West Lothian Courier

Council backs station plans

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A direct appeal to the Scottish Government for funding to ensure Winchburgh will get a railway station is to be backed by West Lothian Council, less than a month after doubts about developmen­t were first cast.

Livingston Conservati­ve councillor Alison Adamson told a meeting of the council’s executive that for Transport Scotland to ignore the demands of commuters would “make a mockery of active travel promotion.”

She said that residents in surroundin­g towns wanted the new station as much as those living in Winchburgh, and cited the surge in commuter traffic accessing stations at Linlithgow, Uphall Station and even Bathgate.

Conservati­ve group leader Damian Doran-Timson proposed an option for the council to approach the Scottish Government to make a case for funding, with the developer of Winchburgh, Winchburgh Developmen­ts Ltd (WDL).

While the railway station has been considered part of the Winchburgh developmen­t plan from the outset, Transport Scotland, the national transport infrastruc­ture agency, would not allow the delivery of the station to be a condition as part of the original planning consent as, at the time, further work on the business case for the station was required.

But as a deadline approaches for WDL to provide a transport strategy doubts have arisen that a station will be built because of potentiall­y huge increase in costs - up to £20m - and the belief that numbers of commuters are dropping because of pandemic related work from home policies. Almost 1000 new homes have been built in the village and WDL has to produce a long-term transport strategy.

Head of planning, Craig McCorristo­n, said he understood Transport Scotland had completed improvemen­ts to the Edinburgh/ Glasgow line, including timetables, and was now in a position to consider a station for Winchburgh.

Mr McCorristo­n told the meeting that council officers had now proposed the accessing of funding from the City Region Deal which provides funding for region wide economic developmen­t, to back up a any financial shortfall and support a station plan.

Local councillor Janet Campbell, for the SNP, said that the local MSP, Angela Constance, was trying to pull together a meeting of the developers, Transport Scotland and ScotRail to push the proposals ahead and called on West Lothian Council to support that. Councillor Adamson said: “It’s important to note although this is a main line between Edinburgh and Glasgow the places in between are just as important.”

Council leader Lawrence Fitzpatric­k, chairing the meeting, added: “Transport Scotland, way back in 2011, would not allow the council to obligate the developer to provide a rail station. Had that been there I’m sure we would have had a station by now.”

It’s important to recognise places between cities are important

 ?? ?? Artist’s impression The Winchburgh developmen­t
Artist’s impression The Winchburgh developmen­t

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