Richard Bowker
Chairman, Strategic Rail Authority
55 Victoria Street
London
SW1H 0EU
Our ref: OTH/C0826/ID
Date: 5 March 2002
Dear Mr Bowker,
The Strategic Rail Authority Plan
As you will be aware from the West Midlands Rail Summit on 15 February, there is
considerable concern in the West Midlands that the SRA Plan does not commit to the
implementation of necessary investment projects in our area. The purpose of this letter is
to reinforce that view and to press for improvements in the Plan.
As you will know, the investment needs of the West Midlands rail network were clearly
defined in the West Midlands Multi-Modal Study. £7 billion is needed over 30 years
including £3.9 billion for heavy rail, sufficient only to ameliorate traffic growth.
There appears to be no provision for investment of this order of magnitude in the Plan.
Whilst Local Transport Plans include rail investment, final decisions are taken by the
SRA. I was therefore unimpressed to read your press release dated 15 February, £3.4
million for Turn Up and Go Service for Cross City Line which
contains the comment that "the SRA continues to plan ahead to address the long
term capacity issues in the region". What is meant by this? Whilst the £3.4m is
welcome, from the point of view of the contents of the SRA Plan, this comment seems an
insult.
In 2000, the Governments own Rail Summit listed New Street Station as the number
one bottleneck on the national rail network, yet there is little of substance (eg
diverting local trains into new underground platforms) in your plan to deal with this. The
Governments Ten Year Plan aims to increase rail passengers by 50% and rail-freight
by 80%. Do you anticipate that the SRA Plan as it stands will be sufficient to achieve
these targets without the removal of the New Street Station bottleneck? I consider that
this is vital, not just for intercity traffic but for uninterrupted journeys on the
cross-city line.
Furthermore, although the SRA plan does not seem to cater comprehensively for the
infrastructure needs of the rail network, recent articles in the Financial Times suggest
that the resources allocated are not even adequate to cover what is actually in the Plan.
The short section in the Plan on funding (pages 24-26) does not provide sufficient
information to refute these concerns and there is also no breakdown between capital and
resource spending. Will you be producing an assessment of the resources necessary to
complete the individual projects in the Plan, identifying any shortfalls in funding for
the works needed to meet the Governments Ten Year Plan targets? What factors are
preventing the SRA from developing a nationwide plan that really can ensure that
Government targets on increased rail use are met?
I understand that you have stated that the SRA plan is dynamic and will be updated
annually to reflect changing circumstances. As it stands, the Plan is not acceptable even
if circumstances do not change and I believe there is a need for an urgent revision of the
investment designated for the rail network in the West Midlands, if not nationally.
Yours sincerely,
LYNNE JONES MP
cc John Spellar, Minister for Transport