Yorkshire Post

‘Plain wrong’ to keep station plans a secret

People living in South and West Yorkshire were offered a £300m HS2 station to make up for the route being diverted through their neighbourh­oods. But will it actually happen? Chris Burn reports.

- ■ Email: chris.burn@jpress.co.uk ■ Twitter: @chrisburn_post

HS2 HAS refused to publish an internal report on whether plans to build a £300m parkway station in the Yorkshire countrysid­e are feasible.

A Freedom of Informatio­n request by The Yorkshire Post was rejected on the grounds that Ministers and officials need a ‘safe space’ to discuss the findings as a further study takes place. Eight potential locations for the station in largely rural parts of South and West Yorkshire have been identified as part of what is known as the ‘M18’ route running between the East Midlands and Leeds.

The line has been opposed by thousands of local residents after it was rerouted from the original plan to build a dedicated HS2 station at Meadowhall to the north of Sheffield – with the potential offer of a parkway station designed to avoid a situation where the high-speed route passes through the area but brings no economic or journey time benefits to people living in areas of Rotherham, Doncaster and Wakefield.

Labour MP John Healey, who represents the Wentworth and Dearne constituen­cy in South Yorkshire, said today it was “plain wrong” for HS2 to keep the report secret.

He added: “A parkway station is essential to South Yorkshire getting any jobs and business boost, so there’s a powerful public interest in this study and it is plain wrong for HS2 to keep it secret.”

HS2 said today it remains “committed to exploring the options for a possible parkway station”.

Transport Secretary Chris Grayling will make the final decision on whether the parkway station is built.

TWO YEARS ago, the shock announceme­nt that HS2 intended to divert a key section of its planned high-speed railway line in Yorkshire through previously unaffected homes, businesses and farmland was swiftly followed by an olive branch of sorts – a promise to investigat­e the possibilit­y of building a £300m parkway station to serve their affected communitie­s. But with HS2 now refusing to publish any details of a feasibilit­y study that was completed last summer, coupled with an apparent lack of further progress since then, it seems the idea is being shunted into the sidings.

HS2 has rejected a Freedom of Informatio­n request by The Yorkshire

Post to see the report on the grounds that Ministers and senior officials in the Department for Transport which will make the final decision need a “safe space” in which to discuss the findings “away from public scrutiny”. It is the latest developmen­t in a saga that antiHS2 campaigner­s have labelled “a dog’s dinner”.

In July 2016, following a longrunnin­g row between political leaders in South Yorkshire about whether the region’s HS2 station should either be based at the then-preferred location of Meadowhall to the north of Sheffield or in Sheffield city centre, HS2 put forward a cost-saving compromise that it said would save about £1bn but left no one in the area entirely satisfied. Instead of a new station being built as had been hoped, the Meadowhall option was scrapped in favour of HS2’s cheaper option of adopting the existing station to support high-speed trains, with a ‘spur’ running off the main route into the city.

While Sheffield Council claimed the decision as a victory for its campaign for a city-centre location, South Yorkshire was ultimately left without a dedicated new station and Sheffield was off the main HS2 route, with trains from the city to London now due to take longer and run less frequently than those from Leeds 40 miles to the north.

More pertinentl­y for residents living in rural areas of Rotherham and Doncaster, as well as near Wakefield in West Yorkshire, they suddenly found themselves in the path of the revised main route running close to the M18 motorway that cut through businesses, farmland and properties including an entire new housing estate in Mexborough.

The ensuing backlash soon led to a commitment from Transport Secretary Chris Grayling to work up a remit for the building of a parkway station on what had become known as the ‘M18 route’, with the Government suggesting the study would be completed by spring 2017.

