Road Infrastructure Next 05 July 2017 9.30 am Huw Merriman
(Bexhill and Battle) (Con) I beg to move, That this
House has considered road...Request free
trial
05 July 2017
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I beg to move,
That this House has considered road
infrastructure.
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship,
Mrs Gillan. I am conscious that many right hon. and
hon. Members are in the room; I shall try to give
way as much as I can and leave time for other
Members to make speeches.
It is somewhat fortuitous that this debate is
taking place today. According to the front page of
The Times—I am sure it can, as ever, be
believed—today is the day when the transport
investment strategy for the next decade is to be
announced, which will include a £1 billion per year
fund to allow local authorities to bid for bypass
projects. Can I be the first hon. Member in this
House to make an oral application to the Roads
Minister—for bypasses for Little Common, off the
A259, and for Hurst Green, off the A21? I am sure I
will not be the last applicant today.
Both those roads are busy, single-lane A roads that
cause congestion and danger through two villages in
East Sussex. They have the misfortune to be managed
by Highways England. If the Roads Minister came and
visited both roads—he would be absolutely
welcome—he might be surprised that they are part of
the Highways England portfolio. The reason is that
they are deemed to be trunk roads, off the A27 and
M25 respectively. The villages badly need to be
bypassed, but Highways England naturally focuses
its resources on the motorway or dual carriageway
network within its portfolio.
As my colleagues here today will be aware, there
are only 11 km of dual carriageway in the entire
county of East Sussex. My ask is that the new fund
should be accessible for local authorities to
deliver bypasses, even if that bypass would be off
a Highways England road. It is a misfortune for the
two roads that I mentioned that they are controlled
by Highways England—it is illogical—but my concern
is that the new, £1 billion fund is available only
to local authority-managed roads. That would be an
obstacle for those two roads. I ask the Roads
Minister that the issue of qualification should be
type of road, rather than the entity managing
it.
The A21 is a trunk road that runs from the M25
through Kent, then through East Sussex and down to
the coastal town of Hastings. Highways England is
continuing the dualling from Tonbridge to Tunbridge
Wells in Kent, but it thereafter turns to single
file when it enters East Sussex—a bit of
discrimination, I would say, that benefits Kent.
Some miles further on, the road goes through the
heart of the village of Hurst Green in my
constituency. In 2014, the A21 was deemed by the
Road Safety Foundation as the most dangerous road
in the UK—so much so that one section of dual
carriageway that we do have in East Sussex has been
closed and coned off as a single carriageway due to
the dangers of speeding.
A bypass for Hurst Green was in the pipeline and
homes were purchased by Highways England, but it
was postponed in the 2010 spending review. Now
those homes are being resold. Last year, Highways
England announced that it would introduce average
speed limits on to the A21, from the end of the new
works at Tunbridge Wells all the way down to
Hastings. Although that would not improve or remove
the congestion, or decrease travel times, it would
perhaps do something about the appalling safety
record.
The villagers and I were therefore dismayed to find
out last year that Highways England had decided
that that work would not be forthcoming and that
better options are available. None of those options
has been given to us. I am afraid it just compounds
our issue in East Sussex: that Highways England
does not appear interested in our road network.
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The hon. Gentleman mentioned a dual carriageway
where one lane is closed off because of speeding.
Does he have any views on average speed cameras,
which the Scottish Government have installed on
some roads in Scotland? They meet a bit of
resistance from drivers but have been proven to
make roads safer and they control speeding on those
roads.
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I thank the hon. Gentleman for that point. The
project put forward by Highways England was to have
average speed cameras all the way down through the
village—there is a primary school in the heart of
the village. The A21 was modelled on a road in
Scotland—it may be the one he referred to—which
apparently reduced the traffic accident rate by
80%. We were very excited to copy that fine example
from Scotland, so were dismayed when the scheme was
cancelled. I very much take the point and I hope
Highways England will do so as well.
My second example is the A259. Again, that road is
managed by Highways England, unfortunately for us.
It runs along the Sussex coast and takes over from
the A27, which itself is in bad need of dualling,
as championed by my hon. Friend the Member for
Lewes (Maria Caulfield), my right hon. Friend the
Member for Arundel and South Downs (Nick Herbert)
and others. As the A259 approaches Bexhill at a
village called Little Common, it acts as a
dangerous bottleneck. Again, the village was due to
be bypassed, as part of Highways England south
coast trunk road, which was due to come from Devon
all the way to Dover and give us a much better
transport system. That was scrapped in 2001.
Fortunately, a new link road was built by East
Sussex County Council and our local enterprise
partnership, with Government funding, and has
opened between Bexhill and Hastings. It opened last
year and has delivered not just improved journey
times, but 50,000 square feet of land for a
business park and 2,000 new homes—it is as much a
business road as a transport system.
East Sussex County Council and our local enterprise
partnership are now building a second road off that
new link road, so we are effectively now two-thirds
through bypassing a town of 40,000 residents. The
last remaining section is for a bypass around the
remainder of Little Common, which would deliver a
bypass for the entirety of Bexhill and make it
easier for the Sussex coastal towns to join
up.
I have asked my local authorities and the local
enterprise partnership to consider whether the
housing infrastructure fund—the £20 billion fund
announced by the Chancellor last year—could be
tapped for Hurst Green and Little Common. The issue
is that, having delivered the link road with its
room for 2,000 houses, the local authorities
rightly feel that they have already delivered
housing and do not need any further. I will
certainly be asking them to apply for the new
bypass fund, but we first need clarity from the
Roads Minister that they will be allowed to apply,
given that the road is managed by Highways England.
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I congratulate my hon. Friend on securing this
debate. On housing, would he agree that particular
consideration needs to be given to key arterial
routes that link major motorways, such as the A5 in
my constituency, which connects the M69, M1 and
M42? It is already under huge pressure, and will be
even more so due to proposed housing and the
development of High Speed 2.
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I agree. Perhaps my hon. Friend will agree with me
on some of the points that I will come on to talk
about with respect to Highways England and some of
the problems that many hon. Members may have had in
facing that agency.
At the A21 reference group, which I sit on with my
right hon. Friends the Members for Tunbridge Wells
(Greg Clark) and for Hastings and Rye (Amber Rudd),
we asked Highways England representatives what we
could do to dual the rest of the A21 all the way
down to Hastings: how we could commission an
economic study and what boxes that study would need
to tick in order to meet Highways England’s
programme. I am afraid to say that the Highways
England reps before us displayed a lack of dynamism
and a “no can do” attitude, which is caused, in my
view, by the fact that it has no competition on its
strategic road network programme for
building.
The link road that I described was delivered by a
small outfit called Sea Change, in conjunction with
the county and our local enterprise partnership.
They were able to deliver that road to time and
cost. I ask the Roads Minister whether it is
possible to let counties, LEPs and their agencies
put tenders together to bid for Highways England-
managed roads. I put that proposal to the chief
executive of Highways England during a sitting of
the Transport Committee, on which I sit, and he
claimed he is confident that Highways England
cannot be beaten on value for money. Let us put
that to the test and allow others to tender for the
work.
Time does not allow me to speak for much longer,
because I want to let others in, but I want to open
up the debate by talking about a few more points.
This is about not just building more roads, but
ensuring that the roads we currently have are
moving for traffic. To that end, I would like
traffic enforcement provisions to be moved from the
police to the local authority for moving traffic
offences. I would also like there to be some form
of compulsion to ensure that local authorities that
still rely on the police to enforce parking on the
highways take responsibility for that. There are
only 15 remaining, and two of those districts are
in my authority. As a result, it is a free-for-all
when it comes to parking and blocking up space.
For the visually impaired—I have some sympathy,
having undertaken a guide dogs test in a
blindfold—we have to ensure that it is an offence
to park on the kerb outside London, as it is inside
London. We have to change the situation. I would
also like new roads and existing roads to encourage
cycling. London does a great deal for cyclists, and
I would like that practice to be adopted throughout
the country. I will finish my speech now to allow
others to make their own cases.
