Tweets on 2010-10-13

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Interesting traffic light casework

A few weeks ago, a primary school-aged FOCUS reader got in touch with me to complain that a pedestrian crossing on a very busy main road took ages to let him cross the road. Indeed so long, that he had got a stopwatch to time it and said he had been waiting over 10 minutes to cross.

Clearly not right, so I passed on the details to the traffic signals team at the Council and asked them to look into it.

The junction in question – which used to be called Kamikaze Island ((roundabouts are called “islands” oop ‘ere in Nottingham)) until there were so many accidents they eventually, shortly before I came to the city, gave in to a Lib Dem campaign and replaced the roundabout with a pretty complicated traffic light scheme.

The traffic lights are controlled by a system called SCOOT ((Split Cycle Offset Optimisation Technique)) and part of that means there are a lot of traffic cameras in the area to help people help the computer control traffic remotely from Traffic Control Centre (TCC), currently located in Lawrence House in the city centre. So the staff there looked at the system, tried to make some changes, and asked my constituent for feedback about whether it had solved the problem. Many thanks, by the way, to the officer in question for writing an answer that clearly explained all this in a way someone of his age could easily understand. I’m probably not managing that in this blog post!

Unfortunately, the problem was not fixed by the changes made remotely, so we agreed on a site visit. Me, the signals engineer and the young constituent would all meet up for a cup of tea at 8am, then we would walk to school together and see the problem in action.

When we did, it was fairly clear what was going on.

For most of the junction, it’s possible to have green man phases when the traffic is stopped. Because the junction is so busy, it’s not possible to have a phase when all the traffic is stopped, so there are two exit roads out of the junction where the traffic only stops if pedestrians press a button. To make sure the traffic only stops when necessary, the junction waits for the button to be pressed, and before stopping the traffic, detects whether the pedestrian is still waiting, using visual sensors near the button. If the pedestrian moves away from the road – or manages to cross in a gap in the traffic before the green man comes – the crossing automatically cancels the request for the green man.

The signals engineer demonstrated this to all of us – me, my initial correspondent and his brother and family – by pressing the button, and making all of us stand away from the edge of the road. The “Wait” light came on when he pressed the button, but when he moved out of the range of the sensor, it just went off again, without calling the green man phase.

When we asked the young man to show us how he used the crossing, it was clear that this was what was going on. He’d been taught to press the button and then stand well clear of the road edge. By standing away, the crossing stopped detecting him and cancelled his request.

This is not an unreasonable thing for him to be doing. Traffic does come past the roadway very fast, and it’s very safety conscious to step back from the danger zone. And if the crossing is not detecting this one person, there are probably many others similarly affected.

So the engineer took the decision to disable the sensors. Now if you press the button, you get a green man every time, and the crossing does not take into account whether it can see someone standing there or not.

Since the sensor equipment is expensive, it will be moved and redeployed somewhere else where it can be more effective – and where hopefully it can be better tuned to detect people.

For me, a bit of a nerd on issues like this, one of the more exciting bits of the morning was when the engineer reprogrammed the junction. He did this by taking a big yellow keyboard out of his bag, unlocking the grey system box on the roadside, and plugging the keyboard into the computer there in the box. I’ve never seen inside one of those boxes and was keen to peek. The thing I remember most was the unshielded transformer in the corner of the box stepping mains voltage down to the low voltage needed to power the environmentally friendly LED lights and the computer equipment. Never open or hit one of these boxes with your car or you could get electrocuted!

(This post – or at least the idea you can blog about junctions – partly inspired by Helen Duffett’s post The Slash!)

(Also sorry for the slightly stuffy “constituent” and “traffic signals engineer” – because of the Power of the Internets and for privacy reasons, I try and avoid naming people who are not public figures)

The cost of last winter’s cold snap

Last year, Nottingham had a sudden cold snap which left the roads and pavements frozen and icy for a number of days. It was at the same time as the rest of the country, but there was a particular problem for quite a narrow area of the East Mids that left Nottingham, Derby and Mansfield particularly badly off.

As part of learning from the process and trying to perform better next year, in March, Nottingham City Council’s Overview and Scrutiny committee had a meeting to talk to both the staff responsible for winter resilience and staff at our local hospital, the QMC, about what happened.

I meant to blog about it at the time, because the meeting was fascinating.

I have just unearthed my notes, so I will blog about it now – with the proviso that I’m just relying on notes and my own sketchy memory, so apols if I get anything wrong.

So the senior management in charge of gritting came and told us what they had done, and what the council’s winter maintenance plan is. Basically, when the weather is as bad as it was for this brief window of time, the Council’s main focus is keeping the principle routes open. These are mainly the arterial roads into the city centre that are served by Nottingham City Transport. There were periods when the weather was so bad that they were trying to grit these routes multiple times per day, including taking staff off other work – I think I remember hearing that in the days when the bin lorries couldn’t get around, refuse collectors were redeployed to help with keeping main routes open.