In December 2016, HS2 chairman Sir David Higgins told MPs that idea of the station was ‘very attractive’ and would take pressure off the increasing­ly congested M1 and A1 roads. The following month, it was announced eight potential locations – Bramley, Wales and Hooton Roberts in Rotherham, Clayton, Mexborough and Hickleton in Doncaster and Fitzwillia­m and Hemsworth in Wakefield – had been identified as possible new homes for what would be a rail park-and-ride site with 1,700 parking spaces.

But with a final decision yet to be made on the route, the campaign for HS2 to reverse its decision and return to the Meadowhall option continued. Rotherham Council noted the potential costs of building a parkway station had not been factored into official HS2 budget costs, despite estimates it would cost between £200m and £300m.

In July 2017, Mr Grayling confirmed the M18 route as the chosen option – partly on the basis that doing so would better support the future developmen­t of parallel ‘Northern Powerhouse Rail’ plans to cut journey times between Sheffield and Leeds city centres to under 30 minutes. But a 59-page report accompanyi­ng the announceme­nt explained no decision had been taken in relation to the parkway station issue – which remains the case.

A report last month to the Sheffield City Region (SCR) Combined Authority on developing a local HS2 economic growth strategy listed the delay as one of the ‘unique challenges’ the area was facing. It said the original HS2 report had not examined “the potential economic or social benefits from a parkway at each location or investigat­ed the environmen­tal impact” – leading to the need for further work. But it added that progress by the DfT “hasn’t been as quick as anticipate­d”, with HS2 only commission­ed in December to carry out an extra study.

But the SCR report did add some benefits of a potential parkway station had been identified. It said: “HS2 estimate that the journey time from London to Sheffield will be reduced from 122 minutes to 85 minutes. Currently, it takes at least 30 minutes by rail to reach Sheffield from the area being considered for a parkway station. An HS2 Parkway station would greatly increase connectivi­ty, reducing the travel time to London to around 74 minutes from the parkway station.”

It added that three million people live within 45 minutes of the potential station, which could reduce local car usage and cut air pollution. SCR bosses have also commission­ed their own economic impact assessment into the potential benefits of the parkway station, which is due to be completed by August. But time is rapidly running out for a decision, given a public consultati­on on the preferred location would be required and the proposed M18 route is scheduled to be put forward to Parliament next year.

While an FoI response by HS2 acknowledg­ed that releasing the completed feasibilit­y study would help with “facilitati­ng public understand­ing of an important public project”, it ruled the report should be kept secret as further work is being undertaken on the potential station. It added: “It is in the public interest to protect the integrity of the decision-making process and allow a ‘safe space’ to do this away from public scrutiny.”

John Healey, Labour MP for Wentworth and Dearne, criticised HS2’s secrecy – and says he still hopes the Meadowhall route could be revived. “I’m still strongly behind a route rethink with Meadowhall as South Yorkshire’s mainline station. The worst of all worlds would be the main HS2 line running though South Yorkshire without stopping in South Yorkshire. A parkway station is essential to South Yorkshire getting any jobs and business boost, so there’s a powerful public interest in this study and it is plain wrong for HS2 to keep it secret. My big concern is this South Yorkshire station study is taking too long and not taking full account of the economic gains for our whole area.”

Jonathan Pile, from Yorkshire Against HS2, says people deserve to know what is happening. “They should be releasing this and being open with the public. Instead of being honest and saying ‘This is what is possible’, it is all being done in secret.” He says he is sceptical that the station will ever happen. “It is a significan­t amount of money and there is no budget for it. It is a dog’s dinner.”

A parkway station is essential to South Yorkshire getting any jobs and business boost. There is a powerful public interest in this study and it is plain wrong for HS2 to keep it secret. John Healey, MP for Wentworth and Dearne.

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 ??  ?? STATION APPROACH: HS2 protesters in Bramley; residents in South and West Yorkshire are waiting to hear from Chris Grayling on whether a station will be built.
STATION APPROACH: HS2 protesters in Bramley; residents in South and West Yorkshire are waiting to hear from Chris Grayling on whether a station will be built.
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