After more than three years of sustained pressure from Westminster Conservatives, Labour-led Westminster City Council has finally started issuing fines to dockless bike operators such as Lime and Forest for blocking pavements and obstructing pedestrians.
The move follows long-running calls from Westminster Conservative councillors for tougher action on dockless bikes, which are often left strewn across pavements, outside doorways and across crossings, creating hazards for older residents, wheelchair users, and families with pushchairs.
However, Westminster Conservatives warn that the Council’s approach still falls short of what is needed to resolve the issue once and for all. Conservative Group Leader Cllr Paul Swaddle said:
"After more than three years of pressure from Westminster Conservatives, Labour has finally caved and begun fining dockless bike operators for blocking our pavements. This is a welcome step; but it is only happening because Westminster Conservative councillors refused to let the issue be ignored.
Dockless bikes continue to be dumped across Westminster, obstructing pavements, blocking dropped kerbs and creating daily hazards for disabled residents, older people and families with young children. Fining operators is a start, but it will not fix the problem unless Labour finally commits to real enforcement.
The people of Westminster do not want token fines from Labour, they want real action. They want bikes removed swiftly when they cause obstructions. They want operators held properly accountable. And they want a Council that treats this as a priority, not an afterthought.
If Westminster Conservatives are elected in May 2026, we will take this issue seriously and deliver the enforcement that people deserve but Labour has failed to deliver.
I will keep pressing until Labour-led Westminster has a proper enforcement regime that keeps our pavements safe and ensures operators take responsibility. Labour must stop making excuses and get a grip."
Conservatives are calling for stronger enforcement powers, the removal of persistently offending bikes, and clear accountability for operators who fail to keep pavements clear.
The campaign to fix the problem continues, with Westminster Conservatives urging residents to back their petition calling for tougher action and safer streets.