A lot of anger comes from residents that they never see gritters on residential streets and that pavements are not cleared. The Council never aims to do this: the costs of just doing the main roads are so much that extending the service to residential streets as well are prohibitive. It would take millions of pounds more to have more gritters, more staff, another salt depot and so on. And you would need to have this even in the years when it ended up not needed.

There were also a lot more requests for grit bins to be installed, which again the Council is probably not going to do. I always have to declare an interest at this point as one of the few places where there is a grit bin is… right outside my house. It might look I’m getting special treatment, but I’m pretty sure it was there before I lived here. And our road is one of the steepest in Nottingham, and difficult to keep passable.

It used to be the case that grit bins were delivered in September and removed in April – this year they have stopped moving them and using the money they save that way to put out a few more bins. But they can’t manage to put a bin everywhere people asked for one.

As the cold receded, the Council started to recover. When the weather was at its worse, they entirely focussed on the principle routes. As it got better, they were able to extend their effort more to some of the larger residential streets, and the principle shopping areas, including Bulwell and Sherwood district centres. I certainly remember the day the bin service restarted – the only way they could safely get a bin lorry up my street was by sending a small flat-bed up first and have workers shovelling grit out into the tyre paths before the bin lorry came.

The next part of the meeting was a presentation from a senior consultant at the Emergency Department at the Queen’s Medical Centre who was there to explain just how the weather had affected them. This was fascinating, and it’s here that I took most notes, so I can be a bit more definitive.

In the period when the weather was at its worst, there were 900 patients with broken bones. This led to 500 major surgeries to try and put right – a total of 900 hours of surgery.

On January 13th, 589 people came through the Emergency Department.

On that day, they did an x-ray every minute for twelve hours.

That day alone, there were 130 breaks that needed 90 operations to put right.

This has had a huge knock on to follow-up clinics and fracture clinics for months would be very busy as they coped with the fall-out.

The effort entirely displaced elective surgery for days, and so waiting times went up. But that was probably OK as many of the elective patients could not get to the hospital through the weather.

The cost to the hospital of treating these patients was £960,000, and they estimated the cost to other employers through sick pay would be around £3.3m.

Nottingham City Council was well aware of the problem: a large number of staff suffered falls themselves and four councillors ended up with broken bones.

Surprisingly, very few of the injured were children – the hospital expects lots of children to fall of sledges. The explanation, apparently, was that although the pavements were treacherous, the playing fields were barely covered in snow. My notes say “crappy weather for sledging.” They also say “don’t drink and sledge” – and I can’t remember what that’s about.

My contribution to the meeting was threefold. Firstly, shortly after the cold snap, I went to my brother’s stag do in Brighton, and noticed every street had grit dumped on the pavement in a pile. Could this be a solution to the grit bin problem? Not to put out more grit bins, but in times of crisis, to just dump a bit of grit where it was needed? The Council weren’t terribly impressed at this idea, but did say that maybe dropping off builder’s cloth sacks full might be a compromise they would consider.

Secondly, for years the Council has joined up with the water boards to offer discounted waterbutts. Could we maybe do something similar for Snow Shovels? Actual snow shovels are easier to use then garden spades for clearing paths, and if the Council helps make sure there is a pool of equipment out in the community, it should be easier for us to all help each other in the worst weather. This idea did not go down well at all. If you want a snow shovel, buy it yourself.

Thirdly, could we put out some really straightforward advice on whether you can be sued for clearing pavements? Apparently not – the legal advice we got back on the was really equivocal. Probably not, was the answer. The gritting team were very keen that as many people as possible cleared their own pavements and helped out clear the back streets and residential roads. But the legal team could not give a clear answer that people could do so safely from a legal perspective. This is just nuts. What kind of country do we live in where people live in fear of being sued from clearing pavements?! They are still working on this.

NB I would put a link to the meeting minutes – but Committee Online is not working right now so I will have to add it later.

