d High-Speed Rail Plan

England’s Traffic-Clogged North Bitter Over Stalled High-Speed Rail Plan By Aina J. Khan, June 11, 2022, NY Times

Mandy Ridyard, a director at Produmax, an aerospace factory in Bradford that makes parts for companies including Boeing, said one of her employees resigned last year because of the terrible traffic on the road from his home in Manchester, around 30 miles away. That road, the M62, is a stretch of highway that includes some of the most congested areas in Britain. “After 3 or 4 years of not getting home in time to see his kids to bed, he just gave up because the traffic was just getting worse and worse,” Ms. Ridyard said. “We’re only asking for what other parts of the country have had forever.”

Bradford, a city of over a half-million people, is Britain’s youngest city. More than a quarter of its population is under 18, but almost 10% of its

18- to 24-year-olds receive unemployment-related benefits, a number around double the national average for that age group, according to figures shared with The New York Times by Bradford Council.

At the factory, where a poster of a caped superhero hangs in the warehouse declaring, “Engineering superheroes this way,” about 20% of employees are teenagers completing an apprenticeship program, according to the company. Ms. Ridyard said she worried that a failure to improve rail links could hurt social mobility in inner-city areas of Bradford, as well as in surrounding commuter towns and cities, and badly affect young people. “If you have to have a car to get somewhere because the train connections don’t work,” she said, “we’re not talking about a level playing field.”

To make up for dropping the high-speed rail, the government has offered some concessionary upgrades on existing lines. Archaic Victorian-era rail tracks would be electrified, cutting journey times for a handful of existing routes (a journey to Bradford from Leeds would be cut by almost half under the new plans). And capacity on northern train services would be increased. But there are no firm dates on when all this will be completed.

Years of travel chaos on the Northern railway, with its aging fleet of trains and staffing shortages, saw the franchise, which was run by Arriva Rail North and owned by Deutsche Bahn in Germany, taken over by the govt in March 2020. “Passengers have lost trust in the north’s rail network,” Mr. Shapps declared. The HS2 line was trumpeted by Mr. Shapps as the “biggest single act of leveling up,” a key pillar of the Conservative Party’s election manifesto in 2019. Months before the 2019 general election that saw a landslide victory for the Conservative Party, which succeeded in winning over traditional Labour voters in the north, Mr. Johnson pledged to fund the Northern Powerhouse Rail route between Manchester and Leeds to “turbocharge regional growth and prosperity” in the region.

Bradford Council said the Northern Powerhouse Rail proposals would have bolstered Bradford’s economy by about 30 billion pounds, creating 27,000 new jobs by 2060. Now the recent U-turn has left a bitter taste for many. “They suffer from the classic problem of over promising & under delivering, which is a reoccurring fatal mistake of many governments but seems to be endemic to this one,” said Jim O’Neill, a key architect of the Northern Powerhouse strategy, and a former adviser in the govt of PM Theresa May. “It was pretty clear at least two years before that Bradford wasn’t gonna happen,” said Mr. O’Neill who was working within government at the time, and who said the plan to build the new station in Bradford had been deemed too expensive. A Department for Transport spokesman did not address the claims of Mr. O’Neill, who is currently vice chair of Northern Powerhouse Partnership, a lobbying group, but told The Times that the government had not canceled the eastern leg of HS2. “The Integrated Rail Plan set aside

100 million pounds to look at the most effective ways to take HS2 trains to Leeds, and further work will be carried out to assess the best options,” he said.

Not everyone was in support of the high-speed rail line in the north. Edna Small, 77, a retired teacher, moved to Church Fenton, a village in North Yorkshire enveloped by lush countryside, in 2007. Under proposed plans for HS2 released a few years later, Church Fenton, with an estimated population of about 1,500, would have been one of the last stops on its eastern leg. After news emerged that a 50-foot viaduct would've thundered through the quiet outskirts of the village, and that her home would be pincered by the viaduct and the local train station on either side, Ms. Small joined a group of anti-HS2 campaigners. The halting of the eastern branch of HS2 brought a sense of relief, even if by then, Ms. Small, 77, had already sold her home, whose market value, she said, had been diminished by the railway plans. “It was gonna destroy the whole area,” she said. “It was a vanity project,” she said. “But Bradford has been left in the lurch,” Ms. Small conceded. “The government make promises they never keep.”

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Reply to
David P
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On my office days into Brum it's an average of 40 minutes to go 10 miles. Which admittedly is better than the 50 mins/8 miles I had last year.

However a cursory switch to "public transit" in Google suggests you won't take less than 90 minutes on a good day by bus. (Obviously no point talking about trains outside London).

It was bad enough before fuel was £2/litre.

And for all the governments wailing for people to go back to subbing their mates companies - sorry I mean go back to the office - people will vote with their wallet at first. In an age of no pay rises and soaring inflation and fuel costs, the easiest saving is commuting.

Reply to
Jethro_uk

You've re-discovered the 4 minute mile :-)

Reply to
Jeff Gaines

Amusing at it sounds, it's not really a great optic (along with pisspoor commercial broadband provision) for a place that laughingly thinks it's in anyway a "second city" when compared to London.

In 1986 I could get 13 miles from my house in Rayners Lane to my desk in Marble Arch in just under an hour. And that included a 25 minute walk to and from the station.

Reply to
Jethro_uk

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