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Order. Before I call the next speaker, I am minded
to put a limit of five minutes on speeches. I am
not going to do that at this stage; I am just going
to ask people to exercise some self-denial, bearing
in mind that 13 or 14 Members want to speak. I
would be grateful if Members kept standing if they
wish to contribute to the debate.
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It is always a pleasure to serve under your
chairmanship, Mrs Gillan. I congratulate the hon.
Member for Bexhill and Battle (Huw Merriman) on
securing this important debate. We heard about the
need for improvements to the A21 and the A259.
Given that the road investment is reaching a
critical phase, this is a timely discussion.
Improving road infrastructure is a priority for
many of our constituents. I was proud to be part of
a cross-party campaign to secure the widening of
the A453—the main trunk route between Nottingham
and the west midlands. The project has improved the
lives of thousands of my constituents.
I want to focus on two of the immediate issues
confronting the Department for Transport: the
delivery of the road investment strategy and the
condition of local roads. The investment strategy
was launched to significant fanfare. More than £15
billion was promised for investment in motorways
and major A roads. Unfortunately, two years on, the
progress report is decidedly mixed. Highways
England is failing to meet its target for
maintaining road conditions, as the Office of Rail
and Road warned in February. The pledge to
resurface 80% of the strategic road network, which
was so widely trumpeted, is also set to be missed.
I hope the Minister will update hon. Members on
what the actual figure is likely to be.
Most seriously, the delivery of new capital
investment schemes worth £11 billion is also in
doubt. Many hon. Members might be familiar with
Network Rail’s current problems. Major projects
were committed to at an early stage in their
development when there was a limited understanding
of their costs and deliverability. I am concerned
that a similar story looks to be playing out on our
roads. In the ORR’s February update on capital
planning, the regulator warned that there are
significant differences between the initial cost
forecasts and the latest estimates, and that the
investment strategy
“is not fully demonstrated to be affordable”.
There is currently an £800 million gap in Highways
England’s capital works budget, on top of the £140
million of extra funding that the Department
granted last year. Those overruns are at least
partly due to headline-grabbing claims taking
precedence over realistic pledges. I therefore
suggest that those who are dusting down their bids
for a bypass do not start to celebrate just
yet.
Internal Highways England minutes that I obtained
through the Freedom of Information Act blamed the
cost increased on a
“lack of focus on affordability in an environment
where an emphasis has been placed on the imperative
to deliver as quickly as possible”.
Given that 60 projects—more than half the total—are
due to begin construction in the final year of the
road investment period, there will be an
exceptional strain on Highways England and external
contractors. The regulator said that there is
“limited evidence” that the construction timetable
is “deliverable or efficient”. That could have a
knock-on effect on investment in the roads
investment strategy, too, so we need to look at
which projects are priorities within the strategy.
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Prioritisation is very important, but, moving away
from Highways England, does the hon. Lady agree
that local authorities find it difficult to
allocate funds to produce feasibility studies and
business cases to move projects forward? There has
been a problem in my constituency with moving
forward the York outer northern ring road, which is
regularly congested—many constituents call it a car
park. Does the hon. Lady agree that if the bypass
fund is properly targeted, it might allow local
authorities to move some of those long-term
projects forward?
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Order. May I remind Members that interventions
should be short?
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I will come on to the role of local authorities,
but there needs to be certainty about costs and
affordability.
To return to the national network, there was a
clear case for ending spending on removing the hard
shoulder from more than 500 motorway lane miles.
Those proposals were taken forward despite an
inadequate evidence base, safety fears, concerns
from the emergency services, and drivers’
unwillingness to use the former hard shoulder lane,
as evidenced by Atkins’ recent review, which the
Department commissioned.
It was reported last week that the Transport
Secretary has ordered changes to the roll-out of
the scheme, including the fitting of more refuge
areas. Will the Minister confirm that those reports
are accurate? If so, will there be a formal
statement to the House? What is the expected cost
of those changes? The Transport Committee raised
that issue and suggested that,
“the proposed schemes be replaced by schemes based
on the M42 Active Traffic Management design.”
It may be slow, but we know it will be safer.
The priority for many drivers is the fixing of
damaged local roads, not the strategic network.
Potholes do not just impair the quality of driving,
extend journey times and damage vehicles; they are
a real safety risk for drivers and cyclists.
Everyone is a road user, so tackling the poor
condition of our local roads should be a national
priority.
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It is projected that by 2020 the spending on roads
will be £86 per head, whereas the spending on
cycling will be reduced to just 72p per head. Does
my hon. Friend think that, when we are talking
about road infrastructure, we should include
cycling, which the hon. Member for Bexhill and
Battle (Huw Merriman) mentioned?
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My hon. Friend is a doughty advocate for cyclists.
Of course, when planning investment in our roads,
we should consider the needs of all road users,
including pedestrians and cyclists.
According to the Department’s own data, spending on
routine maintenance has fallen by 30% in real terms
since 2010, and the situation is set to get even
worse. We have to consider the amount of funding
available, especially in the light of the emerging
problems on some of Highways England’s projects. It
is time for Ministers to look again at whether we
have the right mix of national capital spending and
local revenue allowances.
I am conscious of time, so I will just mention a
couple of things. This is not just about spending
more; it is about being smarter—that relates to the
point made by the hon. Member for York Outer
(Julian Sturdy). With annualised budgets, councils
are forced to adopt a rather limited patch-and-mend
approach, with the result that the busiest roads
often receive temporary repairs over and over
again. In the longer term, that is a highly
inefficient approach to maintenance. The Department
should look at the case for granting local
authorities their highways budget up front for a
period of five years, which would enable the entire
resurfacing of the worst affected roads. It should
not be in the business of writing blank cheques,
but that mechanism could allow longer-term planning
to take place.
Before I finish, I will say a quick word about
suicide prevention, which has perhaps not received
widespread attention but which should be prominent
on the Department’s agenda. Obviously, every death
is a private tragedy, and the recovery stage can be
a traumatic process for staff. With about 1,000
suicide attempts on the strategic road network
every year, we urgently need a national road
suicide prevention strategy. We know from the
railways that we can be effective and make a
difference, but the best time to incorporate
changes into new infrastructure is at the design
stage. The Highways England health and safety
five-year plan commits the organisation to
establishing a suicide prevention group and
developing an action plan by March 2018, but that
is three years into the investment strategy. That
is not good enough and I urge the Minister to
prioritise the issue and to instruct Highways
England to bring the work forward.
Many challenges confront road infrastructure in
this Parliament, and on some important points the
Department needs to change course. I appreciate
that many hon. Members are waiting to speak, but I
hope the Minister will address the points I have
raised when he replies to the debate.
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I congratulate my hon. Friend the Member for
Bexhill and Battle (Huw Merriman) on initiating
this debate.
I will talk about the A27, which runs through my
constituency. It was envisaged as a coastal highway
although, as anyone who has travelled along it
knows, it is too often a coastal car park.
Stretches of dual carriageway give way to very
congested spots that cause severe delays. Every
single day, 25,000 traffic movements, most of them
not local, pass through the historic town of
Arundel, with severe delays every morning and
afternoon. That exacts a price from the local
economy in the relatively deprived areas of West
Sussex—there are some, in fact—and places such as
Littlehampton need better transport infrastructure.
Sussex Enterprise estimates that the cost to the
local economy of poor infrastructure links,
including a poor rail service, is £2 billion a
year, so there is certainly an economic case for
upgrading the A27. There is also, however, an
environmental case, and that is important.
The consequence of traffic queuing for long periods
at Arundel is of course air pollution. Furthermore,
people seek to avoid the congestion in Arundel
either by rat-running through the historic town
itself, which makes for high volumes of traffic
there—so often the story up and down the country is
that towns and villages suffer as a consequence of
delays and of people seeking to avoid those
delays—or by making the south downs suffer. In
order to get from east to west, people will go
above Arundel, driving up through the south downs.
The South Downs national park is therefore
affected, and so are its villages and adjacent
villages. Storrington, just above the national
park, has some of the worst air quality in the
whole of south-east England, caused by queuing
traffic. It is important to weigh claims that the
construction of a much needed bypass at Arundel
might damage the environment against the
environmental damage caused by queuing traffic and
traffic passing through the national park.
