ULEZ cameras now in place around High Barnet ready for TfL’s daily emissions levy of £12.50 on older vehicles.
Transport for London cameras are being installed at road junctions and vantage points around High Barnet in readiness for the the planned introduction of Tuesday 29 August of the Ultra-Low Emissions Zone which will impose a £12.50-a-day levy on older vehicles.
High Barnet has a pivotal position at the northern boundary of the zone.
Although many of the cameras are now in place, the go ahead for the erection of new ULEZ warning signs is awaiting the outcome of a challenge in the High Court.
Four Conservative-controlled outer London boroughs, Bexley, Bromley, Harrow, and Hillingdon – and Surrey County Council – have argued that the Mayor of London Sadiq Khan “lacks the legal power” to extend the ULEZ zone from inner London to the whole of the capital.
Mr Justice Swift reserved his decision when the case was heard in early July, and he indicated it could be some weeks before he gives his verdict.
Three main roads within High Barnet have been excluded from the zone to allow a free flow of traffic for residents of Hertsmere – especially those travelling between Borehamwood and Potters Bar.
Of all the junctions, perhaps the most critical is where St Albans Road meets the upper section of Barnet High Street.
These two main roads will be outside the zone to allow the free flow in both directions of older vehicles which fail to meet the emissions standards.
To avoid the charge, traffic approaching High Barnet from Potters Bar along the A1000 (Great North Road) will be able to turn right into the St Albans Road (A1081).
Similarly, vehicles approaching High Barnet along the St Albans Road will be able to turn left into the upper section of the High Street and proceed towards Potters Bar without being charged.
A camera installed above the pedestrian crossing lights at the entrance to The Spires shopping centre will monitor vehicles that do continue south along the High Street towards the parish church.
Traffic approaching High Barnet along the St Albans Road that is seeking to avoid the town centre will be caught by cameras at right turns into Wrotham Road (above), Alston Road (main picture), and Stapylton Road, with new ULEZ warning signs expected at Chipping Close and Bruce Road.
One side road off St Albans Road has been excluded from the zone: no charge will apply to vehicles that turn left or right into Sunset View cul-de-sac.
The second major through route for older vehicles between Boreham Wood and Potters Bar will be for traffic travelling along the A411 (Barnet Road) from Stirling Corner.
This section of Barnet Road – all the way from Stirling Corner to the junction at The Arkley public house – will be outside the zone and traffic will be allowed to turn left into Galley Lane to avoid the charge.
Similarly, vehicles travelling south on Galley Lane will be able to turn right at The Arkley and proceed towards Stirling Corner without charge.
Vehicles continuing towards High Barnet along Barnet Road — and on into Wood Street — will be monitored by the camera opposite The Arkley.
Again, there are understood to be exemptions for several small side roads. Cul-de-sacs leading off the northern side of Barnet Road, some of which end in the Green Belt, will be outside the zone.
No through roads that are thought to be excluded include Kerri Close, Garden Close, Field End, and Arkley Drive.
Because of the uncertainty created by the High Court challenge to the extension of ULEZ to the outer London boroughs, there is still a lack of clarity about the precise positioning of all the cameras and many are yet to be installed.
Earlier this year Transport for London did indicate there would be a degree of flexibility for communities on the borders of ULEZ and alternative routes for vehicles seeking to avoid the charge.
The full impact of the charge on businesses and services in High Barnet is another unknown quantity.
Patients treated at Barnet Hospital include many from Hertsmere and there appear to be no exemptions for those travelling by older vehicles; hospital staff and health workers will also be affected.
Shoppers and visitors to High Barnet – using the car parks in Stapylton Road and The Spires – will also be caught by the charge if they have older vehicles.
Another consequence might be that even more older cars, vans and lorries attempt to park in St Albans Road to avoid entering the zone.
The existing Low Emissions Zone, which imposes a charge on older heavy goods vehicles, starts at the High Street’s junction with St Albans Road.
The inner London ULEZ was created in 2019 and then expanded in 2021 to the boundaries of the North and South Circular Roads. Expansion to the outer boroughs was announced last year.
9 thoughts on “ULEZ cameras now in place around High Barnet ready for TfL’s daily emissions levy of £12.50 on older vehicles.”
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I’ve just had my first ULEZ charge and the picture claims it was taken at 11.15 on 1 Sept – my car was parked outside my accountants office from 10.30 to 12.00. I’ve challenged it and asked if all of their systems are faulty.
Clean air for our children is one thing (even though it’s debatable whether our air is polluted enough to justify another tax on drivers while our Prime Minister simultaneously flies around in his private jet). But what about the health of these kid in Africa, forced to mine the cobalt that goes in Lithium Ion batteries, including the ones powering our hybrid and fully electric cars and buses?
https://www.independent.co.uk/climate-change/news/phone-electric-vehicle-congo-cobalt-mine-b2277665.html
I suppose it’s out of sight out of mind? Which sounds like the same principle you’re applying to how electricity is produced.
If it’s inconvenience you’re after then I would advise against looking up how the majority of the electricity we use is produced. Or how hybrids, because of the extra weight of the batteries, go through brakes like nobodies business, chucking out into the air far more brake dust which is just as bad for people’s lungs. There really are inconveniences everywhere you look!
Quite inconvenient for you then that over half of all London buses are already hybridized, with the rest converted by 2030. But better news for the rest of us, who would prefer our children to breathe cleaner air.
Labour used to be for the disadvantaged, yet now they seem bent on attacking the worst off in society. They boast how 9 out 10 cars already meet the rules, but who owns that 1 in 10? The people who cannot afford a new car (mostly). If it were truly about emissions then it would be based on CO2 per km, but it isn’t. It’s based on targeting the worst off. Labour seems to struggle to realise that they won’t get votes for this. It is also notable that the last expansion had a negligible impact on emissions (unlike the initial creation, which was positive). Stop it. No more cameras.
And being on the Tube is the most polluted air in London!
The TfL buses are definitely among the worst polluters on the road. They should be getting fined for their negative impact, not rewarded with extra routes down side roads where they don’t belong while ordinary drivers get taxed to oblivion.
For example, ever since they covertly re-routed the 384 buses down Salisbury Road the air quality has been markedly worse, to the extent that we’ve had plants in our front gardens die. And neigther TfL or the council seem to care! I thought the whole point of all of this was to save the planet?!
What a gift the Labour Party are. Penalising the less well off and workmen to fund a profligate mayor
The way TFL have the nerve to force ordinary road users to pay yet another tax (because of, you know, the planet), while their own buses produce more pollution than most cars put together, is a complete joke!