Transport plans “must put disabled people at their heart”

12.29 | 14 July 2025 |

Disabled people are in danger of being further excluded in society if future changes to transport do not involve them and address their needs, according to a new report.

The Transforming Mobility research was led by Sustrans, in partnership with Transport for All. The project was funded by the Motability Foundation. 

The report includes findings from a 2024 survey of 1,107 disabled people across the UK, and workshops with disabled people in Birmingham, Edinburgh and Oxford.

It found that half (48%) of disabled people think the government is not doing enough to ensure accessibility is a priority.

The survey also found that 72% of disabled people support giving greater priority and investment to low-cost solutions.

The report identifies five big ideas, designed to improve safety and accessibility on streets, and benefit everyone.

One of these is legalising side road zebra crossings.

By law, all zebra crossings in the UK must currently include belisha beacons, yellow flashing lights at either end of a crossing, and zig-zag approach markings.

Side road zebras, commonly used across Europe, do not include beacons or zig-zag markings.

This ensures they can be used at a side road junction, are quick to install and much cheaper. 

A two-year trial of side road zebra crossings in Manchester found that drivers give way 65% more times than when the road markings are not present.

The four other ideas mentioned in the report are:

  • Rebalance streets – prioritising through traffic on some roads while calming others can make journeys quicker for buses and cars. Nearly two-thirds of disabled people back councils setting clear plans for how streets are used.
  • Free up public space – reducing unnecessary visitor parking creates room for benches, trees and wider pavements. Only 22% of disabled people oppose cutting on-street parking, excluding disabled bays.
  • Create mobility hubs – join up walking, wheeling and cycling with buses, trams and trains in one place. 81% of disabled people want smoother, simpler connections between modes.
  • Fund access panels – pay disabled people to help shape local transport plans. Scotland is already doing it. 65% support giving councils the funding to follow suit.

Tim Burns, head of research at Sustrans, said: “The next ten years will see exciting changes in how we move around our cities, as local authorities respond to the UK’s economic, health and environmental challenges with visionary transport plans.

“To be truly transformative, these plans need strong local leadership and must put disabled people at their heart.

“We know disabled people face greater barriers to getting around and accessing the things they need to live well – while also wanting to travel more sustainably.

“Our report highlights tried and tested ideas, increasingly being adopted across the UK. Disabled people want transport to change.

“When disabled people are represented, the outcomes are better for everyone.”

Dr Ruth Cumming, senior research officer at Transport for All, said: “We all need the freedom to travel – for work, for school, for shopping – and to make those journeys easily and safely.

“Disabled people are often blocked from that. Including disabled people as experts in transport and urban planning ensures our requirements are built into developments, creating streets, communities and cities that we can all use and enjoy.”


 

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