On one route, an Arundel bypass would have to pass
through a short section of the South Downs national
park, but the A27 already passes through extensive
parts of the national park, including at Arundel.
The part of the park in question, right at the
bottom of it, is not chalk downland but replanted
woodland. My contention, which I hope will be borne
out, is that there will be a net environmental gain
from construction of the bypass, even though a
small section of the national park would be passed
through; that could be mitigated.
The environment could even be enhanced—I have made
this case before, although my hon. Friend the
Minister, whom I welcome to his place, may not have
heard it—if we constructed a beautiful bridge
across the river Arun. My hon. Friend is learned
and erudite, and I am sure travels through France
extensively, so he will know that the French are
very good at constructing beautiful infrastructure.
The Millau viaduct over the Tarn gorge was
controversial when first proposed, but is now a
sensation and a sight in its own right. Designed by
a British architect, it is considered to enhance
the environment and not to despoil it.
The former Roads Minister, my right hon. Friend the
Member for South Holland and The Deepings (Mr
Hayes), who is still a Minister of State in the
Department, has spoken about the importance of
beauty in construction. If we ensure that schemes
will be attractive, we could deal with much of the
public opposition that can sometimes find its way
into debates about such projects.
That said, it is important for the Minister to know
that there is strong local support for an Arundel
bypass—there always has been, since it was first
planned more than three decades ago. On the
preferred route, which is now the starting point
for a consultation that I will come on to, there
was near-universal agreement by all the local
authorities. Those authorities remain committed to
an Arundel bypass, and it is my judgment as the
local Member of Parliament, as it is the judgment
of local councillors, that there is overwhelming
support for the bypass among the local population.
Indeed, that support increases the further away
from Arundel one is—but even in Arundel, my
judgment is that there is strong public support for
the bypass.
In December 2014, when the Government announced
that they would invest in an Arundel bypass under
the roads programme, we were delighted. That came
after the previous Labour Government had shelved
the scheme. In conclusion, I simply ask: will the
Minister confirm that the public consultation that
Highways England is due to hold on the Arundel
bypass route will go ahead this summer, or later
this year?
Highways England states not only that the scheme
will still go ahead, that the cost will be between
£100 million and £250 million and that the start
date will be before the end of March 2020, but that
the public consultation remains subject to
agreement with the Secretary of State. I noticed
that the list of schemes announced last week by the
Department for Transport, although not exclusive,
made no mention of the Arundel bypass. I therefore
seek the Minister’s assurance that the bypass will
still go ahead and that the consultation will be
announced this year. I am convinced that this road
scheme will benefit the local community, the
economy and, crucially, the environment.
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Order. Twelve colleagues have indicated that they
would like to speak. That will be difficult so I am
again appealing for contributions to be kept short,
because I would like to get in as many as possible.
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Thank you, Mrs Gillan, for calling me to speak in
such a broad debate on road infrastructure. I will
not make it too broad because in my constituency
investment in road infrastructure is a matter for
the Welsh Assembly and Government. Montgomeryshire,
however, has a very long border with
England—Shropshire—and I want to speak specifically
about the general principle of how we deal with
cross-border road schemes, making reference to two
schemes in particular.
Several schemes cross the border between England
and Wales, but the two in my constituency are
hugely important. The first one that I want to
speak about is usually known as the Middletown
bypass on a stretch of road from Welshpool—you will
know it well from your previous jobs, Mrs Gillan.
It is an 8-mile road between Welshpool and the
English border, and the gateway to central Wales.
However, it is absolutely hopeless and a real
bottleneck.
Our problem is that the cost-benefit analyses are
different. The two Governments have to agree for a
scheme to go ahead, and the cost-benefit analysis
in each of the two countries is different. In Wales
it is hugely important that we have access to the
market in England, so the cost-benefit analysis in
Wales is high and we are keen to go ahead, but of
course in England it is not. When I became a Member
of the Assembly, then a Member of Parliament, my
main interest was for devolution not to have a
negative effect on the way in which Britain
operates—but it does. In that specific instance, it
certainly does.
These two schemes are good examples. The first is
the Middletown bypass. It is 90% in Wales and 10%
in England, but it cannot go ahead unless the UK
Government commit their 10% to a scheme that any
cost-benefit analysis for England would say was not
worth while. But of course it is hugely worth
while, and the scheme would go ahead if we had that
agreement. That is absolutely crucial for the way
Britain’s economy operates.
The second is the Pant-Llanymynech bypass, for
which 90% of the investment would be in north
Shropshire and 10% would be in Wales. The case
argued locally is often about the environment of
the villages of Llanymynech—it is a village, not a
town; I do not want to cause any offence—and Pant,
and about danger issues, but the key issue for me
and for the economy of Wales has always been that
the scheme concerns the A483 Manchester to Swansea
road, which is a key piece of infrastructure into
Wales. Again, the cost-benefit analysis is
different on each side.
I finish with a general point. When the British
Government look at investing in roads in
England—roads are devolved to Wales and to
Scotland—they must look at the benefit to the
United Kingdom as well as the benefit just to
England. That is absolutely crucial if we are going
to make certain that devolution does not have a
negative impact, as it currently does, on the two
road schemes that I mentioned and on two or three
other road schemes up and down Wales. We must look
at how such schemes benefit the United Kingdom
overall.
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It is a great pleasure to serve under your
chairmanship, Mrs Gillan. I congratulate my hon.
Friend the Member for Bexhill and Battle (Huw
Merriman) on his incredible timing. How he knew
that this debate would take place on the same day
as the Government’s announcement, I honestly do not
know.
Many people want to speak, so I will get straight
to the point. There are two main schemes in my
constituency about which we are particularly
concerned. One concerns the A12, which is the main
A road through East Anglia. We sit on the Essex
border. The A12 will soon have three lanes from
Chelmsford to Colchester. It then gets to our
stretch, which is extremely bendy. Our main concern
is safety. Roads from villages join the A12, where
the speed limit is 70 mph, at extremely short
junctions into bends. Those junctions are lethal. I
can only presume that the casualty count is not
higher because of the caution that local drivers
take approaching the junctions, but there is
massive anxiety in surrounding villages, and I will
look to pursue that issue.
Since it is bypass day, the main scheme that I want
to refer to is the Sudbury bypass. My right hon.
Friend the Member for Arundel and South Downs (Nick
Herbert) talked about public support for a scheme
that has been around for decades. The Sudbury
bypass has been around for many decades. In fact,
there has been an outline of the bypass in the
local “A to Z” for a long time.
The essence of the issue will be familiar to many
hon. Members. The A road goes right through the
heart—right through the historic centre—of Sudbury,
our main market town, which is full of heavy goods
vehicles and all the pollution and impact that that
implies. The historic town centre includes
Gainsborough’s house, where Thomas Gainsborough was
born—a museum that will shortly receive millions of
pounds of lottery funding. We are desperate to
regenerate our town, but the sheer pressure of HGVs
is a problem.
I am pleased to say that Suffolk County Council has
brought forward an initial business case for a
Sudbury relief road, which it found could lead to a
60% reduction in HGVs and would have a 3:1
cost-benefit ratio in terms of economic gain, but
the most important point is the environmental
impact, which others have referred to. Our scheme
was previously rejected on environmental grounds
because, unfortunately, the only way to avoid the
town—I am sure this is true of other rural areas—is
to go into the countryside to some degree, but I
think there is a trade-off. On the streets that the
bypass would avoid, nitrogen oxide levels are very
high—they are, in effect, illegal. The safe level
is 40 micrograms per cubic metre of air; in Cross
Street, the main road that we seek to bypass, the
level is 59.4 micrograms. That is dangerous and
unsafe. I therefore think the environmental
argument is now in favour of the relief road, not
least because the road would also protect the
historic heritage environment of our town, where
there are many fine wool town buildings going back
hundreds of years.
Unfortunately, Sudbury’s biggest employer, Delphi
Diesel Systems, which is a major exporter, has just
announced a consultation on the entire closure of
its plant, which would lead to the loss of 520
highly skilled jobs. We are obviously worried about
that. While we are doing our best to prevent that
from happening, we need to think positively about
ways to revive the town. We have a strong
industrial base that would benefit very much from a
new bypass that would mean lorries could avoid the
centre of town.
