Wednesday 30 March 2022

ERTA Northern Area Rep articles for wider interest

 All Things Yorkshire!

Our Member Mr Chris Hyomes, gives us the load-down on all he’s been doing for rail causes in ‘God’s Own Country’!

 

Queensbury Tunnel - 2021 Round up

 

It's been another tumultuous year.

 

National Highways spent £2.8M erecting a plug below No.3 Shaft, rather than agreeing to the dewatering arrangement offered by the landowner which would have allowed RamArch/sprayed concrete strengthening to be installed at a fraction of the cost. The rent on the pumping station has still not been paid almost six years after the first instalment became due.

 

The work at No.3 Shaft was probably the most expensive and high-risk single project ever undertaken by the Historical Railways Estate, yet no formal progress reports were produced and practically no emails exchanged about it amongst their team. They have adopted a scorched-earth approach to record-keeping, demonstrating again just how disreputable the company is.

 

National Highways' technical report into options for reuse of the tunnel - no doubt contrived to blow repair out of the water - and Sustrans' draft study into the benefits of a cycle network connecting Bradford/Keighley to Halifax via the tunnel are being reviewed by Bradford Council.

 

"We are now starting work on understanding the inter-relationship between the technical report into the tunnel repair and the economic assessment by Sustrans in order that a holistic picture of the initial costs and benefits of a cycleway through the tunnel can be fully understood, as well as the on-going liabilities which could arise", says the Council.

 

There are pots of Government money for levelling-up and transforming cities which could provide funding for a cycle path through the tunnel. A route from Bradford city centre to Thornton - providing access to the existing Great Northern Railway Trail - is going ahead and Calderdale Council is looking to develop an active travel scheme from Halifax to Trinity Academy at Holmfield. A two-mile link through Queensbury Tunnel would connect these emerging networks either side of the hill.

 

The planning application for the tunnel's partial infilling still sits dormant on Bradford Council's planning portal; the objections currently stand at 7,772 - a huge number. With £7.8M of taxpayers' money frittered away on work that mostly wasn't necessary and serious reputational damage incurred as a result of its incompetence over the unpaid rent, we suspect National Highways will not be keen to return any time soon, but they are nothing if not full of surprises.

 

We'll let you know when there are developments to report. In the meantime, have a fabulous Christmas - as best as you can in the prevailing circumstances - and let's hope for a much better 2022.

Queensbury Tunnel extends for 1.4 miles beneath a ridge in the Pennine foothills of West Yorkshire. Halifax lies at its south end (2.5 miles), whilst Keighley is located to the north (7 miles) and Bradford to the east (4 miles).

The tunnel could help to establish a strategically important link within the emerging network of shared paths across the region, allowing a connecting route to be formed between the Aire and Calder valleys where paths are already under development, as well as a link into Bradford. The existing Great Northern Railway Trail would form part of that route. 

Minsters Rail Campaign

Reinstating the Beverley to York line

Hull and Beverley are linked with Market Weighton, Pocklington, Stamford Bridge and York by the increasingly congested A1079. The Minsters Rail Campaign believes that the former 32-mile Beverley to York “Minsters” rail line (closed in 1965), which branched off the existing Hull-Scarborough line at Beverley and served these places, should be reinstated. This will contribute substantially to the long-term economic and social future of the East Riding, improving public transport, reducing car dependency and encouraging sustainable development. It will also be an alternative link from Hull and the East Riding to the rest of the rail network, needed because the existing rail infrastructure serving Hull lacks resilience. Regionally, the line will contribute to the Government’s “Northern Powerhouse” initiative, improving east-west connectivity between East and North Yorkshire.

 

Following their successful bid to the Restoring Your Railways Fund earlier in the year, The Minsters Rail Campaign are working towards a Strategic Outline Business Case for submission to the Department of Transport in February 2022.  Assistance is being given by infrastructure consultants Aecom and the East Riding of Yorkshire Council in compiling the case for reinstatement, with cross-party support from Members of Parliament in York and Hull. The Campaign is confident that the line will meet all the criteria required for reinstatement and the benefits for the region will be significant and far-ranging. 

  

SELRAP (Skipton-East Lancashire Rail Action Partnership)

Update on the Current Situation with Our Campaign

 

The Airedale line is a modern and fast train service running from Leeds and terminating at Skipton.

SELRAP's proposal is to extend this by reopening the closed railway line from Skipton to Colne, this will allow passengers from East Lancashire to travel directly into Leeds in less than 60 minutes.

This proposal is supported by Arriva Northern Trains and Skipton Building Society, who both recognise that it will open up employment, educational and leisure opportunities throughout Lancashire and Yorkshire.

It also allows the possibility of a direct link to Manchester airport from points from Shipley to Skipton.

 

The aim at present is to progress the project which is within the ‘Develop’ phase of the Rail Network Enhancement Pipeline (RNEP).

A critical engineering study was endorsed by DfT ministers 6 months ago but has apparently being ‘blocked’ from going ahead on the grounds that the Skipton to Colne rail reopening proposals are now deemed to be too expensive. They have done this without the evidence to back it up.

This assumption has been made in advance of this critical engineering study that would have determined on the ground the practicalities for the scheme and its final cost to be built.

SELRAP are contacting local MPs, the rail and transport ministers plus other supporters to try to get this study carried out.

The reopening of this line is essential in helping to ‘level up’ East Lancashire which has some of the most deprived communities in the UK. It would bring social and economic regenerative benefits to them.

Boris Johnson himself stated that ‘we’re going to unite and level up across the country’ whilst also talking about ‘building back better’!

Please visit our website for further information www.selrap.org.uk

You can also view there a promotional video made last year about the benefits of reopening the line. For any further information, questions or comments, please send to chris.hyomes@hotmail.co.uk

ED. We thank Mr Chris Hyomes for these articles and very much hope we will have more news from ‘up north’ in coming editions of our newsletter. Suffice to say “Woodhead… bring-it-on!!


To make common cause, enquiries or give support, please contact ERTA Northern/Yorkshire Area Rep:

Mr Chris Hyomes
10 Tythe Barn Road, Knottingley, West Yorkshire, WF11 9BU
T. 07971766207

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