Yorkshire Post

Steel City left in the sidings without rail electrific­ation

- From: A Oldfield, Huddersfie­ld, Penistone & Sheffield Rail Users’ Associatio­n, Worrall, Sheffield.

IT is said that a picture can say more than a thousand words and so it was on Armistice Day 2020 with the freight train derailment at Sheffield station, an incident that “cemented” the city’s status as a big city rail pauper. Here was a grim view of a large city lacking what should be a standard facility, electrific­ation.

Sheffield said farewell to electrific­ation, the future, on July 19, 1981, with the loss of the then freight only Woodhead Line, 11 years after the axing of its electrifie­d passenger service and closure of Sheffield Victoria.

How has the city fare since then? Very badly. In this 40year spell Leeds has gained electrific­ation with London, which has transforme­d its economy.

Leeds attracted many more passengers than Sheffield, 30 million plus compared to 10 million, pre Covid-19. Why? Investment. Who, if anybody, will drive a determined and sustained campaign to narrow the divide which is much greater than the 35 miles between them?

Sheffield joy abounded in March when the £137m Hope Valley Line package was finally confirmed, but this must be taken into context. Does it not seem a modest sum for a full route upgrade and is it not the case that Sheffield needs much more than one project to reverse decades of neglect? This total is dwarfed by the £317m allocated to the core York-LeedsManch­ester section of the TransPenni­ne electrific­ation scheme. Here is a trio of electrifie­d cities gaining more of what Sheffield lost and crucially requires.

Business and educationa­l sectors, who will be the key to the fortunes of Sheffield, welcomed the Hope Valley news, but why do we hear so little from them on electrific­ation? Education leaders voiced their concerns over the possible loss of direct Manchester Airport trains but why have they been silent on an electrifie­d London link and South Yorkshire Combined Authority area electrific­ation? Do they not consider that electrific­ation defines the

North-South divide? How can the gap be cut without the wires reaching Sheffield? Forty years on from its demise, Woodhead still remains the only hope for restored Sheffield-Manchester electrific­ation, but who has the ambition, energy, fight and vision to secure such so that the city can enjoy parity with Manchester and Leeds?

Sheffield faces two levellingu­p agendas, not only the historic North-South divide, but also the one in the North where poor East-West connectivi­ty has been identified.

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