AN “exciting” opportunity which could help West Yorkshire build a brand new mass transit system was discussed by regional leaders.
Earlier this year, West Yorkshire Combined Authority released preliminary plans to create a rail-based mass transit network – possibly a tram system – to cover the whole of West Yorkshire, with numerous stops in Bradford.
The Intra-city Transport Fund is a £4.2bn government scheme, which will be split between eight mayoral authorities. However, the amount of money received by each authority will be dependent on the quality of its plans, meaning each authority must bid for a slice.
The Government also requires an incredibly tight deadline for all bids, requiring them to be submitted by the end of August.
However, West Yorkshire Mayor Tracy Brabin said she was optimistic this could be done, telling a WYCA meeting: “This is an exciting opportunity with large amounts of money. We have a talented bid writing team.
“There is a high and a low funding range which will guide our bid. Our understanding is that everyone will get something between that range.”
Multi billion pound mass transit system to link up West Yorkshire
She added there would be an expectation to spend the money on low carbon facilities, to increase travel by bike and walking and to reduce dependency on cars.
Mayor Brabin added: “We want this funding to make substantial progress on the new mass transit network and to make a difference to our bus offer.
She said that, as the timescale on submitting the bid was so tight, there would be no scope to discuss it again, and that any decision on submitting the bid should therefore be delegated to senior WYCA officers.
The embryonic mass transit plans suggest such a system could include nine lines and dozens of stops, including Leeds Bradford Airport, Junction 26 of the M62, “South Bradford” and Laisterdyke.
Unlike previous proposals which covered just Leeds, the scheme covers the whole of the region, stretching to Huddersfield, Halifax, Pontefract, Bradford and Wakefield.
WYCA believes construction could start on lines as early as 2025, with priority given to those in and around Leeds. If all goes to plan, the final scheme could be completed at early as 2040.
Whatever slice WYCA gets from the £4.2bn fund is hoped to go some way towards creating the network.
Bradford Council leader Susan Hinchcliffe (Lab) said: “This is a really exciting opportunity. We wouldn’t be sat here now having this conversation if we didn’t have devolution.
“Intra-city connectivity is important. We just don’t have that between each other and it holds us back as an economy.
“If we could get more quickly to Wakefield, Huddersfield, Bradford and Halifax, our economy would propel forward at a much greater rate.
“It is major infrastructure that we haven’t had before. This is what you get into politics to do – to make a lasting difference to people’s lives and to the economy.
“It’s not about the richest areas getting the most from Government.”
WYCA transport committee chair Coun Kim Groves (Lab) added: “The people of West Yorkshire can’t wait another 10 years waiting for this.”
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