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Drivers urged to share journeys
CAR-sharing initiatives are to be encouraged in Maidstone to help reduce the volume of traffic on the roads. Maidstone has one of the highest
rates of single occupancy car use in Kent, with 52% of journeys made by the driver alone. Kent County Council already manages “kentjourneyshare”, a freeweb-based service which links drivers, passengers and taxi users who make similar journeys and en- courages them to share their trips. It also manages the “New Ways
2 Work” scheme to encourage sus- tainable travel choices. Even so, figures obtained from
the 2011 census revealed that 50,131 people – 44.3% of Maid- stone’s population – drove a car to work, 8% (9,023) walked and 4.6% (5,257) used the train. A further 31% were not in work and 4.2% (4,705 people) worked from home. Only 0.8% cycled to work, 0.5%
rode a motorcycle or scooter and 2.6% travelled by bus or coach. Maidstone has very high levels
of car ownership and usage com- pared with other parts of the coun- try, says a report to the council.
Some 84% of households in the borough have at least one car, com- pared with 80% across Kent and 74% across England. The heavy reliance on a small number of key junctions – espe- cially in the town centre – means Maidstone is vulnerable when ac- cidents occur on the motorway or events such as Operation Stack come into the equation. Maidstone Council has two pool
cars and two pool bikes for use by its staff, but reports that usage is very low compared with similar schemes elsewhere in the UK. A number of KCC employees
use Zipcar – a short-term car hire service – to get to and from work and two cars are based at County Hall, with another located in Church Street, which are available to members of the public who sign up to the Zipcar scheme. The 2011 census shows that 15%
of trips to work in Maidstone are 2km or less – walkable for most people – yet only 8% of people opt towalk. “This offers great potential for increasing walking, if the environ- ment is right,” it concludes.
Birthday celebrations at WI
MEMBERS of Bearsted and Thurnham WI tucked into a cake provided by eight members who celebrated their 80th birthday in themovement’s centenary year. The cake wasmade and decorated by member PamCarter. Pictured with the cake are the birthday girls (fromleft) Sue Winchcomb, Daphne Leech, Joy Barton, Ann France, Gladys Ayton, June Churchyard and Thelma Horne. Alma Gardner, who also celebrated her 80th birthday this year,was unable to be at the meeting.
Future of prison is unclear
THEMinistry of Justice says it is un- able to confirm whether Maidstone Prison will close under plans to shut some of the country’s oldest jails. The prison rebuilding pro- gramme announced by Chancellor George Osborne and Justice Secre- tary MichaelGove will “closeVicto- rian relics of the past on prime sites in city centres”, replacing them with nine detention centres.
Maidstone meets this criteria, but
a Department of Justice spokesman said while nine new sites had been identified, only Reading had been announced for closure. The area’s women’s prison, East
Sutton Park, is already set to close. He added: “I can’t comment on
the situation in Maidstone because what we close will depend on the needs of the prison estate.”
Maidstone East January 2016 11
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