#Bristol's Circus of ‘Liveable Neighbourhoods’: Why Residents Don’t Trust the Clowns. Never Mind The Whole Damn Circus!
East Bristol road closures to bus gate fines, residents are fighting back against a council that seemingly treats public consultation as a "tick-box exercise.
Today’s 'Clueless Halfwit of the Year' candidate has to be ex-Green Party candidate for Bristol South, Jai (Jaime) Breitnauer. Bristol247 recently reported on the Bristol City Council’s latest plans for a “liveable neighbourhood” in South Bristol. As with previous schemes, public opinion is divided. Some residents welcome the changes; others feel their voices haven’t been heard.
One response on social media captured that frustration: “It’s not what ordinary working residents want. Pander to the few, at the expense of the many. Who voted this idiotic council in?”
In reply, Jai, an ex-Green Party candidate for Bristol South, argued that people who didn’t vote or didn’t take part in the consultation had lost their right to complain.
Well, Jai, presumably not residing a million miles away, and clearly not up to date with (un)liveable neighbourhood news, is quite possibly one of the main reasons residents in South Bristol didn't respond. Your precious little Green Party colleagues—you know, Green as in not the brightest—have no trust in this council since the East Bristol Neighbourhood debacle. In that case, unannounced, residents of this area woke up to find contractors rearranging the layout of their previously manageable neighbourhood, with roads suddenly blocked with giant plant pots.
The East Bristol Debacle: When 'Dialogue' is Just Doublespeak.
As the council’s contractors rolled into Barton Hill, armed with their plans for a “safer, healthier, greener” neighbourhood, they were met by a few dozen furious campaigners. “They're trying to put the bus gate in because they know it will raise fines for the council's bank balance," said protester Melissa Topping, cutting through the usual council fluff with a swift jab to the wallet.
Meanwhile, Bristol City Council, in a masterclass of political doublespeak, said it supported the right to protest but complained that its own attempts at a "two-way dialogue" were "unfortunately not met in good faith." Apparently, a “two-way dialogue” means the council talks and the residents nod along politely—a dynamic that perfectly explains why so many in South Bristol didn't bother to respond. They know public input is nothing more than a meaningless, tick-box exercise for a foregone conclusion.
"By illegally obstructing works, these actions have put our contractors, protesters and other pedestrians at risk," declared Heather Mack, the council's deputy leader, as if the contractors were facing down a small army instead of a few fed-up residents. It’s a tragic state of affairs when a group of people standing in the way of a project is seen as a greater risk than the project itself. Meanwhile, there is still no further news of Cllr Mack’s brain transplant, as there is yet no one volunteering to donate.
The System as Goliath: Fighting Bristol Bus Gate Fines.
One-way systems and road closures have already been installed as part of the trial for the East Bristol Liveable Neighbourhood, which covers parts of Barton Hill, Redfield, and St George. The council has said the measures stop drivers cutting through residential roads in order to beat congestion and will "create a safer, healthier and greener neighbourhood." Do you also smell the faint whiff of bullshit, I wonder?
Three bus gates—in Avonvale Road, Marsh Lane, and Pilemarsh—are part of the wider scheme. Only drivers with certain exemptions, such as those with disabilities, care providers attending clients, and families of high-needs children, may be exempt from charges. Of course, the reality of this can be far different. Trying to prove an exemption for a bus gate charge feels like being a modern-day David going up against Goliath. The Goliath, in this case, is a powerful, automated system that issues fines, and you, the driver, are David, trying to prove your specific, human-scale exemption.
The bus gates are the system's unfeeling eyes and ears, cameras that snap a picture of every vehicle that passes through, automatically generating a fine. This system doesn't know you, your circumstances, or your exemptions. The initial fine isn't a human judgment; it's a robotic, data-driven action. It's an efficient and impersonal process designed for the masses, not for individual nuance.
You, the driver, have to challenge this Goliath. The system has already found you guilty, and now you must prove your innocence. This isn't just about a simple ticket; it's about navigating a bureaucratic labyrinth. You can't just tell the camera your situation. Instead, you have to file paperwork, provide official documentation, and often, spend time on hold with customer service. The burden of proof is entirely on you. You're not just fighting a fine; you're fighting the system's assumption of your guilt.
The real difficulty lies in the fact that the system is designed to be challenged in a very specific way, usually through official channels that can be slow, confusing, and unforgiving of errors. It feels impossible to win because the process itself is the punishment—it’s not about the money, but about the sheer effort and time required to prove a seemingly simple fact. It's a modern dilemma: how do you use human reason and compassion to argue against a system built on cold, hard code?
The Electorate Got the Whole Damn Circus.
So, Jai, let's recap. You're telling residents they should have taken part in a Bristol council consultation process when the same council has a track record of bulldozing through schemes without proper consent. The lack of trust isn't the residents' fault—it’s the council's. Maybe before you start calling people "irresponsible" for not engaging, you should first encourage your party colleagues to rebuild the trust they've so clearly lost. Otherwise, it feels like Bristol's electorate didn't just vote in the clowns; they ended up with the whole damn circus. And what a show it is: with the finance department's endless juggling acts, planning committee acrobats twisting out of accountability, and a ringmaster more interested in the spectacle of their own oversized clown car—all cheered on by a chorus line of performing seals we elected.