Today we have announced the launch of Network North, a new approach
to transport in this country. As a result of the decision to
scrap the extension of HS2, every region will now receive
investment in the modes of transport that matter to you most.
Here’s how this change will help to transform your local area.
North West Improving connectivity in all six Northern
city areas: Nearly £4 billion to improve connectivity,...Request free trial
Today we have announced the launch of Network North, a new
approach to transport in this country.
As a result of the decision to scrap the extension of HS2, every
region will now receive investment in the modes of transport that
matter to you most.
Here’s how this change will help to transform your local area.
North West
-
Improving connectivity in all six Northern city areas:
Nearly £4 billion to improve connectivity, which could pay
for schemes such as the extension of the Manchester Metrolink
to Heywood, Bolton, Wigan and Manchester Airport and bus
rapid transit corridors in Manchester.
-
New fund to transform rural travel: A brand new £2.5
billion fund to transform local transport for smaller cities,
and towns. This new money could pay for new stations, further
electrification, bus corridors and new integrated public
transport networks.
-
Energy Coast Line between Carlisle, Workington and
Barrow upgraded: Improving capacity and journey times,
enabling trains every 30 minutes between Carlisle,
Workington, and Whitehaven
-
Contactless & smart ticketing: £100 million will be
shared across the North and Midlands to support seamless
travel by enabling contactless or smartcard payment.
-
Fixing potholes: £3.3 billion long-term road
resurfacing fund for North alone will fix potholes causing
misery for drivers and more than £500 million in funding will
be provided for two major road schemes around Manchester.
These include a new link road between the M62 and the M60,
Manchester’s ring road and the busiest freight route outside
the M25. The scheme will help tackle congestion and reduce
delays.
-
£300 million for 9 smaller road schemes: Including the
A582 South Ribble Distributor, Kendal Northern Access Route,
and the Wigan East-West Route.
-
£2 bus fare will also be extended: Will run to the end
of December 2024 instead of rising to £2.50 as planned. This
will mean passengers on a bus journey from Lancaster to
Kendal will save £12.50 every time they travel.
-
£700 million bus funding package in the North: More
buses and more frequent routes, including a new service to
Royal Blackburn Hospital, doubling the service between
Northwich and Chester and more buses to industrial estates
and business parks.
-
£1.5bn for Greater Manchester: Comes from the City
Regional Sustainable Transport Settlement 2 budget - an
unprecedented investment in local transport
networks.
-
Nearly £1bn for Liverpool City Region: Comes from City
Regional Sustainable Transport Settlement (CRSTS) 2 budget,
plus a further £600 million on top – funded from HS2. That is
more than double their allocation under the last round.
North East
-
75 per cent more funding for improved connectivity:
Benefiting millions of people living in the towns and suburbs
around Newcastle and Teesside, funding new roads in the Tees
Valley.
-
Dualling A1: Funding to dual a section of the A1
between Morpeth and Ellingham.
-
£460 million for smaller road schemes: Including
the Blyth Relief Road.
-
Reopening stations: Communities in the North East will
be reconnected, including a new station at Ferryhill, Co
Durham. The Leamside line, closed in 1964, will also be
reopened.
-
Funding for contactless and smart ticketing: Supporting
seamless travel by enabling contactless or smartcard
payment.
-
Fixing potholes: Funding to combat potholes causing
misery for drivers in the region.
-
£2 bus fare extended: More buses to industrial estates
and business parks.
-
£1.8 bn for the North East from the City Regional
Sustainable Transport Settlement 2 and HS2 funding.
-
£1 bn for Tees Valley.
Yorkshire & Humber
-
£2.5 billion West Yorkshire mass-transit system: Better
connections to Bradford and Wakefield. Leeds will no longer
be the biggest European city without a mass-transit system,
with up to seven lines potentially created as part of a
transformed network, eventually linking Leeds to Bradford,
Halifax, Huddersfield, and Wakefield.
-
Hull brought into Northern Powerhouse Rail network:
Reducing journey time to Leeds from 58 minutes to just 48.
The number of trains between Hull and Sheffield. Journeys
from Hull to Manchester will drop from 107 to 84 minutes,
enabling two fast trains to Leeds.
