Your views on call to ban parents from idling their cars at schools: ‘What should we ban next?’
Banning drivers from running their car engines while waiting to pick up their children is among a series of measures being put forward as a means to cut air pollution and reduce its associated impact on public health.
Promoting car sharing and high-occupancy lanes, introducing more low-emission zones and creating priority parking for low-emissions vehicles are among other proposals being put forward by Public Health England.
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Hide AdWe asked you for your views and here are a selection from our Facebook page
Biggest issue is parking on paths causing kids to have to walk on the road to get round them.
Mark Denison
Then supply buses for children to go to school for free.
Marie Jo
Those come in electric too, Marie.
Craig Robinson
Ooooo what should we ban next?
Nicola Telford
Biggest issue is parking on paths causing kids to have to walk on the road to get round them.
Mark Denison
Anyone who lives in the Longridge to Preston area who is concerned about the low quality air and traffic emissions and the fact that they are trying to build a furnace to make it worse should attend this...7pm, March 26, Longridge Civic Hall...a talk on climate change.
Faye O’Neill
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Hide AdI would park outside school as well to watch my child go in.. they are not safe waking to school nowadays cause there are predators waiting for them.
Kelly Farish
We live next to a high school where parents park on the pavement with their car engines idling and sometimes ‘music’ blasting out.... Something should be done about it but who is going to enforce the rules???
Trish Barker
Exactly.. who is going to enforce it.. drivers aren’t supposed to sit with their engines idling anyway, anywhere and nobody enforces that.
Angela Murphy
Walk.
Fatima Hussein
Years ago, no-one would have even considered taking their children to school in the car.
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Hide AdThey walked, you walked with them, or they got on a bus if they were a bit older.
It seems to me that we all worry to much about something that is unlikely to happen and then set bad habits which are going to pursue children into adulthood...ie use the car when you could easily walk a journey of around one mile.
Helen Dempster
Or the Government could just stop calling for bans to stop us from choosing how we live our lives?
Andrew Goodman