Ten asks to address the road safety emergency: will you make Birmingham's roads safer?

We have joined forces with 15 national and local organisations to make manifesto asks that improve road safety in our city.

We now turn to political candidates and firmly ask: 106 people will be killed in crashes during the next council term. Will you make Birmingham’s roads safer?

Read our asks

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Backed by

RoadPeace
20s Plenty
Living Streets
Action Vision Zero
Mums for Lungs
Clean Cities Campaign
Solve the School Run
More Than a Cyclist
The Royal Society for the Prevention of Accidents
Walk Cycle Play
Roam
Change Kitchen CIC
Moseley Community Development Trust
Eco Birmingham - Inspiring positive action
Pushbikes - The Birmingham Cycling Campaign
BikeBus.org

Our ten manifesto asks

Ask 1: Continue rolling out 20mph across the city to reduce casualties by 25% through signage, focusing on residential streets and local centres.

How to achieve it:

  • A rolling programme of 20mph limits across areas using signage
  • Make streets self-enforcing through changes to make them greener and calmer

Benefits:

  • £63.5 million back into the local economy each year
  • Cheaper insurance
  • Fewer collisions
  • 25% fewer casualties
  • Cleaner air
  • Quieter streets
Ask 2: Upgrade crossings and cut wait times so that people can cross streets safely and quickly.

How to achieve it:

  • Roll out a standard maximum wait time of up to 30 seconds
  • Install countdown timers on routes with high footfall
  • Upgrade crossings to be in line with modern statutory guidance

Benefits:

  • Walking and cycling becomes easier
  • Greater safety as people know they will not have to wait long to cross
  • Making changes crossing times incurs little to no cost

National campaigns:

Ask 3: Roll out more school streets and wider journey improvements to make routes safer for children.

How to achieve it:

  • Create car free school streets outside school gates
  • Improve crossings and signage in the catchment area
  • Address pavement parking

Benefits:

  • Safer school journeys
  • Better air quality around schools
  • Improved physical and mental health
  • Lower school traffic as more children walk, scoot and cycle
  • More social interaction
  • Greater independence of older children
Ask 4: Scale enforcement of the rules of the road by creating a programme of speed, red light, banned turn, box junction, bus lane, red line enforcement. Ensure the Council’s new parking enforcement service works.

How to achieve it:

  • Hypothecate moving traffic offence revenue for more camera sites
  • Create a priority list across the site
  • Incorporate cameras into new bus and cycle schemes

Benefits:

  • Bus and tram reliability
  • Less congestion
  • Reduced collisions and less severe outcomes

National campaigns:

Ask 5: Clear pavements for disabled people, children and those who rely on them by creating a programme of controlled parking zones with residents permits and parking restrictions to define who and where people can park on a street.

How to achieve it:

  • Area-wide marked bays for resident permit holders and guest pass holders
  • Area-wide prohibited parking restrictions
  • Improve parking enforcement and work with West Midlands Police to ensure obstructive parking is dealt with by Operation Snap and local police teams
  • Parking permit revenue is retained for new parking zones

Benefits:

  • Safe pavements
  • Clear and visible crossings
  • Increased walkability of local streets
  • Local access for disabled people and those pushing prams
  • More people making local trips by walking, wheeling and cycling
Ask 6: Build a network of cycle lanes and cycle-friendly streets connecting the city using devolved funding.

How to achieve it:

  • Reprioritise the local cycling and walking infrastructure plan
  • Build lanes to modern standards – coherent, direct, safe, comfortable and attractive
  • Build cycle lanes with temporary materials at first and upgrade later
  • Cycle lanes are primarily funded by government grants through the Combined Authority

Benefits:

  • 6 in 10 Brummies want to cycle more
  • £13:£1 benefit-cost ratio
  • A more active population with better health
  • Reduced and less severe collisions
  • Improved air quality
  • Reduce congestion as more people take local trips by cycling
Ask 7: Install residential cycle hangars using clean air zone money, targeting areas with terraced housing.

How to achieve it:

  • Use Clean Air Zone revenue and Active Travel Fund grants
  • Prioritise terraced streets as with the EV lamppost chargers

Benefits:

  • Safe storage of residential cycles
  • Increase in cycle ownership
  • Uptake in cycling

National campaigns:

Ask 8: Make residential streets greener and calmer by planting trees and rain gardens, installing benches, narrowing junctions and preventing shortcutting for the 46% still open to through-traffic. Update the next highways contract so that when repairing, they can make safety improvements.

How to achieve it:

  • Just under half of Birmingham’s residential streets remain open to through-traffic and prone to being used as shortcuts
  • Repurpose ETNF to be used on meaningful interventions
  • Run a programme of area-wide schemes to create Healthy Streets and keep through-traffic to main routes
  • When forming the new highways maintenance contract, ensure that highway and utility works can make minor safety changes, following the Dutch ‘work with work’ approach

Benefits:

  • Cleaner air
  • Lower temperature streets
  • Lower speeds
  • Less anti-social driving
  • Places to rest for those with mobility issues
  • Lower road noise linked to lower dementia risk
  • Less congestion at junctions from drivers making shortcuts
  • More local trips walked, wheeled and cycled
  • Greater interaction between neighbours
Ask 9: Upgrade public transport by working with Transport for West Midlands to upgrade bus lanes, railway stations and new tramways.

How to achieve it:

  • Engage with WMCA to deliver the Local Transport Plan
  • Continue with an ambitious programme of bus lanes and bus rapid transit routes
  • Open new tram routes
  • Reopen stations on the Sutton Park line and Balsall Heath
  • Lobby for 24/7 bus routes as part of franchising
  • Lobby for later train services at the weekend to support the nighttime economy

Benefits:

  • Reliable journey times by public transport
  • Public transport costs are 88% lower than car ownership, freeing up for the local economy
Ask 10: Change parking charges and permits to be based on the vehicle by considering size, weight and emissions.

How to achieve it:

  • Upgrade parking meters
  • Update parking tariffs and permits accounting for size, weight and emissions

Benefits:

  • Disincentivises SUV ownership
  • Smaller cars are less likely to kill in a crash
  • Smaller cars pollute less
  • Smaller cars wear out the road less
  • Smaller cars free up road space for other uses

National campaigns:

Political candidate looking to get something done?

Check out our guide to requesting transport improvements and getting things done, including a handle table of who owns and maintains what in the public realm and transport.

Co-sign our asks today

We need residents to join the campaign to get the manifesto asks adopted to achieve safer streets.


106 deaths between 2026 and 2030 assumes no further interventions are made and deaths continue to plateau with an occasional uptick anomaly year-to-year.

The percentage of residential streets open to through traffic is based on OpenStreetMap data and Cycle Streets analyses. We have refined this data further to filter out motorways, main roads (A, B and unnumbered [C] classified roads) and service roads (e.g. access roads to hospitals or golf courses and car parks). We have only included residential streets and living street highway types (combined, these are ‘residential streets’) – a total of 1,662km. Residential streets open to through-traffic make up 766km (46.1%). Of streets open to through-traffic, 69km feature traffic calming measures such as speed humps, speed cushions, chicanes or one-way systems. Residential streets not open to through-traffic make up 896km (53.9%). Our base data is available in a JSON format here.