Yorkshire Post

Business chiefs launch A64 upgrade campaign

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YORKSHIRE’S BUSINESS community has been told it must make its voice heard if it wants to guarantee the planned HS2 highspeed rail line is built to the region.

An audience of business people in Leeds were told doubts will hang over the stretch of the line from Birmingham to Yorkshire until the go-ahead for constructi­on is given.

MPs have already passed the law paving the way for phase one of the project from London to Birmingham and will shortly begin debating the Bill which will pave the way for the stretch from the Midlands to Crewe.

But there remain concerns among cities on the proposed eastern leg from Birmingham to Leeds, Sheffield and York, that it remains vulnerable to future government­s deciding to press ahead with the western side only.

Andrew Pritchard, policy director for the East Midlands Councils group, told the event: “That eastern leg, from Birmingham through the East Midlands to Yorkshire and then onto the North-East and Scotland is really, really crucial.

“It’s the part of HS2 that delivers the most economic benefits but it is also the last part to be built and there is a real challenge around that which we should not shy away from.”

Leeds City Council leader Judith Blake said the city was already seeing an impact from the prospect of HS2 arriving.

She told the event work was already under way to transform Leeds station and to build transport links with other parts of the region in readiness for HS2.

Coun Blake said there were “detractors” over HS2 and it was vital supporters “sharpen up” their arguments to make clear the benefits the project will have beyond the areas which will have stations on the line.

The event heard concerns that the case for the eastern leg of HS2 might be damaged by the lack of metro-mayors in Yorkshire to speak up for it.

Greater Manchester, the Liverpool City Region and the West Midlands were among areas to elect metro mayors in May as part of so-called devolution deals to take more control over their own affairs.

Sara Gilmore, chairman of the West and North Yorkshire Chamber of Commerce’s transport group, said: “We all want HS2, if we want the HS2 eastern leg to happen we all need to be saying the same things, continuall­y saying to Westminste­r, continuall­y lobbying for it.

“Whether we have metro-mayors or not doesn’t really matter if we all want the same thing and we say it loudly enough.”

The Conservati­ve General Election manifesto included a commitment “to strategic national investment­s including High Speed 2”.

The Queen’s Speech following the election included plans for a Bill to progress the section of line known as phase 2a from Birmingham to Crewe.

The eastern leg will stop at a parkway station in the East Midlands before heading north with a spur taking some services into Sheffield and the mainline continuing to Leeds and connecting to the existing network at York. “VITAL” ACTION to improve the traffic flow on Yorkshire’s most notorious transport bottleneck will help to boost the region’s economy and reduce the death toll, a high-level summit was told.

Business leaders and senior politician­s have thrown their weight behind a major new campaign to upgrade the A64 from York to Scarboroug­h.

Yesterday, at the launch of the A64 Growth Partnershi­p, an initiative backed by both the private and public sector, they argued that improvemen­ts are integral to the future success of east coast resorts where a number of significan­t job-creation schemes are in the pipeline.

Kevin Hollinrake, MP for Thirsk, Malton and Filey, said: “There are vital economic and tourism reasons why the A64 needs investment but there have also been tragic events.

“Couples crossing the road have died in similar circumstan­ces recently – bringing the number of deaths on the A64 over the past 12 months to 10.”

Scarboroug­h and Whitby MP Robert Goodwill said there were “desperate” queues at times on either side of the carriagewa­y and that “the single most important investment that can take place is the dual carriagewa­y all the way to Malton”.

Barry Dodd, chairman of the York, North Yorkshire and East Riding Enterprise Partnershi­p, added: “This is vital for the area. The east-west connection is dire, rail and road.

“If you live in West Yorkshire this is the leisure corridor in which you will have sat in a queue of vehicles on the A64.

“We need people to actively get behind this and push for dual carriagewa­y to Malton.”

Major companies such as Kingspan, McCain and Sirius Minerals have also given full backing to the A64 Growth Partnershi­p.

 ??  ?? Protests against the HS2 plans in Bramley. Business leaders have been urged to lobby for the line.
Protests against the HS2 plans in Bramley. Business leaders have been urged to lobby for the line.

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