Brussels wrestles with local anger over plans to
curb traffic
Locals accuse the city of trying to gentrify districts
that are struggling with more pressing issues.
The anger the traffic changes have unleashed goes well
beyond transport |
BY HANNE
COKELAERE
NOVEMBER
22, 2022 12:00 PM CET
Brussels
grapples with poor air quality, traffic jams and road accidents — yet its
strategy to change that is being met with violent pushback.
The
region’s Good Move strategy aims to curb traffic in Brussels' neighborhoods by
redirecting through-traffic to larger roads. That would cut pollution and free
up public space for local residents — a rarity in some of the city's
neighborhoods.
But the
plan was greeted with violence in Schaerbeek. Last month, protesters tore down
bollards and traffic signs and dumped them on the steps of city hall, set off
fireworks and pelted firefighters with eggs. Two police officers and a
firefighter were hurt.
The
municipality quickly backtracked and froze the changes, the final phase in a
three-step plan, pending more consultations with locals.
“Either you
choose to put everything back every night, but then you know the violence would
escalate further — that much was clear — or you put the peace and the safety of
the neighborhood first, and then reintroduce it in a calm manner,"
Brussels’ Mobility Minister Elke Van den Brandt told POLITICO.
The
government had expected some pushback as it rolled out the measures — but not
to this extent, she said.
Opponents
complained that locals had not been properly consulted about the changes.
Françoise De Smedt, who heads the far-left PVDA-PTB group in the Brussels
Parliament, said a series of meetings held on Zoom were not enough to inform
and get feedback from local communities.
COVID
restrictions made it harder to be on the ground as the government prepared the
plans, which added to the difficulty of communicating decisions to local
communities with different backgrounds and languages, Van den Brandt
acknowledged.
The anger
the traffic changes have unleashed goes well beyond transport, also tapping
into deep-rooted frustrations over marginalization and fears of gentrification.
“They’re
not hearing us,” said Abdelmajid El Bali, manning the bar of a coffee and tea
joint on Place du Pavillon, a busy junction in Schaerbeek where six streets meet
in a hubbub of cars, trams, buses, cyclists and pedestrians.
El Bali
pointed to a petition lying on his counter: “Not to hear the cries of the
citizens is to provoke anger,” it read.
He
complained the new road plans were harming his business. Before the changes,
traffic had been smoother and his establishment was filled with customers. But
he predicted authorities would eventually go ahead with the scheme as planned:
"It's already been decided."
Brussels'
Mobility Minister Elke Van den Brandt said the government has been careful to
not only select greener or richer areas to launch the plans | Nicolas
Maeterlinck/Belga/AFP via Getty Images
Residents
who'd looked forward to the changes aren't so sure.
Pieter
Fannes, a Schaerbeek local who launched a road safety campaign group called
Heroes for Zero, is concerned the pushback will persuade municipalities to sit
on plans for years, even though there’s a “real urgency” to improve safety in
school areas.
"This
should not be an excuse to shelve everything again," he said.
Road rage
Brussels
isn't the first city to experience blowback when trying to restrict cars in the
city.
In nearby
Ghent, an alderman pushing a mobility scheme in 2017 was placed under police
protection. Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo faces political headwinds over her efforts
to limit traffic in the city.
Within
Brussels, Schaerbeek is not an isolated case: Other municipalities like Jette
and Anderlecht have revisited traffic plans after running into protests. Rudi
Vervoort, the head of the Brussels regional government, even warned against
insisting on implementing the changes if they cause tensions.
Anderlecht
has promised a broader "revitalization plan" with more input from
locals, saying in a statement that "security, prevention, cleanliness,
citizen participation, housing, employment, social cohesion and youth are also
priority issues for the neighborhood."
That's a
wider trend, Van den Brandt said: Support for the plans varies widely but tends
to be lower in districts with "broader needs."
For
anti-racism collective Bruxelles Panthères, the Good Move protests were an act
of civil disobedience by people long ignored.
“That’s
positive, from our point of view," said Mouhad Reghif, a spokesperson for
the group. "That working class districts, and the people who usually don’t
get organized or express themselves are … participating in the political life
of their neighborhood."
The traffic
measures have targeted working-class districts with a larger share of people
belonging to ethnic minorities, which political elites ignored for decades,
said Reghif.
Those
neighborhoods struggle with problems such as access to housing, unemployment
and racism. Rather than addressing those issues, the city is rolling out plans
that could end up attracting the well-heeled at the cost of locals, he said.
Rudi
Vervoort, the head of the Brussels regional government, warned against
insisting on implementing the changes if they cause tensions | Nicolas
Maeterlinck/Belga/AFP via Getty Images
“That’s the
plan of the ecologists: People are naked, but rather than giving them clothes because
they’re cold, they offer them a beautiful ring. It’s important, but it’s not
the most important thing. There are material, immediate, social challenges,”
Reghif said.
Van den
Brandt said the government has been careful to not only select greener or
richer areas to launch the plans, but also poorer areas with little public
space. But she stressed it's “absolutely not the case” that the traffic plans
are aimed at gentrifying districts.
“I’m very
sure that if you ask parents in every district of Brussels, no matter where,
whether they’re concerned about their child’s safety in traffic, their answer
will be ‘yes.’ If we want to tackle that, there’s support, we know that. The
same goes for clean air, and for more nature in the districts,” she said.
Ties that bind
Baki Kahya,
who lives near Place du Pavillon, agrees that there are too many cars on the
streets. "No need for music here, we've got car horns," he joked.
The
protests against Good Move were "catastrophic," he said, arguing that
the new rules should be "respected." But he also complained that
traffic changes aimed at redirecting traffic had sent more cars and trucks
through his street.
There are
other pressing issues to be addressed in the neighborhood, such as a lack of
parks and dirty streets, he also said.
Those
frustrations are typical among locals, whether they're skeptical of the city's
plans or not.
Fannes, the
Schaerbeek activist, said it won't be easy to find a way forward, but stressed
that there's "a lot of common ground" among those who had gathered to
discuss the plans over tea in the neighborhood. He suggested local authorities
should step back in and steer the process.
Van den
Brandt acknowledged that the protests had slowed progress, but said the target
still stands to implement the plans in all 50 of Brussels' districts by 2030.
“The second
the benefits [of the changes] become visible, that’s going to have a positive
effect," she said. "Now we’re seeing sort of a negative domino
effect, but then we’re going to have sort of a positive one."
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário