The Scotsman

Congestion charge bid in Glasgow considered

● Opposition moves to beef up city’s new low emission zone

- By ALASTAIR DALTON

Motorists could have to pay to drive into Glasgow city centre after councillor­s backed a move to consider congestion charging in Scotland’s biggest city.

Labour’s plan calls for the council to commit to introducin­g road user charging by December 2020.

The developmen­t comes 13 years after Labour’s proposals for congestion charging in Edinburgh were defeated in a referendum. The party said revenue from tolls would help improve public transport.

Motorists could have to pay to drive into Glasgow city centre after councillor­s backed a move to consider congestion charging.

A call by opposition Labour members for road user charging to beef up the council’s pioneering low emission zone (LEZ) was backed by a committee.

The surprise move came as environmen­tal campaigner­s failed to get restrictio­ns on vehicles entering Scotland’s first LEZ brought forward.

Only one in five bus journeys will have to be on vehicles with the cleanest engines after the zone is launched on 31 December.

The proportion will increase by stages to 100 per cent in 2022, with “substantia­l” funding available to bus operators to retrofit older engines to make them cleaner.

The phasing of restrictio­ns for cars and other vehicles up to that date has yet to be announced.

LEZS are also due to be introduced in Edinburgh, Aberdeen and Dundee by 2020.

Glasgow City Council’s environmen­t, sustainabi­lity and carbon reduction city policy committee yesterday agreed to the Labour call for congestion charging.

The Snp-run Glasgow City Council said the proposal would now be considered by its city administra­tion committee.

Labour’s plan called for the council to commit to introducin­g road user charging by December 2020.

It comes 13 years after Labour’s plans for a congestion charging scheme in Edinburgh was defeated in a city referendum.

The party said revenue from road tolls would help improve public transport.

Another Labour proposal, for non-compliant buses using the zone being fined, was also agreed by the committee.

The council currently plans to tackle this by adding conditions to operators’ licences, which could be revoked by the Traffic Commission­er.

Glasgow Labour group transport spokesman Matt Kerr said: “I am very pleased with today’s result.

“We have turned the SNP’S ‘no ambition zone’ into a real and radical proposal to deliver the change that Glasgow needs.

“I am disappoint­ed that the SNP were the only party not to support the move.

“Today has shown that Glasgow Labour is, without a doubt, the only party with the vision and energy to continue building a Glasgow for the many. The level of congestion in Glasgow city centre does not work for anyone.”

Protesters from Friends of the Earth Scotland wearing gas masks staged a “die-in” outside the City Chambers in George Square to highlight the council’s “weak” LEZ plans to tackle air pollution.

Air pollution campaigner Emilia Hanna said: “Today’s decision means the people of Glasgow will be exposed to illegal levels of dirty air for years to come.

“These weak plans will create a ‘No Ambition Zone’ that will have little to no impact on the city’s air pollution problems.”

Anna Richardson, the council’s convener for sustainabi­lity and carbon reduction, said: “It’s recognised the introducti­on of a LEZ needs to be proportion­ate and managed in such a way that ambition and practicali­ty can be balanced.”

She said its phasing had to be done “at a robust yet realistic pace”.

 ?? PICTURE: JOHN DEVLIN ?? 0 Campaigner­s staged a ‘die-in’ in George Square, Glasgow yesterday
PICTURE: JOHN DEVLIN 0 Campaigner­s staged a ‘die-in’ in George Square, Glasgow yesterday

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom