • Question by: Victor Anderson
    • Meeting date: 16 October 2002
    That is an encouraging answer. During the first six months of the GLA, when you had your policy commissions, I went to an interesting meeting about what's become the draft London Plan, where Professor Peter Hall and Nicky Gavron spoke about Orbirail and the idea that this would be a key part of your Spatial Development Strategy, that you would have an orbital rail route joining up inner-city areas, and then you would have interchanges between that route and the radial routes coming out from Central London. The phrase that was used was `the city of interchange" because London was...
  • Orbirail (Supplementary) [3]

    • Question by: Victor Anderson
    • Meeting date: 16 October 2002
    It's proceeding but it doesn't seem to have the prominence in the draft London Plan that other transport schemes have. Orbirail doesn't appear on the London diagram in the draft London Plan; there's a list of major transport schemes with their timing and it doesn't appear on that; in the Options Appraisal document for the Plan, it's not listed amongst the major projects. It's not up there with Crossrail and Thameslink 2000; it is excluded from those even though it looked like the most important of the schemes that the Plan was going to move on.
  • Orbirail (Supplementary) [4]

    • Question by: Victor Anderson
    • Meeting date: 16 October 2002
    How do you think Orbirail compares for cost effectiveness with the other transport infrastructure schemes that you've got? Crossrail is estimated to cost between £6-£10 billion, whereas Orbirail, if you already have the East London Line extension, is only supposed to cost something like 3% of that amount. In cost effectiveness terms, Orbirail ought to be the top of your list.
  • Orbirail (Supplementary) [5]

    • Question by: Victor Anderson
    • Meeting date: 16 October 2002
    Doesn't that make it more important that you put it at the top of your list because, surely, your criteria should be different to the Treasury's? Orbirail is going to benefit people in London, particularly in inner-city areas, whereas Crossrail is largely about people getting from Heathrow Airport to the City. There are far less stops for people in London on the Crossrail plans than there will be on the Orbirail plans. The idea of measuring the benefits of a transport scheme through productivity, is biased against poorer people who are going to earn lower incomes. The Treasury's figures are...