-
Sheffield-Leeds line electrified and
upgraded: Giving passengers a choice of three to four
fast trains an hour with journey times cut from 40 to 30
minutes. A new mainline station for Rotherham will also be
added to the route, boosting capacity by 300 per
cent.
-
Hope Valley Line between Manchester and Sheffield
electrified and upgraded: Cutting journey times from 51 to 42
minutes, and increasing the number of fast trains on the
route from two to three per hour, doubling
capacity.
-
Reopening train lines: Communities will be reconnected,
including through the restoration of the Don Valley Line
between Stocksbridge and Sheffield Victoria, and new stations
at Haxby Station, near York, Waverley, near Rotherham, and
the Don Valley Line from Sheffield to Stocksbridge.
-
Contactless and smart ticketing: £100 million will be shared
across the North and Midlands to support the development and
roll-out of London-style contactless and smart
ticketing.
-
Nearly £4 billion to better connect all six Northern city
areas: This could pay for schemes such as bus rapid transit
corridors in Bradford and Leeds.
-
£2.5 billion fund to transform local transport in 14 rural
counties: This new money could finance projects like more
electric buses in Harrogate and better bus-rail interchange
in Scarborough.
-
£460 million for smaller road schemes across the North: Like
the Shipley Eastern Bypass, near Bradford, while a £1 billion
roads package in the North could fund schemes like the A1-A19
Hickleton Bypass in Doncaster, easing pressure on
traffic.
-
£3.3 billion long-term road resurfacing fund for North alone
will combat the potholes causing misery for
drivers.
-
£2 bus fare extended until the end of December 2024:
More buses and more frequent routes, with more buses to
industrial estates and business parks.
-
£1.4 bn for South Yorkshire from savings from HS2 and the
City Regional Sustainable Settlement.
-
£1.3 bn for West Yorkshire. This includes a £500m downpayment
for the West Yorkshire Mass Transit.
West Midlands
-
Reopening closed Beeching lines: including the Stoke to Leek
line and the Oswestry to Gobowen line, with a new stop at
Park Hall. A new station will be built at Meir,
Stoke-on-Trent, on the existing Crewe to Derby
line,
-
Contactless and smart ticketing: £100 million will be shared
across the North to support seamless travel by enabling
contactless or smartcard payment.
-
£2.2 billion fund to transform local transport: Rural
counties such as Shropshire, smaller cities like Leicester
and towns such as Evesham will receive funding which could
pay for smaller, more demand-driven buses in rural areas as
well as funding the refurbishment of Kidsgrove and Longport
stations, near Stoke-on-Trent.
-
£250 million for smaller road schemes: Including the
Shrewsbury North Western Relief Road and the A4123 Birchley
Island, near Oldbury. A Midlands Road Fund worth nearly £650
million will be launched for new roads.
-
£230 million for more bus services: Increased frequency
of bus services in the Midlands, which could be spent on new
bus stops around Telford and park and ride upgrades elsewhere
in Shropshire and new bus lanes in Herefordshire.
-
£2.2 billion for the Midlands to combat potholes: Fixing
roads causing misery for drivers.
-
£2 bus fare extended: Until the end of December 2024 instead
of rising to £2.50 as planned.
-
£1 billion more for local transport funding in West
Midlands: This includes £100 million to deal with ongoing
metro and Arden Cross cost pressures, £250 million to
accelerate local transport projects over the next five years.
East Midlands
-
Increased rail capacity: The number of trains between
Leicester and Birmingham will be doubled from two to four per
hour.
-
£1.5 billion for East Midlands City Region Mayor:
Transforming transport for 2.2 million people living in
Derbyshire and Nottinghamshire. This is an average of almost
£1000 for everyone in the two counties. The new Combined
Authority could use the funding to extend the Nottingham Tram
system to serve Gedling and Clifton South and connect Derby
to East Midlands Parkway with a Bus Rapid Transit
System.
-
Reopening Beeching Line stations: Including the Ivanhoe Line
between Leicester and Burton, connecting 250,000 people
across South Derbyshire and North West Leicestershire, with
new stations en route.
-
Funding for the Barrow Hill Line: Between Chesterfield and
Sheffield Victoria, with a new station at Staveley in
Derbyshire.
-
Contactless and smart ticketing: £100 million will be shared
across the North and Midlands to support contactless or
smartcard payment.
