Manchester Evening News

Mayor: we won’t accept a charging Clean air Zone

BURNHAM DENIES ‘CLIMB DOWN’ OVER CONTROVERS­IAL SCHEME

- By JOSEPH TIMAN

ANDY Burnham has set out his ‘red line’ as Greater Manchester goes into negotiatio­ns with the government over the revised Clean Air Zone plans.

The Labour mayor said local leaders will not accept a charging Clean Air Zone, calling for cash incentives instead – but he dismissed claims of a ‘climb down.’

It comes after the controvers­ial scheme remains under review with seven weeks left for the city-region to agree a new proposal with the government. But the fast-approachin­g deadline of July means the public may not be consulted on the revised Clean Air Zone proposal until after it is agreed.

Mr Burnham yesterday set out Greater Manchester’s ‘red line’ ahead of negotiatio­ns with the government.

He said: “We will not accept a charging Clean Air Zone in Greater Manchester. If that is what the government wants, it will have to impose it on us.”

Mr Burnham will now write to all Greater Manchester MPs, asking them to support this position and calling on Conservati­ves to stop ‘playing politics.’ The mayor criticised his opponents of spreading ‘misinforma­tion’ about the Clean Air Zone and who is responsibl­e for it ahead of the recent local elections.

However, he denied his latest position on the Clean Air Zone is a ‘climb down.’ He said: “I personally don’t see how you can possibly call it a climb down. We had to agree a plan with the government prepandemi­c. We didn’t have a choice. We had to agree a plan with them and we did, working in good faith.

“But a plan agreed pre-pandemic clearly was not going to work post-pandemic and we were the ones who blew the whistle on that – not the government. [We] went back to the government and said the position isn’t workable and we’ve negotiated the position that allows for a non-charging zone.”

Greater Manchester’s Clean Air Zone, which was set to start charging certain vehicles from May 30, was paused following a public backlash earlier this year. Local authority leaders asked the government to delay the deadline by which councils had to

bring air pollution down below legal limits from 2024 to 2026. It comes after research found that supply chain issues in the vehicle market caused by Covid meant the cost of new vans had increased by up to 60 per cent. Mr Burnham said no charges would be needed if the deadline was extended by two years – but he claims the government only offered a one-year delay at first. Together with the nine Labour leaders in Greater Manchester, the mayor wrote to the prime minister after the two-year delay was agreed, calling for all CAZ charges to be scrapped – and this had the backing of Bolton’s Tory

leader too. But writing back eight weeks later, Boris Johnson did not rule out charges.

Transport for Greater Manchester must now present evidence to the government that air quality compliance can be achieved without any charges.

Instead, the mayor is arguing for a non-charging Category B scheme which would identify the non-compliant buses, lorries and taxis using Greater Manchester’s roads and offer owners funding to upgrade vehicles.

Under this scheme, vans would no longer be eligible for any CAZ funding.

The mayor said all CAZ infrastruc­ture will be ‘switched off’ when air quality compliance is achieved and the Automatic Number Plate Recognitio­n cameras could be given to GMP.

 ?? ?? Andy Burnham denied a ‘climb down’ over the CAZ scheme
Andy Burnham denied a ‘climb down’ over the CAZ scheme

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