Chesterfield leader warns Government not to back-track on HS2 as report suggests stopping short of Derbyshire

Political and business leaders from Derbyshire have reacted angrily to proposals suggesting the region’s HS2 connection to Birmingham and the North could be drastically scaled back.
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The National Infrastructure Commission’s (NIC) Rail Needs Assessment Plan comes ahead of the Government’s announcements about how and where it will fund major rail investments aimed at helping the UK recover from Covid and create jobs across the country.

Regional leaders in the Midlands and the North have spent the past five years developing detailed plans which use HS2’s arrival at Toton and Chesterfield as the centrepiece of a joined-up economic growth strategy which would create thousands of jobs and transform rail connections between the East Midlands, Birmingham, Leeds, the North East and Scotland.

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But the NIC has tabled ideas which include a proposal for the HS2 line to terminate at East Midlands Parkway – a location dismissed as unworkable by feasibility studies – and put passengers back on to the old network if they want to travel further north.

A worker walks past a sign outide a construction site for a section of Britain's HS2 high-speed railway project. (Photo by Tolga AKMEN / AFP) (Photo by TOLGA AKMEN/AFP via Getty Images)A worker walks past a sign outide a construction site for a section of Britain's HS2 high-speed railway project. (Photo by Tolga AKMEN / AFP) (Photo by TOLGA AKMEN/AFP via Getty Images)
A worker walks past a sign outide a construction site for a section of Britain's HS2 high-speed railway project. (Photo by Tolga AKMEN / AFP) (Photo by TOLGA AKMEN/AFP via Getty Images)

Despite indicating that future rail connectivity could be scaled down in the Midlands, the NIC’s report appears to assume that the second stage of Crossrail in London - previously estimated to cost £27 billion - should go ahead.

Government will take the final decision on which option to choose in the East Midlands, with political and business leaders in the region now doubling down on their demands that it honours its commitment to build the station at Toton and deliver HS2 East in full.

Coun Tricia Gilby, leader of Chesterfield Borough Council and chair of the Chesterfield and Staveley Delivery Board, said: “In Chesterfield and Staveley, the prospect of HS2 connectivity and the establishment of an infrastructure maintenance depot is already driving new development and investment that will benefit and bring hope to large areas of northern Derbyshire and Nottinghamshire that have suffered from years of industrial decline.

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“Now is not the time to scale back HS2. We have worked with local business, landowners and communities on plans for major new development bringing hundreds of new jobs, and we have investors knocking at the door.

“It makes no sense for the NIC to jeopardise all this potential at such a critical time for our economy, as we recover from Covid and prepare for Brexit. We owe it to future generations to deliver on the promise of growth that HS2 has provided.”

Coun Chris Poulter, leader of Derby City Council and a member of the East Midlands HS2 Executive Board, added: “Our city is a world-class centre for rail engineering, and we have marquee companies such as Rolls-Royce, Bombardier and Toyota. What industry wants to see is a commitment to HS2 East in full, not a station on the cheap which goes no further.

“Derby, Nottingham and Leicester together offer a unique opportunity for the Government’s recovery plans.”

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The already-agreed HS2 Hub Station at Toton would be integrated with major development proposals for Toton and Chetwynd, which include the delivery of thousands of new homes, a ‘Garden of Innovation’ intended to attract knowledge-related jobs, and a detailed connectivity strategy which links more people to employment and opportunities.

It has also been built into proposals for an East Midlands Development Corporation, launched earlier this year by Midlands Engine Chairman Sir John Peace as an ambitious bid to transform the regional economy through the efficient delivery of a series of major, large-scale developments.

East Midlands Parkway was built as an interim stop on the Midland Mainline. When it opened in 2009, the ambition was for it to carry 743,00 passengers a year. But in 2018-19, the isolated site was used by only 360,770 people.

Elizabeth Fagan CBE, chair of the D2N2 Local Enterprise Partnership, said the decision about HS2 would be an historic moment for the region: “We strongly believe that HS2 delivered in full is a once-in-a-generation opportunity to boost investment, development and economic growth. HS2 would also be a catalyst for our collective ambition to a low carbon future.

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“The East Midlands has a crucial role to play in the future economic recovery and growth of the UK, and this is dependant on improved infrastructure and connectivity.

“We know, for sound economic reasons, that the scale and ambition of this project would revolutionise the East Midlands, lifting and levelling-up our economy. It is critical that Toton and HS2 East is built in full.”

Scott Knowles, CEO of the East Midlands Chamber of Commerce, said: “Any suggestion that involves stopping HS2 at East Midlands Parkway would not work for the region, and has already been considered and dismissed from a feasibility perspective years ago.

“When the Government makes its decision about which option to include in its Integrated Rail Plan, it will have a clear choice between an exciting vision created by a region that’s focused on long-term growth and prosperity – one that will shape how we want our country to look as we leave the UK-EU transition period – and another that applies rough methodology, offers short-term logic and ultimately doesn’t deliver the same benefits.

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“We have a plan that’s ready to go and it’s time the Government delivered on promises it has made so many times over the past 12 months since it firmly committed to the scheme – and in the years that preceded it.”

Regional leaders are concerned because the NIC’s assessment does not appear to take into account the benefits of local growth strategies around Toton, Chesterfield and Staveley, Sheffield and Leeds. They claim it fails to understand the complex geography of the eastern leg and undervalues its economic benefits as a result.

The final decision on HS2 will be taken by Ministers early in the New Year through the Government’s Integrated Rail Plan for the North and the Midlands.