Evening Telegraph (First Edition)

Goodfellow­s bakery boss fires warning on impact of LEZ

- BY PAUL MALIK

BAKERY boss Martin Goodfellow has warned the impact of introducin­g the LEZ is like “using a sledgehamm­er to crack a nut” and will harm city centre businesses.

Mr Goodfellow, sales and marketing director for Goodfellow & Steven, warned car use across the city would actually increase, claiming customers will choose to avoid the city centre shopping area and head to out-of-town retail parks instead.

Dundee’s Low Emission Zone (LEZ) comes into force on May 30. It follows Glasgow as being one of the first Scottish cities to restrict the type of vehicle allowed into the boundary.

Goodfellow & Steven left its city centre location in 2020, as the pandemic contribute­d to a commercial downturn.

LEZS reduce pollution levels and improve air quality by stopping the most polluting vehicles entering a specific area, according to Dundee City Council.

There has been no significan­t impact analysis reports, in particular to business, trade and city centre footfall, since the introducti­on of Glasgow’s LEZ.

Anecdotal evidence from Glasgow business owners has been reported.

Recent research published by Dundee University shows reducing harmful pollutants could result in 40% fewer child respirator­y admissions to hospital.

Mr Goodfellow said he was concerned data collated ahead of the LEZ policy drafting was recorded pre-pandemic.

As a result, he said, it did not take into account the dramatic changes to the city’s retail landscape.

“I am extremely concerned with the imminent introducti­on of a LEZ,” he said. “As a business owner, I attended a business feedback session in 2019 and completed an online survey to air the views of my company.

“The data on air quality upon which the decision is grounded is data recorded pre-covid, so one wonders how accurate a picture it now presents.

“The worst emissions were recorded as a result of diesel fumes from buses in the Seagate.

“The other area of concern is the circle at the top of the Marketgait which is part of the ring road, not the city centre.

“Much of that traffic never goes into the centre. Against this background, the blanket LEZ coverage of the city centre seems tantamount to using a sledgehamm­er to crack a nut and in the process, sacrificin­g our struggling, age old city centre on the altar of politics.

“The introducti­on of an LEZ would reduce the number of visitors and shoppers into Dundee City Centre (and) increase the number of shoppers using out-of-town shopping centres. That will increase car use, not reduce it.

“I want to see an overall reduction in car use and pollution but do not see this as being a solution in Dundee.

“Retailing should be a path by which young entreprene­urs can find their feet and follow their dreams, with themselves as masters of their own destiny.

“The Scottish Government and local authoritie­s should be concentrat­ing on incentivis­ing city centre use, not making it a no-go zone so they can tick their box marked green credential­s while actually making the problems of vehicle use even worse in the city and country as a whole.

“They should concentrat­e on supporting local authoritie­s to improve public transport, limit bus transporta­tion to electric vehicles and balance the tax burden between city centre and out of town locations to provide fairer, competitiv­e trading.”

Plans to restrict certain vehicles would help “accelerate” the city’s compliance with nitrogen dioxide reduction requiremen­ts, the council said.

They said: “Despite improvemen­ts in air quality since the introducti­on of the Dundee City Council Air Quality Action Plan (AQAP) in 2011, there remain locations in the city where the Scottish Air Quality Objective (AQO) for annual mean nitrogen dioxide (NO2) levels (40ug/m3) are not being met.

“While the number of exceedance­s of the NO2 annual mean objective has decreased significan­tly in the past 10 years, the LEZ is to be introduced in the city to further accelerate Dundee’s required compliance with the objective levels.

“The LEZ is also being introduced to contribute to the council meeting greenhouse emissions reductions targets as outlined within the Dundee Climate Action Plan published in 2019, and to help promote the city as an inclusive and desirable place to live, invest, visit and learn.”

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 ?? ?? ‘SLEDGEHAMM­ER TO CRACK A NUT’: Martin Goodfellow said Dundee’s LEZ ‘will increase car use, not reduce it’.
‘SLEDGEHAMM­ER TO CRACK A NUT’: Martin Goodfellow said Dundee’s LEZ ‘will increase car use, not reduce it’.

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