MPs Demand £100 Billion To Spare Future Generations From Northern Rail Network Misery

It's estimated businesses have lost almost £38 million because of Northern Rail disruption.
Rail passengers wait for a train at the temporary Workington North railway station which has been built in six days to reunite the Cumbrian town that was split in two after several bridges in the area were lost after torrential rain just over a week ago.
Rail passengers wait for a train at the temporary Workington North railway station which has been built in six days to reunite the Cumbrian town that was split in two after several bridges in the area were lost after torrential rain just over a week ago.
PA Archive/PA Images

Senior Tories including former deputy prime minister Lord Heseltine have urged Philip Hammond to commit £100 billion to transform northern England’s rail and road network to prevent future generations enduring the misery faced by today’s commuters.

Lord Heseltine, along with other Conservatives including former transport minister Sir Robert Goodwill and ex-whip Sir Greg Knight, are among a cross-party group of more than 80 MPs and peers to press for extra investment.

The Northern Powerhouse Partnership (NPP) has estimated businesses have lost almost £38 million because of Northern Rail disruption.

Last month it was announced rail season ticket holders in the north of England will be entitled to compensation worth up to the cost of four weeks’ travel amid chaos following new timetables.

They call on the Chancellor to use his Budget to commit £24 billion of funding for the high-speed Northern Powerhouse Rail (NPR) scheme.

That would involve an initial £24 billion of funding, including at least £200 million a year to bring forward the target completion date to coincide with the planned arrival of the HS2 line to Leeds and Manchester in 2032.

Critics have highlighted the amount spent on transport in the South East compared with the North and the letter urged the Chancellor to allocate funding for NPR so it can proceed at the same time as the Crossrail 2 scheme in London.

The letter to the Chancellor, which was sent by Tory MP Kevin Hollinrake, the co-chair of the Northern Powerhouse all-party parliamentary group, also called for a commitment to increase funding for major road and rail projects in the region to £100 billion by 2050.

Hollinrake said the extra investment could see the next generation enjoy opportunities across the region which are “currently beyond young people today”.

Signatories to the letter include a string of Tory MPs representing northern constituencies at a time when Transport Secretary Chris Grayling has come under fire for his handling of the Northern rail fiasco.

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