Latest Rail News

11.12.14

Greater control over rail links for city regions – ICE

The Institution of Civil Engineers (ICE) has urged policy makers to give city regions greater influence over national rail and road networks. 

Within its ‘Transport for Growth: Unlocking the Potential in City Regions’ report, the professional association  called for “an accelerated process” of power transfer away from central government to city regions, guided by the needs, ambition and capacity of each area. 

ICE argues that identifying the right geographical areas and the appropriate powers to be exercised within them is critical to achieving the transport outcomes that travellers actually care about – connectivity, convenience, reliability and affordability – and which economies need to support sustainable growth. 

With regards to rail, the organisation stated that city regions could assume greater powers over the local rail network, as is already done on Merseyside (Merseyrail), increasingly in London and previously in Strathclyde. 

It added that these areas have city region sub-networks focused on relatively short trips and largely separate from national and regional operations. ICE argues there is also scope to integrate these further through micro-franchising and integrated ticketing, as is the case with the expanding London Overground network. 

However, where city region integration is not appropriate, perhaps because most routes serve longer distance markets, ICE states that there needs to be “mechanisms for early and effective consultation and meaningful agreement” with city regions integrated into direction for Network Rail, as advocated by the recent One North proposition and programme. 

It also calls for funding from central government to be more flexible. Jonathan Spruce, of ICE’s Transport Expert Panel, said: “As we move towards the General Election, policy makers of all parties are seeking ways to get the best economic, social and environmental return on public money investments, and the devolution of transport powers to stimulate more balanced growth across the UK, is an opportunity at forefront of the debate. 

“The question has now shifted from whether this should happen, to how it should happen and it is time for all political parties to look more seriously at how to pave the way forward and seize this opportunity. 

“This means making some specific changes in national transport policy to help city regions use their greater autonomy to the best effect and ensure it contributes to UK wide goals. We believe a clear, overarching national transport strategy for England – complementing updated documents for the devolved nations – is required, providing a basis for city regions to develop their own strategies.” 

Tell us what you think – have your say below or email [email protected]

Comments

There are no comments. Why not be the first?

Add your comment

Rail industry Focus

View all News

Comment

The challenge of completing Crossrail

05/07/2019The challenge of completing Crossrail

With a new plan now in place to deliver Crossrail, Hedley Ayres, National Audit Office manager, major projects and programmes, takes a look at ho... more >
Preparing the industry to deliver trains for the future

04/07/2019Preparing the industry to deliver trains for the future

The move to decarbonise the rail network involves shifting to cleaner modes of traction by 2050. David Clarke, technical director at the Railway ... more >

Most Read

'the sleepers' blog

On the right track, Sulzer is awarded RISAS accreditation for Nottingham Service Centre

29/06/2020On the right track, Sulzer is awarded RISAS accreditation for Nottingham Service Centre

Following an independent audit, Sulzer’s Nottingham Service Centre has been accepted as part of the rail industry supplier approval scheme (RISAS). The accreditation reinforces the high-quality standards that are maintained by Sulzer’s... more >
read more blog posts from 'the sleeper' >

Interviews

Andrew Haines, CE of Network Rail, tells BBC News his organisation could issue future rail franchises

24/06/2019Andrew Haines, CE of Network Rail, tells BBC News his organisation could issue future rail franchises

Andrew Haines, the Chief Executive of Network Rail, has told the Today programme on Radio 4's BBC’s flagship news programme that he would not rule out his organisation issuing future r... more >
Advancing the rail industry with management degree apprenticeships

08/05/2019Advancing the rail industry with management degree apprenticeships

In answering the pressing questions of how current and future generations of managers can provide solutions to high-profile infrastructure projects across the UK, Pearson Business School, part of... more >