Yorkshire Post

HS2 review ‘sitting in a safe’ for weeks

- GERALDINE SCOTT WESTMINSTE­R CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: geraldine.scott@jpimedia.co.uk ■ Twitter: @Geri_E_L_Scott

RAIL: Labour’s Shadow Transport Secretary has accused the Department for Transport of keeping the review into HS2 “sitting in a safe” for weeks as pressure mounts on the Government to decide on the future of the scheme.

Supporters of the project met in in an 11th-hour bid to garner support for the rail network.

LABOUR’S SHADOW Transport Secretary has accused the Department for Transport of keeping the review into HS2 “sitting in a safe” for weeks as pressure mounts on the Government to decide on the future of the scheme.

Supporters of the project met in Westminste­r yesterday in an 11th-hour bid to garner support for the rail network, which the Government is expected to make a decision on soon.

The Oakervee Review, which looked into whether HS2 should go ahead – and if so, how – was first due for release last year but this was delayed by the General Election.

And a dissenting report by the review’s former Deputy Chairman Lord Tony Berkeley was published earlier this month which slammed the money spent on the scheme,

But at the event yesterday, organised by group Connecting Britain, Andy McDonald said the review “has been sitting in the DfT safe for weeks and weeks and weeks”.

He said: “We know it’s there, we want the damn thing published. It’s no good the dissenting voice coming out and telling us what he thinks, we want the majority report and we’ve all got a pretty good idea what it says.”

Rail Minister Chris HeatonHarr­is replied: “Well, I’ve just learned something from Andy because I didn’t know we had a safe in the department.”

The Yorkshire Post understand­s the release of the Oakervee Review is expected in coming weeks, and Mr Heaton-Harris said both HS2 and Northern Powerhouse Rail were “super important to what the whole government is trying to deliver”.

He added: “Transport is key to that mission. Nothing binds us all together more than efficient, reliable transport links, and on occasions, as I’ve seen with rail recently, nothing unites us more than when they’re not working, and how people really do get sore when they’re not working properly for them.”

Jason McCartney, the newly-elected Conservati­ve MP for Colne Valley, spoke at the meeting and said he despaired at the situation with HS2. He said: “I despair, quite frankly, at all of this.”

He said he backed various Northern leaders’ words on why HS2 was essential and needed but said: “But whenever we read quotes in the regional press, The Yorkshire Post in my part of the world, support for HS2 has so many caveats, so many conditions, so many qualificat­ions that it just undermines the whole case. It gives energy to the cynics and it’s being undermined all the time.”

Tory West Midlands Mayor Andy Street added that to win people over, the champions of the project needed to speak to people outside the room who needed convincing, rather than operating in an echo chamber.

He said as someone who was involved in the Oakervee Review, he is “utterly confident” in the “strong economic case which will eventually show through”, and he hinted that everyone except Lord Berkeley had agreed on the report’s conclusion­s, suggesting it will recommend the scheme goes ahead.

But he added: “We’ve actually got to influence the decision makers in London.

“The title of this event is Connecting Britain, not Connecting the Midlands and the North, and I think we should just pause a moment and think about how you’re actually influencin­g the decision makers.”

We’ve actually got to influence the decision makers in London. West Midlands Mayor Andy Street.

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