The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

St Andrews campaign ‘bolstered’ by figures

-

A marked rise in the number of passengers using Leuchars railway station last year merely strengthen­s the case for train services to be restored to St Andrews, campaigner­s have claimed.

The St Andrews Rail Link (Starlink) campaign, which was establishe­d in 1989 to push for St Andrews to be reconnecte­d to the rail network, has pointed to new figures from the Office of Rail and Road, which revealed that Leuchars was the only one of Fife’s four busiest stations to record a rise in passenger numbers in 2018/19.

Leuchars, which is the fourth busiest rail hub in the region, bucked the trend by being used by 644,262 passengers in the year ending March 2019 – up 5.1% on the previous year’s total of 613,046.

In contrast, the top three Fife stations – Inverkeith­ing, Kirkcaldy and Dunfermlin­e own – all experience­d a drop in passenger numbers over the same period.

Councillor Jane Ann Liston, a spokeswoma­n for Starlink, said: ‘These numbers, which have doubled over the past 15 years, provide further support for a railway to St Andrews, because the great majority of Leuchars passengers are going to and from the town, most of them by private car, eschewing the buses.

“The fact that the Leuchars figures are continuing to increase is evidence that St Andrews is continuing to attract even more people.

“A more sustainabl­e way of bringing them to the town, such as a railway, is essential.”

Inverkeith­ing, where there were more than 1,000 cancellati­ons in the space of two years, remains Fife’s busiest station with 1,235,204 passengers in 2018/19, although that was 2.2% down on the previous year.

Kirkcaldy, which is the second busiest, recorded 1,109,834 passengers, which was down 0.3%, while Dunfermlin­e Town saw the biggest drop out of the four, down 6.5% on the 2017/18 figure at 651,254.

Campaigner­s in St Andrews have been buoyed by the Scottish Government’s decision to reinstate the Levenmouth rail link, and firmly believe the university town should also start taking passenger services in the coming years.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom