Public Notice for TMO 2037I've been reading the
Public Notice for TMO 2037. This isn't the
formal TMO, but Public Notices can help shed light on TMOs. In this case it does.
Curiosities of TMO 2037The first curiosity of TMO 2037 is that there is no paragraph 2. The next is the apparently incomplete paragraph 4:
4. No person shall cause any motor vehicle to proceed in a northbound direction on Rivercourt Road past a point at its junction with the A4, Great West Road and;
This ends with that hanging "and;". It makes no sense because it is followed by paragraph 5, which begins as a new sentence:
5. The controls specified in article 4 do not apply in respect of a vehicle being in any length of the restricted streets –
(a) with a valid permit;
(b) being a bus, local bus, taxi and pedal cycle;...
After this comes paragraph 6 which, along with the Schedule, shortens the existing one-way south-to-north restriction on Rivercourt Road from
between Great West Road and King Street
to
between Great West Road and a point and a point 8.30 meters south of the southern building wall of No. 17 Rivercourt Road
The Public NoticeThe Public Notice puts these differently:
2. The general effect of the above-mentioned Order will be to prohibit as an experiment any motor vehicle to proceed in a northbound direction on Rivercourt Road past a point at its junction with the A4, Great West Road and;-.
3. to revoke the one-way northbound traffic flow restriction on Rivercourt Road and to introduce as an experiment a northbound one way restriction on Rivercourt Road between its junction with the A4, Great West Road and a point 8.30 meters south of the southern building wall of No. 17 Rivercourt Road.
4. The controls specified in article 2 would not apply in respect of a vehicle being in any length of the restricted streets -
a. with a valid permit;
b. being a bus, local bus, taxi and pedal cycle;
This makes a lot more sense. First, the paragraphs are numbered sequentially. Secondly, it is clear that paragraph 2 (the TMO's paragraph 4) is intended not as a complete sentence but as half of a single sentence spread across paragraphs 2 and 3 (the latter being given effect by the TMO's paragraph 6 and the Schedule).
It's as though one person (a highway engineer, perhaps?) drafted the Public Notice as a statement of what the TMO would do and then a second person botched the job of translating that into formal legal language.
I surmise that the policy maker knew that the Council's Rivercourt Road started to the north of the combined cycleway/footway on Great West Road and specified that:
- Rivercourt Road between the cycleway/footway and King Street was to become two-way with unrestricted access from King Street;
- access from Great West Road was to be restricted to buses, taxis, cycles and permit holders.
Where No Motor Vehicles was Intended to ApplyThe Public Notice makes it clear that the restriction on the classes of vehicle which can enter Rivercourt Road from Great West Road was intended to apply just at
a point at its junction with the A4, Great West Road
and not (as I had surmised) along the length of the one-way south-to-north restriction.
H&F now acknowledge that the junction between A4, Great West Road and Rivercourt Road lies at the northern boundary of the combined cycleway/footway to the north of the eastbound carriageway.
But suppose that it was a highway engineer who worked out how the TMO would achieve the policy maker's objectives. Highway engineers inevitably approach the design of highways from a motorist's point of view. Such a person might well consider that the junction lay at the edge-of-carriageway road markings. Then paragraph 2 of the Public Notice's "point at its junction with the A4, Great West Road" would have lain on the edge-of-carriageway road markings.
Road Markings on Slip RoadNow consider the road markings which H&F painted on the exit slip road. They are diagram 1040.3 (ignore the stated diagram number 1040.4 on
the plan). This is
TSRGD 2016 Schedule 11 Part 4 Item 23 and means:
Reduction in the number of lanes, or area not available to traffic, on the main carriageway or slip road of a motorway or all-purpose dual carriageway road
It is the correct road marking for a slip road from a dual-carriageway and prohibits all traffic from crossing the solid white line at its boundary. It is precisely what a highway engineer would specify to prohibit vehicles which have started to turn off Great West Road from returning to the carriageway. Unless the entire manoeuvre can be completed without any part of the vehicle's crossing one of the solid white lines, an offence is committed.
A mistaken belief that TfL's highway coincided with the carriageway could also explain H&F's failure to give TfL notice under
s.121B of Road Traffic Regulation Act 1984 of a proposed change to one of H&F's highways which could affect TfL's highway. It would certainly explain why H&F felt able to change the road markings on that part of the slip road which lies within TfL's highway.
There's still the risk that vehicles turning onto Rivercourt Road will crash into vehicles which have come south from King Street and are doing a 3-point turn just north of the Give Way lines. This would have an impact on the carriageway of the A4, as would vehicles which come south and ignore the No Entry signs (see
this PCN video).
The road markings on the exit slip road therefore lend support to the inference that the intended "point at its junction with the A4, Great West Road" lay on the edge-of-carriageway road markings on Great West Road.
South-to-North RestrictionFurther support for this is provided by the definition of the south-to-north restriction. This begins at the "junction between Great West Road and Rivercourt Road". It ends at "a point 8.30 meters south of the southern building wall of No. 17 Rivercourt Road". H&F have stated that this latter point lies on the northern boundary of the combined cycleway/footway. If the "junction between Great West Road and Rivercourt Road" lies at the edge-of-carriageway markings, the south-to-north restriction applies to the exit slip road where it crosses the grass verge and combined cycleway/footway, a distance of some 6m.
Reality IntrudesUnfortunately for H&F, TfL's highway, Great West Road, includes the verge and the combined cycleway/footway. At some point, H&F accepted reality. In their responses to my FoI request, they acknowledge that the junction lies at the northern edge of the cycleway/footway.
Notwithstanding this, they maintain that the south-to-north restriction is of length greater than zero. As I have set out in
Reply #1, the fact that Great West Road makes an acute angle with Rivercourt Road means that the end of the restriction lies to the south of its start. As it's defined as a south-to-north restriction, this isn't meaningful, so the restriction is void.
ImplicationsTo return to the Public Notice, its placing the south-to-north restriction as paragraph 3 means that when paragraph 4 refers to "restricted streets", it made sense to its authors because paragraph 3 has just applied a restriction to what they considered to be part of Rivercourt Road. With that restriction in place, paragraph 4 relieves buses, taxis and permit holders, which have been in a "restricted street" (i.e. the south-to-north restriction) from the prohibition of paragraph 2.
In the real world, the "junction with Great West Road" lies to the north of the end of the south-to-north restriction. This means that not only is there no south-to-north restriction but that the "restricted street" does not exist. It follows that paragraph 4 of the Public Notice (paragraph 5 of the TMO) does not relieve buses, taxis and permit holders from the prohibition of paragraph 2 of the Public Notice (paragraph 4 of the TMO).
ConclusionsI'm not convinced that a TMO can impose a restriction on crossing a line or passing a point, especially when that happens on another traffic authority's highway. Assuming that it can, TMO 2037 has these effects:
- the entire length of Rivercourt Road between the northern boundary of the cycleway/footway on Great West Road and King Street is open to all vehicles in both directions;
- all motor vehicles (with no exceptions) are prohibited from crossing the northern boundary of the cycleway/footway northbound; cyclists may do so;
- the No Entry signs and Give Way road markings have been placed 4m too far north; they should be at the northern edge of the combined cycleway/footway.
Traffic authorities are required to place signage to show the effect of TMOs which they impose. Needless to say, the signage H&F have placed does not show the effects of the TMO. For instance, the "flying motor cycle sign" lies 1-2m north of the (single) point where the prohibition on northbound traffic applies. This is where the No Entry signs and the Give Way lines should lie (but there would be even more crashes if they did).
Given the road markings on the exit slip road, motorists on the A4 need to be advised that they are not to start turning left onto Rivercourt Road. Once they have started to turn left, they commit an offence if they turn back onto the A4. They incur a PCN if they continue. H&F's variable message signs do not provide the necessary information and are beyond the 6-month time limit on such "temporary" signs. As has been stated in so many cases,
If the signs do not in fact provide adequate information no offence is committed; see James v Cavey [1967] 2 QB 676
Unfortunately, that doesn't stop H&F from sending out PCNs.
P.S.I now think I know why H&F moved the Give Way lines north: it was because the northern edge of the northern Give Way line should lie between the No Entry signs. I don't know why they didn't instead move the No Entry signs south so they were on the back of what are now a pair of No Motor Vehicle signs.