I hope that the Minister will be able to visit and
give our schemes due consideration. I welcome this
timely debate and the Government’s timely
announcement. We all need greater support and, when
it comes to relieving congestion in a historic
market town, you can’t beat a good bypass.
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I, too, congratulate my hon. Friend the Member for
Bexhill and Battle (Huw Merriman) on securing this
debate on today of all days. Who would have thought
it?
I shall not detain hon. Members for too long. No
doubt they will show no surprise at all that I will
spend three minutes unashamedly banging on about
the North Devon link road. In the extraordinarily
unlikely circumstance that anyone here does not
understand the vital importance of the North Devon
link road, let me give Members the 20-second
lesson. It is the A361 between Tiverton and
Barnstaple and onwards to the beautiful North Devon
coastline. It links our part of the world with the
M5 and the rest of the country. However, we do not
see it as North Devon’s only link to the outside
world; we see it as the outside world’s only
opportunity to visit us.
We therefore need real investment in the North
Devon link road. We must ensure that it is fit for
purpose. At the moment, it is not. It is single
carriageway for about 85% of the distance between
Tiverton and Barnstaple—two towns some 30 miles
apart. Where it is not single carriageway, it has
short stretches of overtaking lanes that merge
quickly into the main carriageway with little
warning. That leads to risk taking, speeding,
dangerous overtaking and, sadly, a high incidence
of accidents in which people are killed or
seriously injured. Sadly, two summers ago, three
people were killed on the link road just a mile or
so from my home in North Devon.
We need to change that, but not just because we
need holidaymakers to be able to get to North Devon
more quickly in August. We need real investment in
the North Devon link road because it currently
hampers economic investment in our area, which has
so much to offer as far as a growing economy is
concerned.
We have made real progress. Devon County Council is
doing absolutely fantastic work, and we have
secured £1.5 million from the Government to carry
out detailed planning work, including putting
together a comprehensive business case. We are
currently in the third phase of a public
consultation, with a series of exhibitions—I was at
one in South Molton myself less than a fortnight
ago—that show what could be done to improve the
road. We have a plan. We are, to use the awful
phrase, shovel ready. We now need the money. I am
not the first and I am sure I will not be the last
to say to this Minister—this excellent Minister,
this wise Minister, this almost noble Minister,
whom it is a pleasure to see here—“Please look at
this scheme, because you will get so much bang for
your buck if you invest in it.”
Normally, people would not find a cigarette
paper—perhaps these days we should say an
e-cigarette paper—between me and my good friend the
hon. Member for Bexhill and Battle, but it rather
suits our purposes in North Devon that it seems
that the new £1 billion roads fund announced today
will be targeted at roads that were de-trunked and
are purely the responsibility of local authorities.
That is exactly the situation in which we find
ourselves in North Devon. Why? Because a Labour
Government chose to de-trunk the A361. That
happened under a Labour Government’s watch and, I
have to say, under the watch of a Liberal Democrat
MP in North Devon. [Interruption.] Absolutely. That
should not have happened, but it did happen, and it
hampered investment in this road. I am however
pleased to say that, if The Times is to believed—of
course it is; it is The Times—we can see the way
out of this and, through the new fund being
announced today, we can get some real investment in
the North Devon link road.
Let me look wider across the south-west, because it
is no good people being able to get to North Devon
if they cannot get beyond there to the rest of the
south-west. Last week, I was delighted to see media
reports of a new £6.1 billion programme to open up
road access to the south-west. In particular and
for so long, many colleagues in the south-west have
been asking for a proper dual carriageway linking
the M3 with the M5. Too many bits of the A303 and
A358 are single carriageway and not fit for
purpose. The Government have announced real
investment, which will see a major change in that,
and I warmly welcome it.
I say to the Roads Minister that we will be
knocking on his door. The Government have invested
£1.5 million in ensuring that we are shovel ready
for this vital scheme to improve the North Devon
link road. The message that needs to go out today
is, “Come to North Devon. Come and do business in
North Devon. Come and spend your tourist pound in
North Devon, and come and live in North Devon and
contribute to the local economy.” I want to be able
to say, “You can do all those things and get there
safely, sustainably and efficiently, thanks to
investment by this Conservative Government.”
-
-
Order. I will call Layla Moran next, but as I have
nine colleagues standing I will put on a time limit
of about three minutes, and maybe even less, if
people cannot keep their contributions short.
-
Thank you, Mrs Gillan. This is my first debate in
Westminster Hall, and I am delighted to be here. I
would be remiss not to mention the A34. Many hon.
Members will know about the issues of Lodge Hill
junction, and I will be speaking to the most
wonderful Minister about that junction. It has been
the subject of cross-party campaigning for 25 years
and it is reaching the point where, if we do not
secure it now, it will impede the unlocking of
Abingdon’s future forever.
My point is actually about taking people off roads.
Oxford is one of the UK’s great cycling cities, and
we should be doing much better. There are many
reasons why we should consider taking people off
roads completely. We have many active groups in the
area who are campaigning for, in particular, a path
from Eynsham to Botley. I am delighted to see my
fellow Oxfordshire MP, the hon. Member for Witney
(Robert Courts) in his place and I hope we will
work together on that issue. That community path,
which will go along the B4044, has been well
documented—there have been lots of warm words—but
what we need now is investment to get it going. We
also have many groups in Didcot who have lobbied
for a cycle path from Oxford to Didcot—that is
quite a long way, so it is not something I would
do, but those groups are insistent that they would
and I would love to be able to deliver it for
them.
A parent in Abingdon contacted me within days of
the election because her son had been mown down by
a car. Luckily, he survived, although sadly in 2009
a child died on a cycle route approved by the
school—a route that goes through 14 major
junctions. We need to do much more to protect our
children.
Finally, I want to talk about air quality. It is a
danger to children’s health to be knocked down by a
car, but also to breathe in the noxious fumes
released by cars. It is estimated that a third of
nitrous oxide emissions in the UK come from road
use, and 14% of children’s asthma is estimated to
be caused by air pollution. That, incidentally, is
the same as passive smoking. While it is no longer
acceptable to light up in front of children for
fear that they will breathe in the fumes, we have
yet to make the case for taking children out of
dangerous air pollution areas, such as those around
North Hinksey and Botley schools, for the sake of
their health.
I ask the Minister to apply a lot of creativity to
the way we look at local infrastructure. It is not
just about roads. Let us also look at different
ways we can take people off the roads, because in
the end it is better for the environment and better
for their safety—but, above all, for their
wellbeing, too.
-
-
Order. I am going to put on a time limit of three
minutes.
-
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship,
Mrs Gillan. I congratulate my hon. Friend the
Member for Bexhill and Battle (Huw Merriman) on
securing this debate. I will not go over the
preamble of how pleased I am, but I hope that
today’s announcement will help the bottlenecks in
places such as Bury St Edmunds and alleviate
problems in the historic town for the reasons my
constituency neighbour, my hon. Friend the Member
for South Suffolk (James Cartlidge), gave
earlier.
I want to turn to the A14. I must declare an
interest as chair of the “no more A14 delays”
campaign. The route is vital for Suffolk, the
region and the nation, with 70% of the cargo out of
Felixstowe—our biggest container port—travelling
down it, and 80% of Suffolk businesses relying on
it. In my constituency, I have the headquarters of
Greene King, Treatt and Muntons, large businesses
and enterprise zones in Bury St Edmunds and
Stowmarket. The economy of Norfolk and Suffolk is
£28 billion-plus, but the A14 holds us back.
To build a vibrant, modern economy we need a
functioning A14. The 20-mile stretch in my
constituency gives people the chance to enter for
business, tourism and leisure, but UK congestion
costs us £2 billion per annum. We could generate
£362 million in additional gross value added,
saving each commuter 13 minutes a day. There is
potential for some 45,000 more jobs in the next 10
to 15 years if we get on and do this work to the
A14. The accompanying homes and growth in the
economy must be worth something in that argument.
