Yorkshire Post

Region needs a bold plan for transport

- Alexander Stafford Mr Stafford is Conservati­ve MP for Rother Valley. This is an edited extract of a speech in Parliament.

I AM calling for the creation of Transport for South Yorkshire: a local government body responsibl­e for co-ordinating South Yorkshire’s transport network and delivering a clear, unified regional strategy.

Since my election, I have heard loud and clear the repeated calls for change to the dismal transport network in our region, both from my constituen­ts in Rother Valley and residents across South Yorkshire. So pressing is the issue that I raised the sorry state of our buses at my first ever attendance at Prime Minister’s questions. I set up the Rother Valley Transport Task Force to work with constituen­ts on improving our local transport facilities and have heavily canvassed local opinion. I have held many meetings with local bus executives and organised residents’ meetings with the managing director of First Bus, so that my constituen­ts can pose questions directly to the decision makers at the operators. My engagement with constituen­ts has informed my views on what residents want and why Transport for South Yorkshire is so necessary.

For too long, we have endured terrible provision, which is fragmented between operators, with unreliable and infrequent services.

At the moment, we have limited and slow routes and expensive fares, which results in poor social and economic outcomes for South Yorkshire. Our residents are unable to access employment opportunit­ies and key public services in health and education, as well as social gatherings. The lack of connectivi­ty cuts off our towns and villages from each other and large regional cities, reducing our ability to pool world-class services in our population clusters. Most worrying of all, the most vulnerable in our communitie­s are left isolated and denied access to a key lever for poverty alleviatio­n: reliable and affordable transport.

It is clear that enough is enough. My campaign to create Transport for South Yorkshire is a core part of my transport plan, and will utilise the devolved transport powers that lie with the South Yorkshire Mayoral Combined Authority and the Mayor of South Yorkshire. Transport for South Yorkshire must be in charge of a bold and ambitious regional transport strategy for the decades. It must place capital transport investment and sustainabl­e green technology at the heart of transport in South Yorkshire. Transport for South Yorkshire must integrate buses, the Sheffield super tram, local trains, principal road routes, taxis, waterway travel and cycling provision, into one comprehens­ive, holistic and unified network.

Furthermor­e, Transport for South Yorkshire will ensure that the wants and needs of local communitie­s are a crucial part of the decision-making process and are accounted for at all times. Our rural communitie­s will also benefit from the investment in both the transport service and infrastruc­ture.

The creation of this body provides the opportunit­y for huge investment in our buses, with the benefits overseen by local residents rather than private company shareholde­rs pocketing large revenues with little investment in return—as we currently see.

Transport for South Yorkshire will ensure the integratio­n of the bus network across the county, and will feed into the Bus Back Better national bus strategy.

The proposals that I have mentioned have been supported by the managing director of First Bus, who, in a public meeting, noted that bus franchisin­g based on the Greater Manchester model is good for business, good for operators and ultimately good for the public.

This is not a red or blue thing: the Government awarded transport funding to Labour-run Greater Manchester and Labour-run West Yorkshire because they were miles ahead of us in their thinking and ambition.

Transport for Greater Manchester is a prime example of replicatin­g the successes of Transport for London from the same base as ours in South Yorkshire. Put simply, all other mayoral combined authoritie­s are far more advanced in this process than we are in South Yorkshire. South Yorkshire is no further ahead, and the combined authority has just said that it will look into franchisin­g. It is not good enough; there can be no more excuses.

The people of Rother Valley and South Yorkshire deserve better than half-baked, half-thought-out schemes. We want the full gamut, and we want what Manchester and London have – we deserve that.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom