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18 August 2020 saw the publishing of the Department for Transport (DfT) sponsored ‘Traffic Regulation Orders and associated data policy: alpha report’. My colleagues Alex Minhinick and Daniel Whittle consider the implications of this report below.
The report covers the outcomes of a user research study into the current legal framework around Traffic Regulation Orders (TROs) and suggests legislative changes to improve the system. This is all in light of the growing feeling that the TRO system is out of date and is not in keeping with a drive towards a data-driven economy.
The report proposes the following changes to bring the TRO system up to date:
The report goes on to assess the impacts of the proposed changes, looking at both financial and non-financial impacts on stakeholders and highways authorities. The report also notes that ‘feedback from participants found that 93% of [highways authorities] users, 85% of data users and 57% of applicants agreed or significantly agreed that the proposed user journey and policy proposals addressed their overall needs.’
Next steps are also considered in the report and include building on the momentum of this report as well as providing guidance on how to achieve incremental improvements to the current system whilst any new legislation is being created.
As part of the report’s focus on how to make the TRO system more aligned to the growing data economy in the UK and the changing way in which the road network is and will be used, it recognises the need for DfT intervention to drive digitisation. Five key options to support this aim are detailed in the ‘Future of Mobility’ annex:
The report recommends that the DfT progresses options A, B and C first, and suggests that this will significantly increase digitisation by 2025 with consequential benefits being delivered for Future of Mobility technologies including connected vehicles.
The DfT since reported that there will be further consultation in 2020 on potential legislative changes arising from this work.
One point which is made clear in the report is the need to overhaul the antiquated paper system of TROs. This is a long-overdue change which will enable crucial developments in the pursuit of a better framework for traffic regulation, achieving a more streamlined system which enables more agile deployment of TROs to both influence, and take the lead from, users’ behaviour. The potential of such a system has become apparent during the COVID-19 pandemic, with significant changes which have been brought into some urban areas such as temporary closure of various parts of London to vehicular traffic.
Creating a truly fit-for-purpose regulatory system will only come about through suitable incentives and rewards for those bodies responsible for putting the measures in place, as well as penalties for those who fail to comply. The report looks at ways to achieve this but it will be up to local authorities and the DfT to implement the right balance of carrot and stick.
The recommendations made are planned to be part of a policy consultation, expected in 2020.
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