The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

City-centric deals may see transport projects overlooked

MIDDLE: Fife may not be best placed to benefit

- fife office chief reporter twitter: @c-csmith

It is great to see work on city deals for the Tay and Edinburgh areas progressin­g, with their promises of vast riches for Fife.

The Tay Cities Deal could see up to 15,000 jobs created, with more than £1.8 billion of planned investment, while the Edinburgh version represents a deal worth £1.1 billion which could create up to 21,000 jobs.

On the face of it, it looked like Fife was well-placed to get the best of both worlds by being part of the wider “region”, with the Tay to the north and Edinburgh to the south.

However, being stuck in the middle may not be all it’s cracked up to be.

Fife will undoubtedl­y feel some benefit and many projects aimed at accelerati­ng growth in the kingdom will get a hugely welcome financial boost.

There will be job creation, there will be growth, there will be initiative­s to tackle poverty and there will be schemes to promote inclusion.

Neverthele­ss, there is a fear citycentri­c deals could see vital major transport improvemen­ts fall by the wayside.

It is one of the few guaranteed ways to ensure the deals would see growth spread equally across the region. The early signs are not good.

It is nothing short of a scandal that Levenmouth and St Andrews do not have rail links, considerin­g their importance to industry, tourism and education, and these should have been put close to the top of priority lists many years ago. We’re still waiting.

It remains unclear if improvemen­ts in west Fife, such as the Dunfermlin­e to Glasgow link, a new rail halt at Halbeath park and ride or even the Rosyth park and choose scheme will get the fillip they need.

While we must guard against parochiali­sm, better transport links from Fife into Edinburgh should be prioritise­d above the £140 million mooted for the A720 city bypass at the Sheriffhal­l roundabout and transport improvemen­ts across west Edinburgh.

Fife is ploughing £30 million of taxpayers’ cash into the Edinburgh deal alone, yet it seems the most we can expect are knock-on benefits from things going on over the Forth.

One MSP previously suggested the deal favours Edinburgh to the extent Fife’s place as a “car-dependent commuter belt for the capital” will be cemented. As things stand, it is hard to disagree.

Get in touch with your local office at Fife or send a letter to The Courier at letters@thecourier.co.uk

 ??  ?? It remains unclear if a new rail halt at Halbeath park and ride will get the fillip it needs.
It remains unclear if a new rail halt at Halbeath park and ride will get the fillip it needs.
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