The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Councillor Braden Davy

RAILWAY: Friends of the Earth Scotland joins councillor in arguing for a return of several stretches

- GRAEME STRACHAN gstrachan@thecourier.co.uk

at Brechin Railway Station yesterday after Friends of the Earth backed the campaign to reopen Angus railway lines and stations closed after the Beeching report. Picture: Gareth Jennings.

Friends of the Earth Scotland is backing calls to get Beeching’s axed railway lines back on track in Angus.

It is more than 50 years since Dr Richard Beeching’s report was published, spelling the end of more than 2,300 stations, and around 6,000 miles of railway line.

In the years since, groups from across the UK have been fighting to bring back their community’s rail links including reopening forgotten Angus lines to increase jobs and growth.

Forfar Conservati­ve councillor Braden Davy called for Tay Cities region deal cash to be used to investigat­e a return of rail to Forfar and Brechin.

Friends of the Earth Scotland air pollution campaigner Gavin Thomson said: “Restoring many of the train routes brutally closed by the Beeching Reports would mean better-connected communitie­s and aid our efforts to cut climate emissions by helping people leave the car at home.

“The transport sector creates the most climate pollution in Scotland, largely due to traffic on our roads, and its emissions have barely reduced since 1990.

“Decades of political decisions geared towards increasing car use are damaging our health via air pollution and belching out emissions threatenin­g our climate.

“Government needs to shift the balance of transport spending away from spending ever more billions on bigger roads and towards affordable, reliable public transport that gets people where they need to go.”

Brechin closed for passenger traffic during the early 1950s but remained open to freight traffic until final closure by British Rail in 1981.

The Stanley-kinnaber junction line closed in 1967 after Beeching published the second of his two reports that would change Britain’s railway system forever.

When the 46-mile line closed, over two-thirds of it was initially retained.

The 26 miles from Stanley to Forfar and the five miles from Kinnaber to Bridge of Dun and on to Brechin were both still in use into the 1980s.

Forfar eventually lost its sparse freight traffic in 1982, Brechin having done so a year earlier.

Scotrail managing director Alex Haynes said: “The growth of the Borders railway is actually accelerati­ng which means we are going to have to operate longer trains on this route and I think there is more growth to come as well.

“The restoratio­n of the line had already impacted communitie­s along its route in a very positive way.”

Mr Davy said: “We need to think big for Angus, and this endorsemen­t shows we are on the right path to future-proof our local economy

“In addition to bringing new investment, we can take cars off the road, ease congestion­s and reduce carbon emissions.”

“Government needs to shift the balance of transport spending away from spending ever more billions on bigger roads and towards affordable, reliable public transport that gets people where they need to go. GAVIN THOMSON

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 ?? Picture: Gareth Jennings. ?? Forfar Conservati­ve councillor Braden Davy at Brechin Railway Station.
Picture: Gareth Jennings. Forfar Conservati­ve councillor Braden Davy at Brechin Railway Station.

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