Evening Telegraph (First Edition)

Traffic ban to curb pollution queried

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A SENIOR councillor has questioned proposals to ban high polluting vehicles from parts of Perthshire.

The creation of a London-style low emission zone is being considered to tackle long-standing air quality problems in Perth city centre and Crieff.

The move could see certain vehicles being blocked from – or charged for – entering these areas.

Perth and Kinross Council has received £140,000 of Scottish Government cash to fight pollution problems.

It comes after Perth’s Atholl Street was named as one of the most polluted roads in Scotland.

Environmen­t committee convener Alan Grant said the main reason for the ongoing problem was that both Atholl Street and Main Street in Crieff were lined with high buildings, which trap pollution.

The Strathmore councillor told the committee: “I have a concern about the idea of effectivel­y saying to drivers of certain types of vehicles, you can’t enter this area.

“I don’t think we can physically stop them, but I understand there are specialist bits of equipment which can snap a photo and use it to trace them with their registrati­on number.”

Councillor Murray Lyle added: “Our response to this needs to be in proportion to the problem.”

Councillor­s agreed to set up a corporate air quality working group to progress a solution, in line with the Scottish Government’s Clean Air for Scotland strategy.

The move has been backed by Friends of the Earth Tayside, which has previously called for a traffic ban in Dundee.

Spokesman Andrew Llanwarne said: “As a society, we have become much more dependent on using private cars, for the convenienc­e and speed of travel, although this means we are less active than we should be.

“Measures to encourage people to cycle and walk more often can help them improve their health directly, whilst also reducing levels of air pollution.”

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