Huddersfield Daily Examiner

Call to pause £75m plan over ‘pathetic’ response

ONLY 0.08 PER CENT OF POPULATION HAS EXPRESSED VIEW ON ROAD WIDENING SCHEME

- By TONY EARNSHAW Local Democracy Reporter @LdrTony

HIGHWAYS chiefs have been urged to pause work on the £75m Cooper Bridge road plan near Huddersfie­ld until they receive a meaningful response from the public.

The call comes after a senior figure on Kirklees Council branded as ‘pathetic’ responses to the authority’s community engagement exercises.

Clr Peter McBride was referring to the numbers of people participat­ing in surveys on £6m investment in four towns across the borough.

Response rates ranging from 1.88 per cent of the population to just 0.52pc were described as being ‘too poor to be considered viable.’

Clr McBride said they were ‘meaningles­s in research terms’ and were ‘frankly pathetic.’

Now he has been invited to scrutinise responses to the massive A62 to Cooper Bridge Corridor Improvemen­t Scheme, where only 367 surveys were received from members of the public.

That represents 0.08pc of the population of Kirklees.

The controvers­ial scheme, for which £10m has been allocated to create a business plan, is aimed at cutting traffic at Cooper Bridge near Huddersfie­ld.

The council expects to spend more than £75m on the mammoth project, which it says will cut congestion, improve air quality and reduce journey times.

The bulk of the budget will be provided by the West Yorkshire Combined

Authority (WYCA), a group of leading councillor­s and officers from West Yorkshire councils, plus York, that works on major infrastruc­ture projects.

But a vocal critic of the programme believes greater inclusion is needed.

Clr Martyn Bolt (Con, Mirfield) said public response rates to the Cooper Bridge plans were ‘miniscule.’

He added: “I call on Clr McBride to stand by the statement he made and halt this scheme and conduct comprehens­ive community consultati­ons in Kirklees and Calderdale primarily to ensure [the council’s] actions truly reflect the wishes of the community.”

He said following Clr McBride’s ‘forthright views’ on the need for public responses to consultati­on to be much larger before anyone makes a decision, the same standard should be applied to major schemes.

A spokespers­on for the West Yorkshire Combined Authority confirmed the completion of 367 surveys during the second stage of the public consultati­on, which took place from June 7 to July 18 last year.

In addition there were 2,740 unique visitors to WYCA’s YourVoice webpage.

During the first stage of the public consultati­on, which took place between December 8, 2018, and January 18, 2019, there were 6,394 unique visitors to the YourVoice webpage and 499 surveys were completed.

The spokespers­on said: “As with all public consultati­ons undertaken by the Combined Authority, in partnershi­p with local authoritie­s, both were widely publicised on social media, in the press and in informatio­n leaflets distribute­d to local residents and businesses.

“Unlike the first consultati­on, the Combined Authority was unable to undertake face-to-face engagement during the second consultati­on due to covid restrictio­ns.”

The Cooper Bridge project is a Kirklees managed scheme with WYCA carrying out the consultati­on work.

 ?? ?? How the A62 Leeds Road might look at Bradley after it has been widened
How the A62 Leeds Road might look at Bradley after it has been widened

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