Yorkshire Post

‘Scrap the monumental waste of money that is HS2, and invest in transformi­ng the existing network.’

Andrew Vine

- Andrew Vine

LIKE MANY another passenger on Yorkshire’s woeful rail network, I tend to approach every journey with the same sense of trepidatio­n as an appointmen­t with the dentist for root-canal treatment.

How painful an experience will it be today? Am I going to make it to a meeting on time, even if I set off an hour early? If so, am I going to arrive flustered and dishevelle­d as a result of overcrowdi­ng? Will the train even turn up?

As a lifelong fan of rail travel, and a firm believer that a properly-run network should be a priority for any government, I find my gradual loss of faith in the trains to take me where I need to go on time sad as well as a cause of annoyance.

But there is a solution which is staring the Government in the face whilst rail in Yorkshire and the rest of the North fails and lets passengers down.

It’s to scrap the monumental waste of money that is HS2, and instead invest in transformi­ng the existing network into one fit for the 21st century.

The cost would be a fraction of the eye-watering £56bn for high-speed rail and produce huge benefits here and now, not at some hypothetic­al point in the future.

HS2 is touted as the biggest infrastruc­ture project Britain has ever seen. It would be equally accurate to describe it as the most enormous white elephant that Government folly has yet conceived.

It won’t help commuters in Yorkshire’s town and cities get to work on time, or home afterwards, solve overcrowdi­ng or do anything for businesses on either side of the Pennines which need to recruit from a larger pool of people.

It won’t help the Northern Powerhouse realise its full potential because efficient links between the great cities of the North are immeasurab­ly more important than shaving a few minutes off journey times to London.

When set against the grim realities of the North’s rail network and need for wholesale improvemen­ts, HS2 looks increasing­ly like nothing more than a vastly expensive vanity project.

Just how expensive it could eventually prove is open to question. Last month, a leaked Cabinet Office report estimated that HS2 was likely to go as much as 60 per cent over budget and end up costing more than £80bn.

For good measure, the assessment by the Government’s Infrastruc­ture and Projects Authority described the scheme as “fundamenta­lly flawed”.

That’s entirely credible. It is a hallmark of major public projects in this country that the cost always soars above budget and they are rarely delivered on time. Sometimes problems cannot be anticipate­d, but in the case of HS2, nobody needs a crystal ball to see trouble ahead.

Little wonder that increasing numbers of Conservati­ve backbenche­rs are reportedly uneasy about HS2, and the likely winners being London and the South-East.

Scrapping HS2 also has the merit of saving £41bn on the scheduled cost, which could solve a lot of other problems.

Britain does not need HS2, which if it goes ahead will be a shiny new train set for transport ministers to play with, attracting all the attention and money whilst the existing network continues to crumble.

We can manage without it. But what we can’t manage without are proper regional rail services that move people around smoothly and efficientl­y so they can do their jobs and business can prosper.

That needs to be the Government’s priority. Alongside getting a grip of the whole rail system, and shaking up or sacking failing operators, investing in improving the existing infrastruc­ture is the only sensible course.

The Government should have the guts to cancel. Leave HS2 to the realms of computer simulation­s and glossy artists’ impression­s, and concentrat­e on making the trains run on time instead.

HS2 looks increasing­ly like nothing more than a vastly expensive vanity project.

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