However, as my hon. Friends the Members for Bexhill
and Battle and for Montgomeryshire (Glyn Davies)
said, we need to think strategically about total
values across the piece and not always look at what
the value is for one singular constituency.
We have congestion around junctions in Bury, but we
have dreadful problems around Nacton and Ipswich in
freeing up the Felixstowe traffic, and we also have
issues going up to Newmarket. We have poor
lay-outs, short slip roads and lack of capacity,
which causes frequent delays. That does not
encourage getting business done, and we need to get
on with the job of building the roads
quickly.
There is a lack of adequate pull-offs, and there
are frequent delays. A constituent told me it had
taken her three and a half hours to do 28 miles
between Bury and Cambridge. Under RIS 1, the
Suffolk map was white: I really look forward to
meeting the Minister and ensuring that we have some
coloured dots for investment under RIS 2, that the
consultation goes ahead in the next few months and
that we are listened to. Remedial work is welcome,
but that is all we are up for. Please invest in
Suffolk.
-
I congratulate my hon. Friend the Member for
Bexhill and Battle (Huw Merriman) on securing this
important debate. House building, not just in my
constituency but in the area surrounding it, has
been an issue of huge concern for many years. It
has created huge pressure on the local roads, and
that pressure is getting greater and greater with
the current proposals and with yet more house
building coming down the line soon. Junction 7 of
the M61—I realise that is not in this narrow
remit—should have been built many years ago. The
fact that it has not been built means that the
roads in Horwich are under far more pressure and
strain than they ought to be, and the A roads and
other roads suffer because of a lack of motorway
investment.
If we look at Westhoughton, a bypass should have
been built decades ago. We think about joined-up
government. Equally, when we have house building we
must also look at the infrastructure needed to
support it, whether that is medical, educational or
other infrastructure such as sporting facilities.
Joined-up government really has not happened on a
local level. Symbolically, locally, the boundary
between the Wigan borough and Bolton borough
highlights that lack of thought-through decision
making.
People travel along the Wigan borough on the
Atherleigh Way A5225, which is a pretty good road,
so they can travel pretty fast, but when they get
to the boundary with Bolton they come across huge
concrete blocks where the road stops, because Wigan
and Bolton did not work together to deliver the
most obvious local road. So all the traffic that
travels through Wigan gets to the concrete blocks
and is diverted through Daisy Hill and
Westhoughton, creating huge misery for residents.
Bolton Council, or previous Governments, should
have delivered on that road many years ago, but
they have failed to do so.
One of the worries now is that given the huge
amount of house building, without nearly enough
useful infrastructure, that is planned for the
Greater Manchester spatial framework, it is more
than likely that building will begin on the options
for the Westhoughton bypass. Houses will occupy the
land where we need the bypass to be built; so we
urgently need it to be built before Bolton Council
builds there and prevents it from ever happening.
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It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship,
Mrs Gillan. I congratulate my hon. Friend the
Member for Bexhill and Battle (Huw Merriman) on
securing this important debate. I shall take hon.
Members through the issues affecting my
constituency, travelling through them quickly, as
it were—which is more than anyone could do trying
to travel on the roads themselves. I assure our
excellent and generous Minister that, despite what
may be heard from other hon. Members present, there
is no project more worthy of investment than the
A40 running through West Oxfordshire.
As anyone who has visited West Oxfordshire or
spoken to a local MP will realise, the A40 is the
pre-eminent issue there. Not only do my
constituents spend hours stuck in traffic doing the
short journey from Witney to the centre of Oxford,
but the economic potential of an enormously
successful area is being constricted. One need only
look at Carterton, where world-beating industries
such as Boeing and Airbus are present on the base,
but where the slip road access to the A40 is
restricted; or Eynsham, where Siemens, with its
word-beating medical engineering, is restricted in
relation to travel on the A40. There are many other
businesses there, as is shown by the West
Oxfordshire business awards, but I cannot mention
them all because time is limited. They are
restricted in the economic growth that they could
deliver, because of the road.
The A40 is the central issue in West Oxfordshire,
but not the only one. It has spin-off side effects.
Traffic trying to avoid the A40 travels, for
example, on the A4095 through Bladon, where I live.
It is a world-famous village because it is where
Winston Churchill is buried, and we have many
coaches per day. Visitors are of course welcome,
but through the narrow pinch point and the coach
parks further on there is excessive congestion.
There is also particular congestion in Burford,
with its world-famous hill, with traffic backed up
along it.
Hon. Members will realise that that high street is
called the gateway to the Cotswolds; nearly every
building is listed, and there are HGVs stacked up
on it, because there is nowhere to go. A bypass for
Burford would also be high on the list for
residents in that part of the world. Horsefair in
Chipping Norton and Bridge Street in Witney are two
areas in West Oxfordshire that have high levels of
pollution, and a bypass around Chipping Norton to
remove the weight of traffic—figuratively and
literally—is absolutely necessary.
There is also a great need for public transport. We
have already heard from my hon. Friend the Member
for Oxford West and Abingdon (Layla Moran) about
cycle paths, and I would like the B4044 cycle path
to happen. I cycled from my home in Bladon to
Oxford, when I worked there, along the A44. There
is an excellent cycle path there, but we need more
of them. I have now concluded my quick canter
through issues of health and economics, in relation
to road infrastructure, and I am grateful for the
opportunity to speak.
-
-
Order. If hon. Members can keep their remarks to
two minutes, we may get everyone in.
-
My main aim in this short contribution will be to
talk about the condition of the A180, but perhaps I
may join other hon. Members in mentioning two quick
asks. I feel somewhat guilty in doing so, because
last Friday the Minister of State, Department for
Transport, my right hon. Friend the Member for
South Holland and The Deepings (Mr Hayes), was in
my constituency opening the upgrade to the A160,
which improves access to the port of Immingham.
That was a £100 million project. We were pushing
for it during the entire 26 years when I was a
councillor in the area, so things do not happen all
that quickly; but I am pleased that the coalition
Government gave the go-ahead, and that the Minister
of State duly attended to open it. If we are to
finish the jigsaw of routes that give us access to
the south Humber port, the dualling of the A15
and/or the A46 are the next asks, and it would be
helpful if I could bring a delegation to meet the
Minister to discuss that, as I have done with his
many predecessors.
My main aim this morning is to draw attention to
the condition of the A180, parts of which, from
junction 5 to the Grimsby boundary, have a concrete
surface that causes no end of problems,
particularly to residents. I have sat in the homes
of constituents living as much as a mile from the
road, and heard the constant rumble of HGVs over
the surface. In 2000 the then Labour Government
said in their transport plan that all concrete
roads would be removed by 2010, on a priority
basis. Surely the clinching factor in the need for
the work was a report in the Cleethorpes Chronicle
of 25 March 2010 that directors of Grimsby Town
football club said prospective footballers were
being put off signing, because of the poor state of
the A180. If that does not clinch it, nothing
will.
As we know, the Minister is a rising star, and he
would not want to be compared unfavourably with one
of his predecessors. In a 4 pm debate in
Westminster Hall on 17 December 2003 a certain Mr
McNulty, who was then Under-Secretary of State for
Transport, said at column 320 that residents near
the A180 needed a rest, and promised that he would
ensure they got one. Improvements followed, and the
Minister would not want to be overtaken or beaten
by his illustrious predecessor. My plea is for him
to arrange for Highways England to make a proper
assessment of the costs and alternatives. If he
wants to join me and residents to listen to the
constant rumble, he will be very welcome.
-
I want to draw the Minister’s attention to
something that I hope is already front and centre
of his desk: the well progressed application for a
Middlewich eastern bypass. It has been a 30-year
wait, and the support in Middlewich and beyond is
strong. It would open up employment land for 2,000
jobs, which would help to transform the local and
wider economy. It would reduce congestion, and not
only through Middlewich. That congestion is
chronic, and not only at peak times. The bypass
would improve transport efficiency from the M6
across that part of Cheshire to the west.
Middlewich is a severe bottleneck, which is holding
back economic development in the area.
