Yorkshire Post

MP backs plan to re-open rail line

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

The Government is being petitioned to re-open a railway line to passengers after almost a century to improve transport links between villages and towns in Yorkshire.

MP Alexander Stafford, wrote to the Transport Minister asking for details and cash to reopen the South Yorkshire Joint Railway to passengers.

THE GOVERNMENT is being petitioned to re-open a railway line to passengers after almost a century to improve transport links between villages and towns in Yorkshire.

Alexander Stafford, the Tory MP for Rother Valley, wrote to Transport Minister Chris Heaton-Harris, asking for details and cash to re-open the South Yorkshire Joint Railway to passengers.

The line, which remains intact, runs from Worksop through to Doncaster, via North and South Anston, Laughton Common/ Dinnington and Maltby. It first opened in 1909 to freight, and to passengers a year later.

It last conveyed passengers in 1929, and while it has been in constant use for freight since then – transporti­ng mostly coal – Mr Stafford saw the decline in the use of the fuel in the UK as an opportunit­y.

He said: “The South Yorkshire Joint Railway is the perfect opportunit­y for the Government to invest in reopening passenger services on a line that offers huge potential for improving connectivi­ty, reducing carbon emissions and providing greater access to opportunit­ies for residents.

“The line is already in place, with almost constant previous use by freight traffic.

“But, with the demand for freight use on the line having fallen significan­tly, now is an ideal time to give residents in Maltby, Laughton Common, Dinnington, and North and South Anston greatly improved local transport links.

“These communitie­s have suffered from a lack of decent transport links for too long, and the chance to access funding here stands to potentiall­y level up the opportunit­ies these communitie­s can realise.”

The Government announced last year that it would launch a £500m fund to go towards reopening lines shut by the Beeching’s cuts in the 1960s.

Mr Stafford, a staunch opponent of the HS2 high speed rail project, said the challenges for reopening passenger services in South Yorkshire are not as tough as building the high speed link. He will be working with a voluntary transport task force within Rother Valley to identify local transport priorities.

The Skipton to Colne line is another mooted to be reopened under Government plans. It has been closed since the 1970s.

There has been a local campaign to re-open it.

An initial study, which was completed in December 2018, found it was technicall­y feasible to re-open the line and the Department for Transport said it was working to assess the freight demand and the commercial viability of the scheme.

The TSSA trade union’s general secretary, Manuel Cortes, has previously described the new rail fund as a “total sham” and accused the Government of “two decades of privatised chaos on our railways”.

The line’s already in place, with previous constant use by freight.

Alexander Stafford, the MP for Rother Valley.

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