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Cycling groups make last minute submissions to National Obesity Task Force. national |
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Wednesday July 07, 2004 14:54 by Shane Foran - Irish Cycling Campaign - Feachtas Rothaiochta na hEireann galwaycyclist at yahoo dot co dot uk Dublin CC: http://www.connect.ie/dcc, Galway CC: http://www.eirbyte.com/gcc, Cork CC:http://indigo.ie/~woz/ccc 087 9935993
![]() Cork, Galway and Dublin Cycling Campaigns make submissions. The groups highlight the proven health benefits of regular cycling, and outline measures required to restore cyclist access to Irish towns. The Department of Health is asked to take a robust line on misleading claims emanating from the Irish car lobby. The last week has seen Irish Cycling Organisations involved in rushed, last minute efforts to make submissions to the National Task Force on Obesity, which had only defined a three-week window for public submissions. Despite the short notice, the Cork, Galway and Dublin Cycling Campaigns managed to make submissions. The groups highlight the proven health benefits of regular cycling – an actuarial cost benefit analysis of regular cycling has estimated that the lives saved/years gained through regular cycling may outweigh any lives/years lost by up to 20:1. The point is made that it is lack of exercise, rather than diet, that is the major cause of obesity. The submissions include a hierarchy of measures for creating a “cyclist-friendly” roads infrastructure including traffic reduction, traffic calming, junction treatments and road space reallocation. The cyclists argue that creating a cyclist-friendly infrastructure requires influencing the current “car-friendly” activities of the Departments of Transport and Environment. |
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