I am grateful that the Government granted business
case funding last year under the fast-track scheme
of the large local major transport schemes
programme. The business case was produced this
spring. As time prohibits my speaking about it in
detail now, I hope that the Minister will allow me
to hand him an executive summary of the business
case after the debate. It was produced by Cheshire
East Council with the support of the local
enterprise partnership, and it was the only one
proposed by that large unitary authority.
The council leader and I were due to discuss the
matter in a meeting with the Minister’s
predecessor—now the Exchequer Secretary to the
Treasury, my hon. Friend the Member for Harrogate
and Knaresborough (Andrew Jones)—before the
election intervened. I hope that the Minister will
look favourably on the idea of putting such an
appointment in his diary soon.
Middlewich is a fine historic town with an
aspiration to grow, including by taking in new
housing, which the scheme would also support. That
is not something that every town in Cheshire wants.
The road would also bring benefits by facilitating
HS2 construction and operation for the nearby link
with Crewe, and the reopening, we hope, of
Middlewich railway station for passengers.
I want finally to make a brief mention of
Congleton. The Congleton Sports Trust’s vision for
the future, following the successful Tour of
Britain through Congleton, is a project spearheaded
by the deputy mayor, Councillor Suzie Akers Smith,
to improve circumnavigation of the town. Obtaining
funding for that is proving challenging. The
project would facilitate the improvement of
infrastructure across the town, and make safe
cycling possible—including for children going to
school. My key message to the Minister is that for
rural and semi-rural areas it is proving
challenging to find cycling funding. Will Ministers
look at that again?
-
Thank you for calling me, Mrs Gillan. I will
briefly talk about the ideas brought forward by my
hon. Friend the Member for Bexhill and Battle (Huw
Merriman).
Something I have found in my constituency is a lack
of joined-up thinking between the local enterprise
partnership, the county council and Highways
England. For example, Highways England and the
county council would like to work together to
create an air quality management site on Hamble
Lane near junction 8 of the M27, but that has not
happened; there are air quality management sites
around the Eastleigh Borough Council offices and
through Botley village in my constituency. Indeed,
the bypass around Botley has been waiting to be
built for 20 or 30 years, and we are progressing,
but this kind of fund is exactly what we need to
get it over the line.
The other road we have been waiting three decades
for in Eastleigh is the Chickenhall link road. Not
having that affects Tower Lane and the village of
Bishopstoke, traffic coming from Southampton and up
towards Winchester and, indeed, air quality. It
also means that some people in my constituency do
12-mile journeys each day that can take up to an
hour and a half. Several Roads Ministers have said,
“I’ve been to lots of congested places; I am sure
Eastleigh is nothing different”, and all of them
have found it quite surprising. In fact, one was so
delayed that he missed an appointment.
HGVs running through villages such as Botley really
do affect the quality of people’s lives, including
our children’s. As a Conservative majority
Government, we can do better. During the coalition
with the Liberal Democrats, my constituency got
nowhere. I would like to prove that this
Conservative majority Government can actually do
things that affect people’s lives, because that is
what politics does. It can deliver what really
matters to people: getting home at night to see
their children and making sure that they have a
good, productive day at work—if they can get there.
-
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship,
Mrs Gillan; I congratulate you on managing to fit
in 12 additional speakers after the opening speech.
I also congratulate the hon. Member for Bexhill and
Battle (Huw Merriman) on securing the debate, and
further congratulate him because the debate was
originally due to be about Southern Rail; it was
changed following the debate in the main Chamber
yesterday. That saves me from having to speak in
another debate on Southern Rail. We have seen how
popular the hon. Gentleman’s debate is.
Given the comments from the hon. Member for South
Suffolk (James Cartlidge), I had to keep checking
the title of the debate in case it was called the
“Bypass Bid” debate; it certainly felt like that is
what it was. It shows just how passionate and
understanding of the needs of their communities
hon. Members are, and how much demand there is on
the road infrastructure network. I look forward to
the Minister’s replies to each individual bid as we
go forward.
The hon. Member for Bexhill and Battle highlighted
a good mix of local issues and the strategic
thinking that needs to accompany their resolution.
He was correctly angry about having the UK’s most
dangerous road in his constituency, and I wish him
luck in his ambition for improving its safety with
the speed camera solution and through other
bypasses that were mentioned. That brought back
memories for me: I remember doing a school project
way back in 1988 about local bypasses. I had
actually been able to access plans from 1947, when
the bypasses were first planned, and we are still
waiting on them. That story has come out time and
again today.
I also agree with the hon. Member for Bexhill and
Battle about strategic issues around traffic
enforcement moving from the police to local
authorities. I think that has benefits, although it
can also put pressure on local authorities. I also
fully support the comments about pavement parking.
I also did a blindfold tour of my local town
centre, which certainly illustrated to me that
vehicles on pavements are a further obstruction
that does not need to be there.
We certainly had quite a run through of hon.
Members. The hon. Member for Nottingham South
(Lilian Greenwood) focused on strategy, delivery
and issues including further funding pressures. I
look forward to the Minister’s response to that. I
liked the good, interesting comments from the right
hon. Member for Arundel and South Downs (Nick
Herbert) about beautiful infrastructure; I am
actually a civil engineer by trade, so I appreciate
infrastructure. Clearly, the issues of congestion,
air pollution and national parks need to be
addressed.
The hon. Members for Montgomeryshire (Glyn Davies)
and for South Suffolk also bid for bypasses, while
the hon. Member for North Devon (Peter
Heaton-Jones) talked of a north Devon link road to
allow holidaymakers quicker access to Devon during
August. Perhaps if the road gets the upgrade he is
looking for, more Scottish holiday makers will be
able to access it before August, because our
holiday period starts at the end of June. That
might extend his area’s holiday season.
The hon. Member for Oxford West and Abingdon (Layla
Moran) highlighted issues about major junctions,
while the hon. Member for Bury St Edmunds (Jo
Churchill) highlighted issues with the A14. The
hon. Member for Bolton West (Chris Green)
highlighted that housebuilding can cause issues,
which again shows the need for strategic thinking.
For me, that is also an issue for strategic local
planning, in terms of the council looking ahead at
where it will build houses and what infrastructure
is needed to accompany that.
The hon. Member for Witney (Robert Courts)
highlighted the A40. Listening to some hon.
Member’s contributions, including his, took me back
to listening to maiden speeches, which can give us
a tour through constituencies and a reminder of the
beautiful villages that exist. The hon. Member for
Congleton (Fiona Bruce) again highlighted a bypass,
while the final contribution, from the hon. Member
for Eastleigh (Mims Davies), again highlighted the
lack of joined-up thinking between Highways England
and local councils, which needs to be
resolved.
I genuinely wish hon. Members all the best with
their bids for funding. It seems to me that the £1
billion fund announced today will not go far
enough, so I ask the Minister to look down the back
of his couch to see if he can find more money.
Certainly, investment in infrastructure leads to
job creation, an economic return and, as we have
heard, can increase safety and improve air quality.
Any additional investment in roads in England and
Wales will hopefully have Barnett consequentials
and would lead to further investment in
Scotland.
I remind the hon. Member for Eastleigh that this is
not a majority Conservative Government but a
minority one. Perhaps the hon. Member for Bexhill
and Battle, who put in the first bid, may have seen
how successful the Democratic Unionist party was in
securing money from the UK Government. Maybe
Conservative Back Benchers need to get together and
do a wee bit of backroom bidding with their
Government colleagues.
Some people are for investment in road
infrastructure and some are against, but nobody
here today spoke out against. Earlier, I touched on
my being a civil engineer by background; I also now
have the role of spokesperson for transport and
infrastructure for the Scottish National party, so
I am certainly all in favour of strategic road
upgrading. However, it needs to be strategic, and
it also needs to link in with other transport
upgrades. We have heard about safe cycling, which
is important, and we also need to invest in rail
and public transport so that we have better
connectivity; that all goes hand in hand.
On Scottish Government investment and looking at
trunk road maintenance, the Scottish Government
look for three strategic outcomes: improved journey
times, reduced emissions to tackle climate change,
improve air quality and health, and improved
accessibility and affordability. Those have to be
the Government’s key objectives when they look at
their £1 billion investment fund. All hon. Members
here certainly have local issues, but the
Government have to look a bit more
strategically.
