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£500 million rail pot to 'reconnect towns across the country'

29 January 2020

 

Communities across the country will benefit from better rail connections that will level-up regional economies and boost access to jobs and education, says the Government. The boost comes thanks to a £500 million fund to kickstart the restoration of lines closed more than 50 years ago.

But the £500m initiative has been branded 'meaningless' by Labour after it emerged that the fund would be spent on 'feasibility studies' of routes that could potentially be restored - not on reopening lines. Writing on Twitter, Andy McDonald, Labour's shadow transport secretary, said: 'To herald the Tories' re-announcement of a £500m fund as the reversal of the Beeching cuts is a joke. £500m would reopen just 25 miles of railway. Beeching axed 5,000 miles.'

Speaking on a visit to the Fleetwood and Poulton-le-Fylde line, where the Prime Minister announced this rail policy in November 2019, Transport Secretary Grant Shapps launched the new investment that will drive forward the reversal of the controversial Beeching cuts. The Fleetwood line was closed in 1970.

The cuts, which were initially proposed by British Rail chief Dr Richard Beeching in 1963, ended passenger services on around a third of the rail network, closing more than 2,300 stations and up to 5,000 miles of track across the UK.

To launch the reversal scheme, the government is also giving funding to develop proposals for re-opening two lines in the near future:

  • £1.5 million to the Ashington-Blyth-Tyne Line in Northumberland

  • £100,000 to the Fleetwood line in Lancashire

Transport Secretary Grant Shapps said: ‘Many communities still live with the scars that came from the closure of their local railway more than 5 decades ago. Today sees work begin to undo the damage of the Beeching cuts by restoring local railways and stations to their former glory.

‘Investing in transport links is essential to levelling up access to opportunities across the country, ensuring our regions are better connected, local economies flourish and more than half a century of isolation is undone.’

Recognising that not all growing towns can re-open previously existing stations, and that some areas may never have been served by rail, the government is also announcing a fresh round of the New Stations Fund.

Two previous rounds of the scheme have already helped develop 10 new stations across England and Wales. £21.9 million of funding has been announced for two routes and the New Stations Fund.

The Transport Secretary has invited MPs, local authorities and community groups across England to come forward with proposals on how they could use funding to reinstate axed local services. £300,000 has been committed to an ‘Ideas Fund’ to kickstart the process to encourage innovative ideas that will then be considered for further funding in the future.

The £500 million fund will help develop these proposals, and accelerate the delivery of schemes that are already being considered for restoration, making possible the rapid reopening of certain stations and lines.

The thousands of miles of railway that were axed under the Beeching cuts are in various states of repair. Some still maintain freight services, some sit unused and overgrown whilst others have been built over or converted to cycle routes or pathways.

The government will also consult Network Rail and train operators which will be instrumental in delivering the benefits to communities.

Rail Minister Chris Heaton-Harris also visited Bedlington Station, where he announced £1.5 million of funding to drive forward the return of passenger services to the Ashington-Blyth-Tyne line. Rail Minister Chris Heaton-Harris said: 'This is an exciting moment as we look to revitalise our railways, reconnect communities and reinvigorate our country. Local MPs, councillors and community leaders are the greatest champions of their local lines, and we want to work closely together to ensure the projects with the greatest potential have the support they need.

'There will also be opportunities for towns who have lost stations to receive a boost, as we launch another round of our New Stations Fund.'

The benefits of reversing the Beeching cuts have already been seen. In 2015, a short stretch of line called the ‘Todmorden Curve’ was restored, supported by £8.8 million of government funding, enabling direct services from Burnley and Accrington to Manchester.

Ilkeston Junction Station was also successfully reopened in 2017 – after 40 years of Ilkeston being the largest town in England without any train service.

Photo caption:

This is what the BR network could have looked like, by the 1980s, had the Beeching II developments gone ahead. All lines except those shown in bold would have been closed. Swathes of the country — notably North, South West Scotland and most of Wales — would no longer have lines. The plans were quietly shelved and closures slowed. Beeching resigned.

Some suburban lines around certain cities (e.g. London, Birmingham, Glasgow, Manchester) would have been kept open for commuters; this is not acknowledged on the map.

The Woodhead route (Manchester to Sheffield) is shown to be kept open on this map, but was axed in the 1980s.

The faint lines are examples of major through routes that would have closed. Most of these remain open to this day, although some were axed subsequently. Of these, some have re-opened or are planned to re-open. Image courtesy Cronholm144

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