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‘Extreme’ number of people wanting £50 bike repair voucher crashes website

PA News

Boris Johnson’s ambitious plan to get Britons cycling has got off to a rocky start, with the website offering bicycle repair vouchers crashing at launch.

As part of the Prime Minister’s £2 billion scheme to boost active travel, the Government has made some 50,000 Fix Your Bike vouchers worth up to £50 available to be used for standard servicing and replacing components.

The website, fixyourbikevoucherscheme.est.org.uk, was due to go live at 11.45pm on Tuesday night.

However, initial efforts to access the site returned only an “Error 404” message.

Then those wanting a voucher were told: “Due to extreme volumes of traffic this resource has been temporarily paused whilst we take action to improve performance for users. Please try again later today.”

Cyclists took to social media to express their disappointment and the volume of complaints was such that the hashtag #FixYourBikeVoucherScheme became the number one trend on Twitter in the UK within 90 minutes of the site’s scheduled launch.

Andrew Bebesi, owner of bike repair service Briscycle, is participating in the Government’s bike repair scheme (Ben Birchall/PA)
Andrew Bebesi, owner of bike repair service Briscycle, is participating in the Government’s bike repair scheme (Ben Birchall/PA)

The vouchers are being distributed by the Energy Saving Trust.

A Department for Transport (DfT) spokesman said on Wednesday: “The Fix Your Bike voucher scheme website was taken offline by the Energy Saving Trust this morning following high levels of interest.

“Vouchers are being released gradually to reflect the capacity of cycle repairers signed up to the scheme and more will be available soon.”

The vouchers were initially due to be available in June, but the DfT said last month they would only be released once maintenance shops could handle the expected spike in demand.

The £2 billion investment, announced in February, also includes thousands of miles of new protected cycle lanes, cycle training, making electric bikes more accessible and creating the UK’s first zero-emissions transport city.

Other measures include strengthening the Highway Code, improving legal protections, increasing lorry safety standards and working with the police and retailers to tackle bike thefts.

On a visit to Nottingham, Mr Johnson said: “You always could spend more and this is the most ambitious package ever – it’s £2 billion.

“What we will do is create thousands of miles of protected cycle lanes – I really believe that protected cycle lanes are essential to give people the confidence people need, many people aren’t very brave or confident cyclists.”

He added: “What I also want to see is more work done to get motorists to understand that we are all going to be sharing the roads, going to be sharing it with cyclists, so be respectful, be courteous.

“Things have been improving but there’s still a long way to go.”

The £2 billion investment was announced in February.

Shadow cycling minister Kerry McCarthy said: “Tory ministers have dragged their feet and failed to seize the opportunity this crisis has posed.

“Although funding is welcome, cyclists will be rightly concerned about how long it is going to take to actually put these plans into practice.”

DfT figures show there has been a surge in cycling following the coronavirus outbreak.

Compared with the equivalent day in the first week of March, cycling usage nearly doubled over the weekend of July 18/19.

Monday July 20 – the most recent weekday for which data is available – showed cycling at 146% of pre-lockdown levels.


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