Boris Johnson, Conservative mayoral candidate, answers your questions:
Q: Is Boris Johnson going to rephase back the traffic lights which ken Livingstone changed when he was elected and get London moving faster again? Posted by Kishore Mandalia
A: I do plan to rephrase traffic lights to get cars moving. Cars stuck at traffic lights emit twice the amount of CO2 and congsetion is now back to pre-congestion charge levels. It’s time to stop clobbering motorists and get London moving.
Q: What concrete steps would Boris Johnson take, if elected, to ensure that corruption, nepotism, waste of public money on foreign trips and on armies of unnecessary apparatchiks are not going to be a feature of his mayoralty, or does he think they are an inevitable feature of modern political life? Posted by Alex
A: Cronyism and a lack of transparency has mired the Livingstone mayoralty in maladministration. There are 732 staff in the City Hall building intended for 440 and staffing costs have more than trebled since 2001. In 2006, the Mayor’s office spent almost a quarter of a million pounds on foreign travel.
I want to be a Mayor for all of London, focusing on London issues and not attempting to adopt a foreign policy. I will not be inviting controversial characters to visit London; people who stand against the very values that I treasure so greatly about this city.
All my advisers will have their details and register of interests accessible on the internet so that people can see what groups there are involved with and can contact them directly. If elected, I will launch an immediate review of City Hall’s finances, including grants given by the London Development Agency and make sure that Londoners get value for their money and can see where that money’s being spent.
Q: We were promised a world class transport system from the first mayoral elections, but life on the tube has gone from bad to worse. How do you propose to bring London’s Victorian age transport system to the 21st century. Posted by Raxa Mehta
A: London has the highest tube fares in Europe and Londoners deserve a service commensurate with that. People should be able to travel on public transport at any time of day or night without fear or intimidation.
I will focus on track and signal upgrades on the tube, which have all too often overrun and look again at getting airconditioning on the tube. I oppose the station closures proposed by the current Mayor and want all stations to be manned at all times during service. Banning alcohol on the tube will go a long way to cutting crime and making people feel more safe and comfortable travelling.
Q: What would you do as Mayor to improve paid employment prospects of disabled volunteers, who are all too frequently relegated to unemployment-related benefits and expenses due to lack of project funding? Posted by Alan Wheatley, working life-long disabled volunteer
A: Volunteers in London are responsible for providing hope and comfort to the vulnerable and disadvantaged and I thank you for all the wonderful work that you do. I want to get all Londoners who are able to work into work and upgrade the skills set of people across the city.
There are currently too many agencies involved in employment and skills provision and I would consolidate the Adult Skills agenda, give the London Skills and Education Board more control over the London Development Agency’s budget for adult skills and promote skills to Londoners through a single branded service for advice and guidance. This would be a one-stop shop and would be able to specifically cater to disabled people looking for work.
We will also begin immediate discussions with the Government about the possibility of creating a single pool of public funding for skills in London by consolidating some of the various agencies’ spending into a single budget under the direction of the LSEB. This would make one body, directly accountable to Londoners through the Mayor, in charge of improving skills training in London — and ensure the maximum return on investment in skills by minimising bureaucracy.
Q: As a London resident I have noticed an increase in hostility from the recently immigrated population towards the culture, lifestyle and the customs of the settled population of London.
Would you: as London mayor: encourage the settled population to change the way they live their lives to appease the new population or would you prefer to encourage the new population to learn and respect londons cosmopolitan but British culture. And how would you go about it? Posted by Genevieve
A: London would not be the dynamic and vibrant city that it is without the input of people coming from all over the world to make London their home. I do believe that everyone coming to live in this country should learn English and the LSEB will help with funding for this and also that they should embrace the values of tolerance that has made London what it is today.
I will not stand for groups that preach hate and division and they will be stamped out. I do not, however, want or expect immigrant communities to abandon their traditions and cultures, but to integrate them into the patchwork that already exists in this great city and encourage inter-community dialogue to foster greater understanding and cohesion.
Q: I work as a district nurse for Southwark PCT. We have to visit patients within the congestion area on a daily basis to administer various medical treatments. We have to pay the congestion charge, claim this back from our PCT who in turn reclaim this from TFL. If a nurse forgets to purchase a ticket and accrues a fine it has to be paid from his or her own pocket.
One nurse last week had to pay over £160 in fines. Careless? No, not when we are dealing with seriously ill and dying patients. We cannot travel on public transport with medical records, body fluids and medical equipment. The sick people of Southwark are being penalised as nurses are loathe to visit the congestion area in fear of possible penalties. We are undertaking an essential service but if we were mini-cabs or vehicles for ‘pre-booked’ hire we would be exempt from the charge. This will never, ever make any sense to me. Please somebody help us. Posted by John Bailey
A: The clobbering of motorists with congestion charges fines by the current Labour Mayor is disgraceful — especially when, in this case, it persecutes people working to save lives. I will alter the current system so that motorists are given a monthly bill so that nurses and other crucial workers are not unjustly penalised.
Q: As the heart of the nation, London’s arterial roads that transport the nation’s economic life blood have chronic blockages that impair its health and the health of all who use them. Under Mayor Livingstone, congestion charges (statins), new larger buses (cholesterol) , more and more traffic lights (heart valves) and narrowing of the arteries by constructing more and more granite-edged islands and wider pavements have made matters far worse not better. Major surgery is needed.
Do any of the candidates have plans for seriously revamping TfL, changing the policy (and attitudes) to, for example, adopt tried and tested Tokyo methods for preventing arterial blockages - all road work at night and especially large holes covered with plates during the day. Do they agree with me that we must move with the times and construct elevated sections of road like the old Mancunian Way (say above The Highway, Thames Street and the Embankment) and again, emulate Tokyo’s road system (but do it better) where there are heart bypasses for through traffic built on stilts or in tunnels? - Posted by graham mellor
A: Congestion in London has now exceeded pre-Congestion charge levels and traffic is at a stand still. I want to get London moving again. I will re-phase the traffic lights to get traffic moving more smoothly.
I will be tougher with utility companies and lobby government to give the Mayor the power to fine companies who cause delays and I will re-instate the tidal flow in the Blackwall Tunnel at the earliest opportunity.
I will have a fresh approach to dealing with congestion in London that is about helping motorists, not penalising them as the current Mayor has sought to do.

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2 comments so far
A win for Boris will be a win for London and Londoners and all who visit our world city.
Its so important that whoever will be Mayor sees the importance of replacing the ineffective and damaging central zone and western extension zone Congestion Charge/road pricing by sensible congestion management.
Better and cheaper public transport and more underground travel facility,that will encourage people out of their private vehicles, the reversing of the anti-car policy, and cheaper and more plentiful parking in
and out of town, and at new public transport hubs for widespread park and ride.
These steps will reverse the damage caused in the last 4years by the charge, and allow London to begin to flourish again; replacing further unemployment, and downsizing and shoppers keeping away from town.
The limited income that the CC scheme brought to the Mayor’s budget that wasnt spent on administering the scheme, (that would be even lower but for
the disgraceful level of fines and limited ways of being allowed to pay charges and fines) can be easily replaced by keeping more of the business rates raised in London in London.
Let all in local and central government and parliament begin to realise that enabling and facilitating interaction between suppliers of goods and services and those who use them is the way to help a city flourish. Instead of all the extra dreamt up taxes, masquerading as virtuosity, putting the city into decline and reducing choice in London.
Jim Abbotson
- Posted by Jim Abbotsonhttp://www.rescuelondon.org.uk
change is good
- Posted by buchi reddylooking for change in general election too