Tweets on 2010-10-12

  • Cherry picker at front of Council House. Must be nearly time to start putting up Christmas decorations! #
  • Tory councillor just back from safari hol. Bit of good natured ribbing about shooting things and coming back with tusks. #
  • Moving council business around so Education chief cllr can get on train to lobby education minister re BSF. #
  • Flushing bright red after standing up in my capacity as group whip to give the apologies of colleague who was sitting right behind me. #
  • Question from resident trying to ban ball games on a playing field. Hmmm. #
  • Paean to Michael Williams, the retiring director of leisure and much else. #
  • @binny_uk oh, they try and do that too from time to time. in reply to binny_uk #
  • Tram motion authorising land exchange in Broxtowe is passed with Lib Dem support. #
  • Audit Ctte annual report. The atmosphere is electric. One of the most enjoyable civic events in the year. #
  • Sheriff of Nottingham seemed to like the suit. #
  • Now bussing it home – after checking seat carefully for chewing gum. #
  • @NCCLols they did have am excuse when they were shifting servers from Guildhall to Loxley, but now…? in reply to NCCLols #
  • RT @solearther: I think renaming Echelon to Facebook was possibly the most effective re-branding exercise ever. #
  • @cyningstan there's six of us, I ought to be able to keep track 🙂 He wasn't supposed to be there until later. in reply to cyningstan #
  • @helenduffett don't tell @markpack #predictable in reply to helenduffett #
  • @aligoldsworthy what's wrong with old chocolate? 🙂 ageist in reply to aligoldsworthy #
  • Llwyn Celyn has a plank and muntin screen passage, a spere truss, a dias bench and elaborate carved spandrels. http://www.landmarktrust.org.uk mag #
  • @GaryDelaney what, no tunes? http://bit.ly/angmUA in reply to GaryDelaney #
  • *coff* *coff* *coff* *coff* *coff* *coff* . Bleurgh. *coff* #

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Tweets on 2010-10-11

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Is it worth getting a solar panel?

A recent commenter asked this on an old post about installing my solar panel, and I spent a few minutes writing an answer. Rather than keep it buried in a comments thread on a post from years ago, I thought I would copy it here again.

Alison – my most recent solar post is here.

My solar panel generates around £150-worth a year of heat, and so will probably take around 30 years to pay for itself.

New deals are now available that make photovoltaic solar panels, which generate electricity, a more financially viable option.

Whether solar hot water is right for you depends on several factors, including planning to be living in your house for several decades, having a roof that points in the right direction (south!), and having the right kind of boiler – not a condensing boiler that provides hot water on demand, but a system that includes a hot water tank.

The Coalition government is preparing a Green New Deal that will provide advice and finance for greening your house, so it might be worth waiting until the details of that become clearer before making any decisions.

If you live in Notts or Derbyshire and you’d like to talk to someone about solar hot water, get someone to look over your house and check suitability, and get referrals to local people who can install them, give Sungain / Notts Energy Partnership a call on 0115 985 9057.

Wedding gallery

If people are adding pics from our wedding to Flickr, please could you tag them “pjwajf” ?

That way they can all be brought together in galleries like this one:

[flickr-gallery mode=”search” tags=”pjwajf”]

(I’m testing a new plugin – I hope as more photos crop up, the gallery will get bigger, but I don’t know if that’s the case.)

My wedding, yesterday

So, back home. The cards are open, the gifts unwrapped and the contents logged. All bills have been paid ((including the beer bill from Nottingham Brewery who hadn’t warned me I had to pay in cash when I collected the polypins, and who just said – oh, take the beer and drop the payment in the next time you are passing)). All guests have left now and the quiet time alone begins.

And married life began with thinking a) why is the sun shining today and not yesterday? and b) Ooh, the sun’s shining – quick, get the laundry on.

My trusty Zoom H2 was there, sitting in the ceremony room discretely on the mantelpiece of the massive fireplace in front of which we got married yesterday at 1pm, making a recording of proceedings.

I don’t think I will be sharing with the world a full copy of the day, although I can probably make a CD for anyone who particularly wants it.

But I did just want to share the following second or so.

This is the noise my darling husband made as he was slipping my wedding ring onto my finger.

[display_podcast]

Harrumph!

I’ll put a bit of explanation in the comments.

Tweets on 2010-10-09

  • @willhowells I may have drunk some of those pints with him, but my records are not that detailed. in reply to willhowells #
  • @rfenwick why, thank you. Sorry you were left out but times is hard and places is limited. in reply to rfenwick #
  • @rfenwick srsly you meant our wedding? Assumed you meant some other one. in reply to rfenwick #
  • *pathetic cough* *sniffle*. bleurgh. Ouch. *rusty arpeggio to get cobwebs off* *cough* *cough #
  • RT @Documentally: RT @CathleenRitt: When the Chilean miners get out & learn that they have #newTwitter they'll want to go back underground. #
  • Humming Ilkley Moor. #
  • Thunder and lightning have knocked the lights out and I can't see which is Cockburns and which is Croft. Still, any port in a storm, eh? #
  • Not so much "polishing" my dress shoes – more like "dusting" #
  • @willhowells worn down after years of use? in reply to willhowells #
  • Resigning self to thought I may not be able to read all of Twitter today. Thanks for all the good wishes! #

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