Campaign for Better Transport is celebrating half a century of
campaigning as the sustainable transport charity turns 50 today
(6 February).
Paul Tuohy, Campaign for Better Transport's Chief Executive,
said: "I am proud to be able to stand here today and celebrate
Campaign for Better Transport's 50th year campaigning for
sustainable transport. We've come a long way in that time,
helping see off damaging cuts to the rail network, preventing
roads dominating our towns and cities and helping change
Government policy to ensure more communities have access to
public transport. There's still a lot of work to be done though,
so we won't be resting on our laurels. With lots of campaigning
activities planned for this year we're hoping this is just the
start of the next 50 years."
Stephen Joseph, former Campaign for Better Transport Chief
Executive for more than 30 years, said: "For 50 years, Campaign
for Better Transport, and its predecessor Transport 2000, has
spoken up for and brought people together to campaign for better
and cheaper rail and bus services, less traffic, less road
building and less car dependence. With cuts in public transport
and more widely the threat of climate breakdown, the need for the
charity continues with plenty of work left to do."
Campaign for Better Transport was founded as Transport 2000 in
1973 to campaign against plans to halve the British Rail Network
from around 11,000 route miles to 5,000. The Government's
'secret' plan was leaked to the media and the National Union of
Railwaymen (now the National Union of Rail, Maritime and
Transport Workers (RMT)) decided to fight the hugely damaging
plans. Realising it needed broader support to fight the planned
cuts, it brought together environmental groups, notably the Civic
Trust, the Conservation Society and the Council for the
Preservation of Rural England (CPRE), to create Transport 2000.
After its initial inception, Transport 2000 expanded its remit to
fight the prevailing policy of the time of urban and inter-urban
road building, notably London's three 'ringways' which included a
central motorway which would have demolished many inner London
suburbs. With bus deregulation in 1986, Transport 2000 campaigned
to protect bus passengers from the negative effects of
privatisation. In 2007, the charity changed its name to Campaign
for Better Transport and now has more than 20,000 supporters.
The last 50 years have seen a number of campaign wins for the
charity, including seeing off those plans to close half the rail
network; helping to stop the 'biggest road building programme
since the Romans'; reforming company car taxation; helping get
rid of the hated 'pacer' trains in the North of England; the
Fair Fares Now campaign to stop double digit rail fare
rises; the New Stations Fund; the introduction of the Local
Sustainable Transport Fund; and gaining a long-overdue national
strategy for buses.
ENDS
Notes to Editors
- Campaign for Better Transport was founded as Transport 2000
on 6 February 1973.
- In 1973, the Railway Gazette and Daily Telegraph leaked
Government plans to close half the rail network. See Reg Dawson: A very
brave and determined man and also "Holding the Line:
How Britain's Railways were saved", by Richard Faulkner and
Chris Austin, Ian Allan 2012 for more on this.
-
London's lost
ringways
- In 1989 the Government launched "the biggest roads programme
since the Romans", under the title ‘Roads for Prosperity'.
-
Campaigners respond to
plans for better rail services for the north of England
-
Public anger over rail
fare increases as Fair Fares Now campaign launches
-
Report calls for fund to
reopen lines shut by Beeching
-
Campaign group welcomes
new local sustainable transport fund
-
Hugely ambitious bus
strategy welcomed