Under the previous UK settlement, Scotland suffered
from a lack of investment in roads. It took
devolution and the Scottish Parliament’s coming
into being to actually increase road investment.
The SNP Government have taken that to a new level,
with the M74 and M80 motorways and the recently
completed M8 motorway between Glasgow and
Edinburgh; it is actually incredible that it has
taken until 2017 to have a continuous motorway link
between the two biggest cities in Scotland.
We have heard about single carriageway roads in the
debate, but rural Scotland actually has single-lane
roads, which only allow cars to travel in one
direction, with pull-off passing bays. Again, that
shows the lack of investment over the years. Also,
the “Road to the Isles”, the A830, was the last
single-lane trunk road in the UK and was only
upgraded in 2009 with the aid of European
funding.
That is another concern going forward: what will
happen to that European funding? Will the UK
Government backfill that lack of money? Scotland
secured £1.3 billion of investment from EU
structural funds, which has allowed those important
road upgrades. I would appreciate it if the
Minister could answer that. I wish the Minister
luck in answering all the bids for bypasses. I
certainly support any additional expenditure on
infrastructure and would like to see further
Barnett consequentials and expenditure in Scotland.
-
It is always a pleasure to serve under your
chairship, Mrs Gillan. I congratulate the hon.
Member for Bexhill and Battle (Huw Merriman) on
securing this important debate on a matter that has
broad implications for all our constituents.
This debate is particularly timely, because by
chance, the Government made an announcement
overnight that they will be shifting £1 billion of
vehicle excise duty away from investment in main
roads and towards a bypass fund. I suspect that the
announcement was made not just to give the Minister
something positive to say in this debate, but as a
result of constant pressure from the Opposition. On
that point, I put on record my gratitude to my hon.
Friend the Member for Nottingham South (Lilian
Greenwood) for the work she did as shadow Secretary
of State for Transport to push these important
issues.
While Labour welcomes the news that local roads
will be receiving some much-needed investment, we
note that the money will not be seen by local
authorities until 2020, as the Government conduct
their consultation. The announcement therefore does
not deal with the immediate backlog of billions of
pounds’-worth of work to fix potholes—a backlog
that will only increase over the next three years.
Moreover, the announcement does not increase the
overall spending on roads. In fact, it could be
seen as the Government slashing £1 billion from
investment in main roads.
Our road network needs proper investment across
both main and local roads. In recent years, our
road infrastructure has been severely neglected.
The Asphalt Industry Alliance says that roads need
to be resurfaced every 10 to 20 years. Only London
comes close to that, with the capital’s roads
repaired every 23 years on average. Across the rest
of England, roads are resurfaced every 55 years on
average. That is clearly not sustainable.
A report published by the Office of Rail and Road
in February highlighted that Highways England—the
company responsible for the management of motorways
and main A roads in England—will have a funding
shortfall of approximately £0.8 billion. It seems
that the Government want to add a further £1
billion to that figure with their announcement this
morning. Highways England has committed to
delivering the Government’s road investment
strategy, which includes investing more than £11
billion between April 2015 and March 2020,
maintaining and renewing the network, delivering
112 major improvement schemes and carrying out
targeted improvements through dedicated funds. In
doing so, the company is also required to deliver
£1.2 billion of efficiency improvements.
However, the Office of Rail and Road report showed
that despite efficiency savings made by Highways
England’s improvement plan that have reduced the
funding shortfall from £1.7 billion to £0.8
billion, the company has plans to propose a range
of changes to the road investment strategy, with
schemes likely to be reduced in scope, delayed or
even removed entirely. Labour has warned
consistently that the Government have been
over-promising and under-delivering on investment
in England’s roads, and the report lays bare their
entire failure on this. The road investment
strategy is beginning to look like a wish list, and
even more so with the decision today to take away
£1 billion of funding.
The Office of Rail and Road report was published
only months after Highways England reported a drop
in its network condition key performance indicator
that reports road surface condition, which fell to
92.3%—significantly below the road investment
strategy target of 95%. We were promised the
biggest upgrade to roads in a generation, but
Highways England is now having to come up with
plans to address a budget shortfall of nearly £1
billion, as well as to guarantee driver safety
after allowing the condition of our roads to fall
short of targets. Labour is very concerned about
the fundamental mismatch between the Government’s
expectations and the effectiveness and efficiency
of Highways England, the Secretary of State having
refused to rule out cancelling or delaying promised
schemes. Will the Minister explain today which
projects will be delayed and which will be
cancelled, or if projects will be neither delayed
nor cancelled, where the additional funds are
coming from, especially now that the Government
have announced a £1 billion cut to investment in
main roads?
The situation is no better for local roads, which
make up 97% of the UK transport network. As I said
earlier, there is an estimated £12 billion backlog
of road repairs. The funding that the Government
have so far committed is a drop in the ocean, even
with the extra £1 billion of funding, which will
not be seen for three years. Local authorities are
finding it impossible to catch up. The permanent
pothole fund announced last year set aside
additional funding of £250 million over the next
five years to tackle potholes, on top of nearly £5
billion of funding for road maintenance announced
previously. However, the additional £50 million a
year until the funding announced today comes into
effect, if spread over the same 148 highways
authorities as last year, is clearly not enough to
address the £12 billion backlog.
The recently published annual local authority road
maintenance survey, produced by the Asphalt
Industry Alliance, found that almost a fifth of
roads were in poor condition, while local
authorities have said that one in six roads across
England and Wales are in such a bad state that they
must be repaired within the next five years. The
ALARM survey showed that last year, more than
16,000 potholes were filled per non-London local
authority, costing £111 million, and more than
4,000 potholes were filled per London local
authority, costing £11.4 million. In 2012, around
12,000 potholes were filled on average per
non-London local authority, costing £80.6 million.
In England, excluding London, the average local
authority budget for highway maintenance saw a
decrease of 16% from £23.4 million last year to
£19.8 million this year. That was unexpected, given
the Government’s commitment to £6 billion of
funding for local road maintenance over six years,
which began this financial year but appears not to
have yet been seen by local authority highways
teams.
Every journey begins and ends on a local road, so
the ALARM report’s warning that Britain’s roads are
in “terminal decline” is deeply concerning. It is
time the Government acted to give this vital part
of our road network the attention and investment
that it deserves. These findings lay bare the
Government’s failure to maintain Britain’s local
roads, which are blighted by potholes, causing real
danger to road users. Indeed, three quarters of
claims received by authorities for compensation for
damage to persons or vehicles as a result of poor
road condition relate specifically to pothole
incidents. The Office of Rail and Road report on
Highways England stated:
“While there is not a direct correlation between
the road condition indicator and safety, a
reduction may indicate an increase in safety risk
which Highways England must manage. The company has
given us assurances that the safety of the network
is not compromised. We have required the company to
evidence the actions it has taken to mitigate any
safety risk and how it will improve road condition
to meet the target.”
Will the Minister tell us today what action has
been taken to mitigate the increased safety risks
brought about as a consequence of the mishandling
of the road investment strategy?
A total of 24,620 people were killed or seriously
injured on our roads in the year ending June 2016,
and hon. Members have talked about road deaths in
their constituencies. Over the past two decades,
the UK has earned a reputation for having among the
safest roads in the world, but in the past seven
years progress has stalled and begun to reverse.
The Tories have scrapped road safety targets and
caused a decline in the number of dedicated road
traffic police officers in England and Wales. In
contrast, Labour’s manifesto stated clearly that we
would reset the UK’s road safety vision and
ambitiously strive for a transport network with
zero deaths, reintroducing road safety targets. In
conclusion, will the Minister set out exactly where
the £1 billion will be spent?
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It is a delight to see you in the Chair, Mrs
Gillan, and a privilege to be able to speak on
these very important issues in the presence of so
many hon. Members, and particularly Government
Members, who have taken a great interest in them
over the years.
