Derby Telegraph

Rail depot is ‘a mix of shipyard, steelworks and Wembley Stadium’

NOISE AND LIGHTS CAUSE FAMILIES ‘TERRIBLE DISTURBANC­E’

- By EDDIE BISKNELL Local democracy reporter eddie.bisknell@reachplc.com

A DERBYSHIRE council has backed a plan telling Network Rail to move from a station-side site causing “terrible disturbanc­e” to families.

Residents and councillor­s living close to Grindlefor­d station in the Peak District say that increasing disruption from Network Rail’s maintenanc­e compound has become intolerabl­e.

The station, next to the entrance to the Totley Tunnel, sits on the Sheffield to Manchester railway line, and Network Rail has run its compound for around 20 years.

However, now Derbyshire Dales district councillor­s want to give the national transport body its marching orders due to the frequent comings and goings of 40 HGVs loading and unloading tonnes of rail ballast and 30-foot sections of rail.

Residents have sent photos and footage of the disruption caused by the compound – in the Hope Valley near Hathersage – which show loud, floodlit operations being carried out at night-time and during the early hours.

Cllr Peter O’Brien, who represents the Hathersage and Eyam ward, said that in the early hours of Saturday, Sunday and Monday each week the Grindlefor­d station site is “akin to living next to a combinatio­n of a shipyard on the Clyde, forge-masters in Sheffield and under the Wembley Stadium floodlight­s”.

He added: “Network Rail use the former siding area as a base for six separate engineerin­g and maintenanc­e teams, these teams work throughout the night on many weekends a year and occasional­ly on weekdays.

“They have been doing this for 20 years, but during that time the level of activity has increased 20 times to the point where it has become intolerabl­e for residents.

“Families’ lives are being made a misery to the point where finding a new base for Network Rail’s operations is the only answer.

“I say the only answer because residents have held many meetings over the years with Network Rail to try to find a way of working which suits all parties.

“Both our previous and current MP have been involved, and our environmen­tal health service have a thick file of the complaints and continues to be engaged, probably on a weekly basis, but there has been no improvemen­t, if anything the disturbanc­e seems to get worse.”

Cllr Mark Chapman said the situation in Grindlefor­d “must be horrendous”, while Cllr Chris Furness dubbed the apparent living conditions “pretty awful”.

Cllr Mike Ratcliffe said: “We need to use our powers to persuade a large transport company to do something about the harm it is causing to the community there. It is very much like a Goliath and David situation.

“We have a responsibi­lity to do our utmost to defend your rights (the rights of residents) and indeed to try and alleviate the problems that you have. We are not looking for huge legal costs or to somehow take this to the High Court and incur all sorts of financial penalties, we are simply trying to point out the error of their ways.”

Chairman, Cllr Sue Bull, said: “Unfortunat­ely there are too many big fish in the sea that us little ones don’t get to fight, but we will all get behind this and, try as we might, hope some kind of solution comes from it.”

Cllr O’Brien said he hoped Network Rail would engage properly and “take rather more seriously their attempts to mitigate the terrible disturbanc­e that they bring to our residents”.

Grindlefor­d parish councillor John Davies, who moved to a cottage close to the station 36 years ago, said: “The small community living around Grindlefor­d Station have suffered years of increasing disruption, day and night, from the ever expanding use made by Network Rail of what once was a disused railway sidings.

“Having hit the buffers in our attempts to communicat­e and negotiate with Network Rail, the opportunit­y to take our case to Derbyshire Dales District Council, through our local councillor Peter O’Brien, felt like a last chance – so we were absolutely delighted to get unanimous support from the council for Peter’s motion. “We will await the response from Network Rail, but hopefully there is now some light at the end of the tunnel.”

In a statement to the council, he said the compound had once been a dark area home to wildlife, but this “is no longer the case”.

He said: “The juxtaposit­ion of the National Trust posters on Grindlefor­d Station platform inviting visitors to enjoy ‘a breath of fresh air’ and ‘peaceful views’ with pictures of scenery and wildlife, and the industrial landscape Network Rail have created right next to the platform could not be more striking.

“The result of this constant disruption has been that we are often unable to sleep or enjoy the sort of peace and quiet in our gardens that you’d expect in this location.

“As a result, a number of residents are suffering from anxiety or depression.

“We are frustrated that five-plus years of complaints to and discussion­s with Network Rail, and involvemen­t of the council’s environmen­tal health teams, have led to no improvemen­t in the situation – in fact, it has got more intense with our complaints falling on deaf ears.”

Families’ lives are being made a misery to the point where finding a new base for Network Rail’s operations is the only answer

 ?? JOHN DAVIES ?? The Network Rail compound at Grindlefor­d Railway Station in the Peak District.
JOHN DAVIES The Network Rail compound at Grindlefor­d Railway Station in the Peak District.

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