The Irish one has aspirational dates.
The Scottish one (and NI and Welsh ones) have guidance on the situation for implementation and a note saying "we may have to step backwards" along with plans of what to do at each stage with a note saying "these may not all come in at the same time, and we may need to fiddle with it"
England has a powerpoint slide...
It's really an exercise in trying to provide a clear enough guide, people are taking them as out and out time tables though hence the Yoons scream "WHYS THERE NO DATES?".
I'd suggest the devolved administrations have been overly specific in reaction to Westminsters shambolic rambling.
When I saw the RoI timetable the first thing I thought was "how the feck can you put dates on these?"
When I saw the Cycling Ireland (RoI) timetable the first thing I thought was "well done for having a plan" and noted that the dates were tentative and carefully/sensibly caveated. I also noted the longing envy of the fact that riding in 'the North' was unhindered by irrational (from a risk mitigation PoV) 'no more than 5km/20km from home' limitations.
A plan, any plan, is much better for all parties:
1) those formulating a 'road map' to resumption (the Audax UK Board);
2) the organisers of events (DIY Regional organisers, Permanent organisers and calendar event organisers); and
3) riders looking forward and aspiring to ride in an 'audax' construct.
Reasons (some with more merit than others) like:
'we don't know enough',
'lots of things are unclear and may change',
'we need to see what other bodies decide' (whose activities involve two (mainly) human-powered wheels but have no interest in niche non-competitive, non-money making activities)
are why consideration needs to be analytic, yet nevertheless come to a resolved way ahead, with dates dependent on national progress (eg shops opening), shared with members.
A list of the additional COVID-19 related hazards to organisers, to riders, and/or to Audax UK's reputation would be a useful part of the decision framework. Perhaps we could crowd-generate a list, to allow the Board to feel comfort that their list already contains all the rational items.