A South London council has vowed to prosecute vandals after a road sign informing motorists of restrictions on travelling down a street in a controversial low traffic neighbourhood [LTN] was decapitated.
The ‘no motor vehicles’ sign in Streatham was sliced off its post on Valley Road and dumped in a nearby planter on the street earlier this week.
Lambeth Council said the sign would be “fixed as soon as possible,” adding that “where damage is committed we will gather all available information and seek to prosecute.”
Since October most drivers have been banned from travelling down Valley Road as part of the Labour-run council’s £450,000 Streatham Wells LTN, which aims to improve road safety and reduce pollution in the area. But the restrictions have fiercely divided locals.
Some residents have praised the LTN for making the streets in the area quieter and safer to cycle down. Others believe the traffic scheme has pushed vehicles onto already busy main roads, doubling journey times and worsening pollution in certain locations.
The restrictions, which cover Leigham Avenue, Culverhouse Gardens, Conifer Gardens, Valley Road and Gleneldon Road, will initially be in place for 12 to 18 months.
The council says it will monitor traffic and air pollution levels in the area and collect feedback from residents during this period.
On Tuesday, November 7, Malcolm Clark, Labour councillor for Streatham Wells, said he was “disappointed” how the council had managed the first two weeks of the LTN in a statement posted on X.
He wrote: “The council does not seem to have done as well as many residents expected either in implementing the physical infrastructure of the LTN, or in communicating about the LTN since launch. I am disappointed about that.”
Cllr Clark added that he was working to ensure the LTN was properly signposted and was focused on reducing the impact of other road works in the area on traffic.
A Lambeth Council spokesperson said: “The Streatham Wells Low Traffic Neighbourhood trial is now live and aims to make the area safer, more sustainable, and give everyone in Lambeth more equal access to their local streets.
“All the signage is out, being monitored and updated as and when it’s needed.
“Where infrastructure is damaged, it will be fixed as soon as possible. Damaging public property is a criminal offence and where damage is committed we will gather all available information and seek to prosecute.”