This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.
People will be permitted to drive to other destinations for their daily exercise under easing of lockdown measures for England announced by Boris Johnson on Sunday night.
In his address to the nation, the prime minister said the government was changing its guidance around motoring, specifically in reference to commuting to work and outdoor exercise.
The UK has been in lockdown since the 23 March. Mr Johnson described the lockdown restrictions on freedoms as “a kind that we have never seen before in peace or war.”
He said the rules have “prevented this country from being engulfed by what could have been a catastrophe in which the reasonable worst-case scenario was half a million fatalities.”
So what are the new rules around motoring?
According to the prime minister’s broadcast you will soon - in England only, mind - be allowed to drive your car to get to work and to go somewhere to take “unlimited exercise”.
How far can people drive?
There are no mileage limits set for the distance people could drive and you may note the government’s discouragement of public transport. Walking and cycling are favoured, but your car is an option once again.
"You should avoid public transport if at all possible – because we must and will maintain social distancing, and capacity will therefore be limited," announced Mr Johnson.
What are the possible issues around changes to motoring rules?
You can see the issues. First, local authorities and employers will need to give serious consideration to where everyone will be able to park, and how much it will cost. Relaxing parking restrictions and reducing or abolishing charges (including the London Congestion Charge) would help, as would scrapping bus lanes, if temporarily.
Parking in parks may be needed, and pedestrianised streets de-pedestrianised, admittedly not an attractive idea; but the congestion will be intense if nothing is done to free traffic flow.
Of course, this will all mean dirtier, more polluted air and a sudden jump in NOx and CO2 emissions.
There will also, inevitably, be more road traffic accidents, (including with cyclists) meaning more strain on the emergency services, and more unnecessary social contacts at petrol stations, garages, motorway services and the like.
Will the two-metre rule be rigidly observed in every single branch of Kwik-Fit, motorway loos or Shell filling station? Will the occupants of the vehicles always be strictly from the same household - given the motor car’s traditional role as mobile clandestine love big? It remains to be seen.
Under England’s new freedoms, the “R” rate may accelerate faster than a Bugatti Veyron, with Boris’ rev counter-style R-gauge racing fast into the red zone. The new rules will also prove impossible to police, given the likely volume of traffic back on the road.
Created with Sketch.
Created with Sketch.
1/19
Two elderly people chat on a street in Valencia, Spain on 4 May
EPA
2/19
People look at the city from Villa Borghese park in Rome during the first day of Italy's next phase in its coronavirus lockdown
Getty Images
3/19
An elderly couple who has not been outside for nearly two months enjoys the weather as they sit on a bench in a park in Athens on 4 May
AFP via Getty Images
4/19
Henri de Chassey, wearing a protective face mask, kisses his partner Margaux Rebois, who is returning to Paris after spending two months in Brussels on 4 May
REUTERS
5/19
A commuter in protective mask wears gloves at an underground station in Brussels as some companies are allowed to bring workers back to the office
EPA/STEPHANIE LECOCQ
6/19
Paralympic swimmer Inigo Llopis prepares to swim in San Sebastian, Spain, for the first time since the lockdown began
Getty Images
7/19
A worker wearing personal protective equipment disinfects a school in Athens as Greece relaxes its nationwide lockdown
REUTERS
8/19
A Spanish National Police officer distributes protective masks in Melilla, Spain, on 4 May
EPA
9/19
An employee poses in front of halfway-cured hams in a factory in Guijuelo, Salamanca, Spain, on 4 May
EPA
10/19
Workers in protective suits disinfect a high school in Athens as Greece moves to reopen schools for final-year students on 11 May
EPA
11/19
A worker disinfects a bus as transport vehicles are disinfected several times a day as part of Belgium's lockdown exit strategy
Belga/AFP via Getty Images
12/19
A worker from Textilia haberdashery in Brussels holds a fabric that can be used to make customised protective face masks as Belgium relaxes its lockdown measures
REUTERS/Yves Herman
13/19
A bride tries on a wedding dress at a bridal shop in Madrid on the first day that some small businesses are allowed to open during Spain's lockdown
REUTERS
14/19
People walk across the Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II shopping mall in central Milan as Italy eases its lockdown
AFP via Getty Images
15/19
