posted on 2009-03-16, 14:10authored byStephen Ison, Graham Hughes, Robert Tuckwell
In the early 1990s Cambridgeshire County Council
considered the implementation of a road user charging
scheme for the city of Cambridge, UK. This involved the
trial of a congestion metering scheme, a form of road user
charging. Cambridge presented an ideal opportunity for
the implementation of a road user charging scheme not
least in terms of its congestion problem, the free-standing
nature of the city and the fact that at the time, the local
authority in the form of the council was sympathetic to
the objectives of road user charging. The scheme did not,
however, proceed and many reasons have been put
forward as to why this was the case—issues such as not all
the alternatives having been exhausted, the level of
sophistication of the proposed scheme and the lack of a
similar scheme to consider elsewhere. Fifteen years later,
Cambridgeshire is once again considering the whole issue
of road user charging. As such, the aim of this paper is to
assess how the authority is proceeding this time round:
what type of technology is being considered; how the
politicians are presenting the concept to the local
population and what are they doing differently from the
first time round, in terms of consultation; and most
importantly, what provision for alternative means of
transport will be made and how this relates to the
potential success of any road user charging scheme?
The paper aims to conclude on what lessons can be learnt
in terms of other cities considering the implementation of a road user charging scheme.
History
School
Architecture, Building and Civil Engineering
Citation
ISON, S.G., HUGHES, G. and TUCKWELL, R., 2008. Cambridge's experience of road user charging: lessons learned. Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers, Transport, 161 (3), pp. 135-141