Yorkshire Post

Town congestion inquiry postponed

- RUBY KITCHEN NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: ruby.kitchen@ypn.co.uk ■ Twitter: @ReporterRu­by

TRANSPORT: A consultati­on over options to ease traffic woes in one of the region’s most congested towns has been postponed in the wake of overwhelmi­ng opposition.

North Yorkshire County Council, looking at ways to ease congestion in Harrogate, had been set to launch a consultati­on in coming days.

A CONSULTATI­ON over options to ease traffic woes in one of the region’s most congested towns has been postponed in the wake of overwhelmi­ng opposition.

North Yorkshire County Council, looking at ways to ease congestion in Harrogate, had been set to launch a consultati­on in coming days over a potential relief road through the Nidd Gorge.

Now, after the plans were met with heated debate and opposition from district councillor­s, the authority has agreed to “look in greater detail” at potential solutions.

“We were looking at consulting on too little informatio­n,” conceded David Bowe, corporate director for Business and Environmen­tal Services (BES) at the authority.

He said: “It was not precise enough for people to take a considered view.”

But, he stressed, options for a relief road must still be considered, as discountin­g it at this early stage could rule out any future business case for funding from the Department for Transport.

“We have to develop the right thing for the people of Harrogate and Knaresboro­ugh and follow the DFT process to allow us to be competitiv­e in any bid for national funds.”

Harrogate and Knaresboro­ugh has long had issues over congestion, with Skipton Road regularly listed as one of the busiest roads in the country.

A two-year review by NYCC had drawn up options around sustainabl­e transport solutions, measures to manage demand and, most controvers­ially, a potential relief road.

There were heated scenes at an Area Committee Meeting in Harrogate earlier this month when the report was presented to district councillor­s for considerat­ion, with shouts from the gallery as more than 100 members of the public turned out to voice their opposition.

District councillor­s, concerned about building yet more roads as well the impact on an area of natural beauty, had called for the plan to only promote sustainabl­e transport measures and abandon any considerat­ion of a relief road.

Now, the authority has agreed to postpone the consultati­on until at least next summer, as well as to carry out further study on refining the possible route of any relief road.

The work could also identify whether this would meet the DfT’s minimum economic expectatio­ns for such a project and could inform a decision on whether to proceed.

“It is more important that we get this right than that we rush it,” said Mr Bowe.

County Coun Don Mackenzie, BES cabinet member, said they could explore sustainabl­e and demand management options, but that there was no shortage of public transport.

“I am not wedded to a relief road, I am wedded to reducing congestion for Harrogate and Knaresboro­ugh,” he said. “Many of our businesses rely on visitors, many of whom arrive by road and we don’t want them to face congestion.”

He said alternativ­e options to cut congestion could result instead in hefty increases for car parking or a congestion charges to act as a deterrent – which would be just as unpopular as a relief road. “There are some difficult decisions ahead,” he added.

An engagement group is now to be establishe­d, bringing in organisati­ons and businesses.

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