A couple kiss in the Duomo Square in Catania as Italy starts moving out of its lockdown
Reuters
16/19
Mirel Chetan organises the books of the Antonio Machado bookstore in Madrid after 51 days of closure
Carlos Alvarez/Getty Images
17/19
A couple kiss in front of the sea in Catania as Italy begins a staged end to a nationwide lockdown due to the spread of the coronavirus disease
ANTONIO PARRINELLO/ REUTERS
18/19
A waiter at Caffe Cracco handles takeaway coffee in Milan on 4 May as Italy starts to ease its lockdown
Miguel Medina/AFP via Getty Images
19/19
A woman holds a yoga posture as she exercises by the Colosseum monument in Rome on the first day of Italy relaxing its lockdown measures
VINCENZO PINTO/AFP via Getty Images
1/19
Two elderly people chat on a street in Valencia, Spain on 4 May
EPA
2/19
People look at the city from Villa Borghese park in Rome during the first day of Italy's next phase in its coronavirus lockdown
Getty Images
3/19
An elderly couple who has not been outside for nearly two months enjoys the weather as they sit on a bench in a park in Athens on 4 May
AFP via Getty Images
4/19
Henri de Chassey, wearing a protective face mask, kisses his partner Margaux Rebois, who is returning to Paris after spending two months in Brussels on 4 May
REUTERS
5/19
A commuter in protective mask wears gloves at an underground station in Brussels as some companies are allowed to bring workers back to the office
EPA/STEPHANIE LECOCQ
6/19
Paralympic swimmer Inigo Llopis prepares to swim in San Sebastian, Spain, for the first time since the lockdown began
Getty Images
7/19
A worker wearing personal protective equipment disinfects a school in Athens as Greece relaxes its nationwide lockdown
REUTERS
8/19
A Spanish National Police officer distributes protective masks in Melilla, Spain, on 4 May
EPA
9/19
An employee poses in front of halfway-cured hams in a factory in Guijuelo, Salamanca, Spain, on 4 May
EPA
10/19
Workers in protective suits disinfect a high school in Athens as Greece moves to reopen schools for final-year students on 11 May
EPA
11/19
A worker disinfects a bus as transport vehicles are disinfected several times a day as part of Belgium's lockdown exit strategy
Belga/AFP via Getty Images
12/19
A worker from Textilia haberdashery in Brussels holds a fabric that can be used to make customised protective face masks as Belgium relaxes its lockdown measures
REUTERS/Yves Herman
13/19
A bride tries on a wedding dress at a bridal shop in Madrid on the first day that some small businesses are allowed to open during Spain's lockdown
REUTERS
14/19
People walk across the Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II shopping mall in central Milan as Italy eases its lockdown
AFP via Getty Images
15/19
A couple kiss in the Duomo Square in Catania as Italy starts moving out of its lockdown
Reuters
16/19
Mirel Chetan organises the books of the Antonio Machado bookstore in Madrid after 51 days of closure
Carlos Alvarez/Getty Images
17/19
A couple kiss in front of the sea in Catania as Italy begins a staged end to a nationwide lockdown due to the spread of the coronavirus disease
ANTONIO PARRINELLO/ REUTERS
18/19
A waiter at Caffe Cracco handles takeaway coffee in Milan on 4 May as Italy starts to ease its lockdown
Miguel Medina/AFP via Getty Images
19/19
A woman holds a yoga posture as she exercises by the Colosseum monument in Rome on the first day of Italy relaxing its lockdown measures
VINCENZO PINTO/AFP via Getty Images
How does this differ in Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland?
The strict old “stay home” rules remain in force in Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland, which means only essential journeys.
In Northern Ireland that actually does include exercise, but only if you need to go to a safe space or facility. In Scotland, the exercise must be local (ie no driving), and in Wales taking the car is only allowed to get to exercise if absolutely necessary and in any case as close as possible to your home.
Of course, you could argue that people in crowded cities find it difficult to get out and keep to social distancing, and that allowing people to venture to remote bits of countryside is in that sense safer. However, those who live in rural areas may well resent the influx of bored townies looking for somewhere to throw a frisbee around.
We will also witness internally policed borders in the UK? For a Bristolian driving to some nice corner of Devon for a hike is at least a lawful option, though one fraught with moral dilemmas and possible hostility; but if he or she were to try to do the same over the border in Wales...it would be a police matter and risk a fine. That is a quiet, revolutionary change.
Staying alert in this next phase of the crisis doesn’t just mean being awake at the wheel; it also means a thorough understanding of what amounts to a new coronavirus-inspired Highway Code. Mind how you go.


Africana55 Radio