I congratulate my hon. Friend the Member for
Bexhill and Battle (Huw Merriman) on securing this
debate about road infrastructure. He is a kind of
prognosticator of prognosticators; I do not know
what goats were opened or other auguries consulted
that allowed him to ensure that this debate
coincided with the announcements this morning, but
I congratulate him on his Delphic powers of
prophecy. I also think he has done no little good
in advertising his own claim to potential
membership of the Select Committee on Transport. I
place that on the record without, of course,
expressing a view on any candidate for such a
position.
Following the Air Travel Organisers’ Licensing Bill
on Monday and a debate in this Chamber on road
safety for horses and riders yesterday, this is my
third debate in three days. I can only salute the
courage and indefatigability of some of my
colleagues, who may have sat through all three
debates—and the strength of their stomachs. I hope
colleagues feel that taxpayers are getting their
money’s worth from this exercise.
I had originally planned to go through in some
detail some of the many schemes that will be
covered under the Government’s present plans, but
such has been the level of interest in and
importance of the debate that after some opening
remarks, I would like to engage specifically with
the points raised by colleagues throughout the
Chamber.
In many ways, as has been rammed home many times
today, our road network is the backbone of Britain.
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Will my hon. Friend the Minister give way?
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I would be delighted to do so.
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Could I ask about the Government’s commitment in
relation to the improvements on the A595 in my
constituency of Copeland and, in particular, the
Whitehaven relief road?
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I am glad that my hon. Friend has mentioned that;
it is entirely appropriate for her, not having
spoken in the debate so far, to do so. I am aware
that there has been some very inaccurate reporting
locally about the status of that road. My right
hon. Friend the Secretary of State has told me that
he is looking forward very much to setting the
record straight himself. I would say that there is
very strong recognition of the importance of that
scheme in its relation to the new nuclear
programme—I say that as a former Minister in the
Department for Business, Energy and Industrial
Strategy—so my hon. Friend’s point has been well
recognised.
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Will the Minister give way?
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If the hon. Gentleman does not mind, I will crack
on, because I have taken three minutes already and
I have a lot to get through.
As I was saying, the road network is the backbone
of Britain. Roads are vital lifelines for our
economy. They matter whether people drive or cycle,
or travel by bus or coach. They matter when people
travel to work or to buy goods, and 95% of people
use our road network every day. That is why the
Government are in the midst of a £23 billion
programme of investment in England’s roads; £15
billion of that is going on England’s motorways and
major A roads—the long-distance roads that link
regions together, connect us to our ports and
airports and enable economic growth. That funding
underpins the “Road Investment Strategy”, a
five-year plan, launched by the previous Government
in December 2014, that sets out the schemes and
funding levels for the period 2015 to 2020. That
covers more than 100 major schemes up and down the
country. At the same time, there was the creation
of Highways England and of a watchdog, the Office
of Rail and Road, to ensure that motorists get what
they are promised.
The investment plan is well under way. Since 2015,
16 major schemes have opened for traffic and 15
more have started construction. They include major
investments such as the £1.5 billion A14
improvements between Cambridge and Huntingdon, and
the £191 million upgrade of the M1, M6 and A14
Catthorpe junction near Rugby. However, that is
only the start, and the pace is picking up.
As announced last Friday, over the coming six
months, the Government will take the next steps on
55 road improvements across the country—opening
eight schemes, consulting on 10 more and publishing
final plans for another 29. In the course of that,
we will be seeking to hear from local people,
organisations and businesses to help to shape our
plans and ensure that they benefit local
communities.
This has been an extraordinarily interesting
debate. I can only congratulate colleagues on the
many schemes that they have brought not only to my
attention, but that of officials and Highways
England. I look forward to the debate’s being
closely scrutinised in my Department and by
Highways England for those points.
Several key themes have emerged from the debate.
The first is the necessity of increased investment.
The welcome nature of today’s news was, I think,
recognised on both sides of the Chamber. The second
theme is the importance of bypasses—the
environmental case for them, and their heritage
effects and economic effects. The third theme is
the integrated nature of the road network. In other
words, one does not want to beggar Peter to pay
Paul; there has to be parallel investment in
motorways and in A roads. Finally, there are the
themes of the importance of safety and of
cross-border funding and the like, on which I think
all colleagues would agree.
Before I respond to some specific comments, let me
turn briefly to the remarks of the hon. Member for
Nottingham South (Lilian Greenwood) and the shadow
Minister, the hon. Member for Kingston upon Hull
East (Karl Turner). I was surprised that, judging
by their comments, there is so little recognition
by Labour of what has actually happened. The new
investment should be absolutely welcomed. I can
tell the House that the investment by the last
Labour Government, in the period 2005-06 to
2009-10, was a little over £6 billion, and the
amount currently being planned is £11.4 billion. I
think that is a difference—
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Will the Minister give way?
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No, certainly not. That is not a difference—
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Will the hon. Gentleman give way?
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The hon. Gentleman had his chance to speak.
[Interruption.]
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The fact of the matter is that this is twice as
much money as the last Labour Government put in,
and that should be recognised. To fail to do so is,
frankly, to insult our motorists—to insult the
people who use these roads.
If one looks down the list, it is perfectly true
that the National Audit Office has talked about a
degree of over-programming. It has also praised the
significant improvement in the road investment
strategy, and I think rightly so. The NAO report
should indeed acknowledge what is well known in
transport circles, which is that there is always a
bit of over-programming in these things; not all
these schemes arise, in terms of public investment,
at the same time. An over-programming of 7%, which
is what it amounts to, is not substantial. Where
there are bottlenecks, undoubtedly we as a
Department will be looking at them.
Let me turn now to some of the specific points. I
absolutely welcome the points made by my right hon.
Friend the Member for Arundel and South Downs (Nick
Herbert). I can confirm that construction will
begin this year, as he has requested, on the A27.
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Sorry, consultation; I cannot read my own
handwriting. Consultation will begin on the schemes
that my right hon. Friend mentions. He rightly
highlights the importance of beautiful bridges and
infrastructure—a point made by my right hon. Friend
the Minister of State. His points have also been
raised—
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Will the Minister give way?
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I will not. The points made by my right hon. Friend
the Member for Arundel and South Downs were also
raised elsewhere by my hon. Friends the Members for
Worthing West (Sir Peter Bottomley) and for East
Worthing and Shoreham (Tim Loughton) and I welcome
those comments.
In the few seconds that I have left before handing
back to my hon. Friend the Member for Bexhill and
Battle, let me say that the point about cycling was
well made by the hon. Member for Oxford West and
Abingdon (Layla Moran)—I am a very keen cyclist
myself. The Government are investing £1.2 billion
to support cycling schemes, and rightly so. The
point about constraints on economic growth from
lack of investment in roads was very well made by
my hon. Friend the Member for Witney (Robert
Courts). I am running out of time and I want to be
sure that my hon. Friend the Member for Bexhill and
Battle has the chance to close the debate if he
wishes, so let me end here and thank colleagues on
both sides of the Chamber very much indeed for
their comments.
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I thank you, Mrs Gillan, and all colleagues for
making this such a fascinating debate. I also, as I
should have done earlier, welcome the Minister
responsible for roads to his place. If I continue as
a member of the Transport Committee, I shall look
forward to spending more time with him.
If I may, I will mention my hon. Friend the Member
for Lewes (Maria Caulfield), who did not have an
opportunity to speak. She is my constituency
neighbour and has worked tirelessly to get the A27
upgraded. She has fantastic ideas, which we were not
able to hear today, but we are, and will continue to
be, led by her to get the A27 upgraded, and it will
be to her credit, on this particular side of the
geography, if that occurs.
I absolutely welcome the extra investment from the
Government announced today. I perhaps should have
welcomed that a bit more strongly when I opened the
debate. It is interesting that so many Government
Members are in the Chamber today. That suggests that
they are working hard on behalf of their
constituents. There are fewer Opposition Members,
which suggests either that all the money was spent in
their constituencies or perhaps that they are not as
interested in this issue as we are. However, I thank
all hon. Members for their contributions, and I look
forward to more bypasses being built across the UK.
Question put and agreed to.
Resolved,
That this House has considered road infrastructure.
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