Harlow MP Chris Vince takes up problem of road safety outside schools
Education / Fri 31st Jan 2025 at 08:52am
THE MP for Harlow, Chris Vince took part in a road safety debate where he was able to raise the issue of traffic outside Harlow schools.
Your Harlow has been contacted by concerned parent across the town.
In particular, parents at Little Parndon Primary School have expressed deep concerns about traffic chaos outside their school on Hodings Road. We will be running a separate piece on this.

Chris Vince said: ‘Thank you for your chairmanship today, Ms Jardine. I sincerely thank Aphra Brandreth for securing the debate, and for her passionate and powerful opening remarks. The hearts of everyone in this Chamber go out to her constituent’s family. That was an unbearable thing to have happened, and the hon. Lady is right that, sadly, it was not an isolated incident; unfortunately, across the country, incidents like that happen far too often.
I want to refer to an incident that happened at a school in my Harlow constituency, Pemberley academy, on 17 September 2023. A car, breaking the 30 mph speed limit, came around a corner far too quickly, came off the road and went straight into the perimeter fence of the school. Fortunately, that happened on a weekend; if it had happened on a weekday, there would have been severe casualties, because it took place where the parents and their children line up to get into school.
Despite a petition led by the teachers at the school and signed by all the parents and local residents—including one local councillor at the time—nothing has been done to remedy the situation. This is not a political criticism—I recognise that Essex county council wants to do more—but there is so much red tape that it takes too long for communities and community groups, such as those mentioned by the hon. Lady, to make the changes that they want in their communities. I hope that a benefit of the English devolution Bill will be that power is given back to local communities, so that they have a greater say on what changes they can make to tackle this issue.
I want to add something positive and pay tribute to the work done by Essex county fire and rescue. The hon. Lady mentioned the importance of education, although she is right that education alone is not everything. We recognise that, with all the will in the world, children—especially young children, when we talk about primary schools—are not always going to look both ways and use the techniques that we have mentioned.
I pay tribute to the work of Essex county fire and rescue. Its FireBreak scheme at Harlow fire station teaches young people how to be fire officers and looks at road safety as well. It has visited Harlow college and other educational institutions in Harlow to talk about road safety education. It is important that you can never be too young or too old for road safety education. Although we often talk about how important it is to teach young ones, the hon. Lady made the point that teenagers and older children can be distracted too.
I welcome this debate and the ongoing conversation with the Minister and shadow Minister, who will be bored of me talking about this topic, because I spoke on it yesterday as well. We need to look at how we can give power back to local communities who know best how to ensure that the areas around their schools are safe.
The proposed Latton Common development will make traffic in Harlow much worse and the traffic report published late last year only considered half of the schools which will be affected. Every exit from Rye Hill Road goes past at least one school. They expect queues of 90 vehicles waiting to get onto Southern Way from Parnall Road and expect that Harlow residents will be forced to change their commute times.
Chris Vince ignores the cost and disruption of reorganising local authorities, including new computer systems that take a lot of time and money to install, instead of the government giving them substantially more money to fix adult social care, roads, education and road safety. Far from improving local democracy, the new devolution plans will reduce the number of councillors, bring in more executive mayors and move the centres of decision making further from the people.
A fee years ago both Dan Swords and Robert Halfon promised a Zebra crossing outside Little Parndon school which would be paid for out of the local highways budget. Like many things it never happened! Doesn't help that signs are the wrong way round specifying 20 MPH Around Little pardon plus parents that park on double yellow lines. Every school should have a red zone.
Surely the answer to traffic outside schools is simple, it’s parents transporting their children, all over Harlow to a school of their choice, and to stop that it’s easy, schools should be in walking distance of where they live. And before there is a outcry, our three children walked to school, and our six grandchildren did the same.
Lee dangerfield. Yes.i have signed petitions in the past to no avail. It's so dangerous crossing the road outside little parndon. Especially because of all the numpties who park right outside the school making it impossible to see on coming traffic when trying to cross. I have to tell my child to wait on the pavement while I walk in the middle of the road to see if it's safe to cross.
It is bad not just outside schools but all over the town. Driving standards are poor with speeding and people parking wherever they want.
Each school with these issues need to have a parking attendant at the school every day. Mr Coster at Hare Street has stood deterring people parking up the road near the school for the children’s safety as one child got hit and many other near misses, yet as soon as he finishes ‘duty’ parents drive all down that road and bump up the curbs again for nursery pick and club pick up. Why do these parents feel the rules don’t apply? Give them a ticket for dangerous driving I say. Absolutely sick of it- my child was missed by an inch last year and this is something I feel so strongly about
When I were a lad I had to walk 2 miles to school from the age of 6-12( sometimes in -40c temperatures) Never bothered me either. My children always walked to school in the 90’s even though we lived 1 mile away from the school in Harlow. The exercise is good for you and it sharpens your brain. Maybe we just need to make stopping near schools illegal around the start and finish times at schools
The parent parking at Harlowbury school is atrocious!! Parents park completely blocking the footpath on both sides of the road for thr entire length of the road so parents & children are forced to walk in the road. They block junctions, block residents driveways, double park blocking access to wider vehicles. They literally park where they want without any concern for the children's safety or consideration for the residents who can't access or vacate their own driveways. Complaints to the head teacher fall on deaf ears! If you ask someone to move so you can leave or enter your property, you are met with a mouthful of foul language infront of the children!!
We already have parking restrictions including red zones, yellow lines and other restrictions near schools, what we need is Essex police and NEPP to be more proactive in enforcement of these restrictions until lazy parents get the message that children's safety is more important than parking outside of school gates as they can't be bothered to walk a few minutes
All schools are the same. Parents park wherever they like , they know that very rarely they will be caught. The police and parking attendants are never around to punish them. The head of the school can only ask for enforcement but it is the same story, not enough staff. Traffic police need to blitz the schools and nick them as soon as they pull up on the zig zags.
All these who cry here drive cars to school. "I can drive and other shouldn't drive" attitude has to stop, hypocrites!
St marks is terrible and parents blatantly ignore the red lines, or park all 4 wheels on the footpath. They park in the bus lanes, churn up the grassed areas and block the cycleway entrance. They need to bring school buses back and children should walk more. Parents regularly arrive half an hour early to make sure they get a spot within spitting distance of the gates. It's mayhem
As Resident points out, clearly parking restrictions are ignored by selfish parents, why can't Essex police and NEPP provide effective enforcement?
The reason why Essex Police as well as all police forces in the UK cannot enforce the relevant restrictions is because of the last governments 14 years of financial cuts and lack of investment to such an extent that the 'Thin Blue Line' no longer exists. Hard pressed overworked and stressed out police officers had enough of being burnt out trying to make the Job work with nothing left to make it work over the past 14 years!
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