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Transport for London - Transport Crime in London
Number of crimes and crime rate by type of public transport, including bus, LU / DLR, London Overground, and London Tramlink. Monthly data released 3 months at a time at end of each quarter. The BTP is responsible for policing the rail network in London, including the TfL managed London Underground (LU), the Docklands Light Railway (DLR), London Tramlink and the London Overground (LO) services. Crime figures for the LU, DLR, London Tramlink and LO have been provided by the BTP. Crime figures for LU and DLR are reported together as these networks are policed by the same division of the BTP. The BTP only deals with crime relating to the rail and Tramlink network The MPS is responsible for policing the rest of London’s transport network, including the bus network. The figures reported for the bus network are based on official MPS figures for bus-related crime unless otherwise stated. There is no distinct category of ’bus crime’ in the MPS crime recording system. Recorded crime data is extracted from the MPS system using a complex query that searches all MPS crime for transport venue codes and those that have the word bus, bus stop, bus station and transport related words somewhere in the electronic case file. For this reason, some crimes that did not occur on the bus network will be included in the figures. This is different from the BTP as all crimes dealt with by the BTP and included on their crime recording system relate directly to the rail network. The crime volume and rate figures displayed by month are accurate according to the month they were extracted from police and TfL systems and are subject to revision due to late reporting of crimes and adjustment of crime and passenger figures. The full financial year total of figures will differ slightly as they will reflect the most accurate and up to date crime and passenger data available; hence the monthly figures here should not be used to generate full financial year totals. The adjusted financial year figures are published in the annual TfL Crime Statistics Bulletin available here. Data will be updated on a quarterly basis, showing monthly breakdowns of crime volume and rate of crime per million passenger journeys. The rate of crime per million passenger journeys is calculated by the dividing the volume of crimes by the number of passenger journeys multiplied by one million. A crime rate per million passenger journeys was unavailable for London Overground prior to April 2011 due to lack of accurate passenger journey information across the entire London Overground network. This dataset is included in the Greater London Authority's Night Time Observatory. Click here to find out more.
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Greater London Authority - Annual percentage change in passengers
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Annual percentage change in passengers travelling on London underground and buses.
Transport for London - London Underground Signals Passed at Danger
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The number of signals passed at danger by London Underground or on London Underground's infrastructure. The number of signals passed at danger are reported, with details of the line, location, date of occurrence, the delay (minutes) incurred to the service and a brief description of the incident. The TfL Group Health Safety Report is available in the TfL Publications and Reports webpage. This includes a report on signals passed at danger on London Underground. This dataset currently contains incidents for period 1 in 2011/12. The complete data for periods 1 to 13 in 2010/11 is also available.
Greater London Authority - Travel Patterns and Trends, London
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This spreadsheet summarises of the key travel patterns and trends relating to the TFL network and Airports around London. Some of the borough level data has been analysed using these interactive charts. Click on the image to open. The first stack graph shows the spread of mode of travel for each borough. In Kensington and Chelsea over 44 per cent of journeys are made on foot, in Bexley 59 per cent of journeys are in a car/motorcycle, and in Hackney over a 25 per cent of journeys are by bus. The second graph shows the proportion of all road casualties by road user type and borough in 2010. The City of London has the highest proportion of casualties for pedestrians, and cyclists. Some of the airports data has been presented in this one page factsheet that highlights some important facts about flights and passengers at London’s airports. The number one country where people have either come from or going to is the United States. List of tables included in the spreadsheet: 1 Aggregate travel volumes in Greater London. Estimated daily average number of journey stages, 1993-2009 2 Modal shares of daily journey stages in London, 2009 3 Annual passenger kilometres travelled by public transport (millions), London, 2008/09 - 2010/11 4 Annual journey stages by public transport (millions), 1991/92 - 2010/11 5 Index of London road traffic, major and minor roads, all motor vehicles, 2000-2009 6 Trends in road casualties, by personal injury severity, London and GB, 1991-2010 7 London road casualties by mode of travel, 2010 8 Trends in cycle flows on the TLRN, annualised indices, 2000/01 - 2010/11 9 People entering central London in the weekday morning peak, 1978 - 2009 10 Car ownership in Inner and Outer London, 2009/10 11 Hours of serious and severe disruption London-wide, 2009/10 12 Number of road works undertaken on the TLRN, Sep 2009 - Oct 2010 13 London Underground: scheduled and operated train kilometres, 1995/96 - 2009/10 14 London Underground - operated train kilometres (millions) by line, 2009/10 15 Average number of passengers per bus, train or tram, 2001/02 - 2009/10 16 Public transport fares - UK and London compared, 1994/95 - 2009/10 17 Air freight moved through London's principal airports, 1993 - 2009 18 Terminal passengers by London area airport, in millions, 2000, 2010 19 Terminal passengers by London area airport, 1990 - 2010 20 Terminal passengers by flight's country of origin or destination, 2010 21 Road Casualties by Severity and Road User Type, by Borough 2010 22 Data used in the Interactive Chart - Number of trips, distribution of trips by mode and average travel time from home to work, 2007/2008 to 2009/10 (3-year moving average) 23 Data used for Air Transport Factsheet - International terminal passengers at London airports, 2010 - All terminal passengers at London airports, in millions, 2000, 2010 - Terminal passengers at London airports by origin or destination of the flight, 2010 - Number of UK flights and passenger by London airport, 2010 Most data is from the annual report Travel in London 3, Transport for London. Further information, reports and data from the Travel in London series can be found on the TFL website.
Transport for London - Pedal Cyclist Casualties, Killed and Seriously Injured
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Pedal Cyclist Casualties in London, Killed and Seriously Injured, 1989-2014. Data shows cyclists who were killed, serious injured and slight injured. Data presented is for personal injury road traffic collisions occurring on the public highway, and reported to the police, in accordance with the Stats 19 national reporting system. Click here to visit the Transport for London Road Safety pages
Transport for London - London Underground Performance Reports
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Transport For Londons's key London Underground performance measures (since May-11). The key measures of underground performance contained in the Excel spreadsheet are: Total operated kilometres, Total number of lost customer hours (LCH) (all causes), Average excess journey time, and Percentage of scheduled operated. More indicators are available from the TFL monthly performance data Almanac. Also available from TFL are a list of tube stations containing passenger entry and exit statistics. London Underground conducts surveys each year. We count the number of people using our service, where they travel to and from and how long their journeys last. TFL also monitor performance and assets, measuring how far trains have travelled and how many trains, lifts and escalators are in service. TFL are committed to providing passengers with details of how well the network is working and regularly publish a performance update. This is updated every four weeks - defined as a period - and gives figures for a range of service and network-related matters. The following information is provided on the TfL website: 1) A PDF report of the latest periods performance 2) Spreadsheet reports (almanac) of historic performance data dating back to 2002 There are also links to other reports of interest (station entry/exit figures, Tube upgrade plan and Quarterly Investment Programme reports). This data package is similar to the information previously made available on the Datastore as part of a London Assembly Scrutiny investigation in 2011.