-
Fixing two major pinch points on the A5: Funding a stretch of
road between Hinckley and Tamworth, linking the M1 and M6,
that serves more than one million people. Funding will also
be provided for improvements to the A50/500 corridor between
Stoke and Derby, cutting congestion for the 90,000 drivers
who use the road each day and ensuring smoother journeys for
drivers and freight around Rolls Royce, Toyota, Magna Park,
and other major local employers.
-
Midlands Road Fund worth nearly £650 million: Launched for
new roads.
-
£2.2 billion fund to transform local transport: Available in
every part of the Midlands outside the mayoral combined
authority areas and the new East Midlands combined authority
- rural counties such as Shropshire, smaller cities like
Leicester and towns such as Evesham.
-
£250m will fully fund ten smaller road schemes in the
Midlands: Including the A509 Isham Bypass, near Kettering,
and the A43 between Northampton and Kettering.
-
£2.2 billion for potholes: Funding for the Midlands to combat
the potholes causing misery for drivers.
-
£230 million for more bus services: Increasing frequency
throughout the Midlands and the popular £2 bus fare will also
be extended until the end of December 2024 instead of rising
to £2.50 as planned.
-
The East Midlands will get a brand new the City Regional
Sustainable Transport settlement of over £1.5 billion as it
embarks its new status as a Combined Authority next year.
East Anglia
-
Ely Junction to be transformed: providing an extra six
freight trains per day with access to the Port of Felixstowe,
removing thousands of HGVs from East Anglia’s roads.
-
Remodelling of the Ely North and Haughley Junctions.
-
Doubling train passenger services: on the Ely to King’s Lynn
and Ipswich to Peterborough routes.
-
£610 million to fund road schemes: ensuring the delivery of
39 road schemes across East Anglia, including the A10 between
Ely and Cambridge.
-
Access to a £2.8 billion roads resurfacing fund: combatting
potholes.
-
£2 bus fare extended: until the end of December 2024 instead
of rising to £2.50 as planned.
South East
-
Funding to ensure the delivery of road schemes: This includes
the A2 at Brenley Corner, a notorious bottleneck on the
corridor to Dover.
-
£290 million to deliver 14 road schemes: Roads across the
South East set to be revitalised, among them the A259 between
Bognor Regis and Littlehampton.
-
Access to £2.8 billion to combat potholes: Fixing potholes
causing misery for drivers in the South East, South West and
East of England
-
£1 billion fund will be launched for new road schemes
-
£2 bus fare extended: Until the end of December 2024 instead
of rising to £2.50 as planned.
South West
-
Funding for vital Exeter to Plymouth rail line: making it
more resilient in the face of extreme weather.
-
Opening more railway lines: between Cullompton and
Wellington.
-
A new station built at Tavistock: connecting it with
Plymouth. Plus, five miles of track will be reinstated.
-
£100 million in funding for a Mass Transit system: to
revolutionise travel in and around Bristol.
-
£140 million in funding to ensure the delivery of 12 road
schemes: among them the A38 in North Somerset.
-
A further £1 billion fund for new road schemes: around the
South West, South East and East of England.
-
Access to £2.8 billion roads resurfacing fund to combat the
potholes.
-
£2 bus fare extended: Until the end of December 2024 instead
of rising to £2.50 as planned.
-
£0.8bn from the City Regional Sustainable Transport
Settlement 2 budget and savings from HS2.
Wales
-
£1 billion to improve transport connectivity in Wales: North
Wales to benefit from a £1 billion investment to electrify
the North Wales Main Line, bringing parts of the region
within an hour of Manchester and strengthening connections
across the Union.
-
Faster journey times, increased capacity, and more frequent,
reliable services: Network North will build better
connectivity across the North and Midlands.
Scotland
-
Reducing congestion for the communities of Ashington, Felton,
Alnwick, and Amble: by delivering the long-awaited upgrade to
A1 coastal route between Newcastle, Berwick-upon-Tweed, and
Edinburgh.
-
Faster journey times, increased capacity, and more frequent,
reliable services: Network North will build better
connectivity across the North and Midlands.
-
Pinch points on the A75 solved: providing better links
between the Cairnryan ferry terminals serving Northern
Ireland and southwest Scotland.
-
Further investment in the M6 and Cumbria, and the A77 towards
Glasgow.
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