Transport Infrastructure (Wellington, Somerset)

Tuesday 11th March 2014

(10 years, 2 months ago)

Westminster Hall
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10:58
Jeremy Browne Portrait Mr Jeremy Browne (Taunton Deane) (LD)
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Thank you, Mr Gray, for presiding over our debate this morning. It is narrowly focused and not necessarily of interest to many Members of Parliament, but is certainly of interest to the residents of Wellington, Somerset, which is in my constituency, and people in the surrounding communities. To put the matter into context for hon. Members who are less familiar with Somerset, I should say that the principal town in my constituency is Taunton, which has a population of around 60,000. It is the largest town in Somerset and the county town, and there have been some substantial infrastructure development projects there during the last decade or so.

A bridge was built on Silk Mills road—the Silk Mills bridge, which opened in 2005 and replaced a level crossing. That was important in allowing the traffic to flow around the edge of that side of Taunton and was introduced at the same time as a park and ride. More recently, a few years ago, the so-called Third Way bridge opened in Taunton. That alleviated some congestion in one part of town and provided a more direct route across the river.

As we speak, the northern inner distributor road is being built in Taunton, with a substantial contribution from the Department for Transport—central Government are spending in the region of £15 million, supplementing money that has been made available locally as well—to alleviate congestion in the northern part of Taunton. However, perhaps more importantly, the road will allow for the development of an extensive brownfield site near Taunton train station and provide an obvious opportunity for new jobs, new housing and new retail sites in Taunton. All that is conditional on the road that is currently being built and due to be finished next year.

There are always people who would like even more projects to be initiated and funded, but we recognise in Taunton that although the traffic congestion is a serious problem, there has been transport infrastructure investment. It is fair to recognise, of course, that central Government have limited funds and that demand always outstrips the money available.

During this short debate, I want to turn to the second town in Taunton Deane constituency, or borough. About two thirds of people in Taunton Deane live in Taunton, but if the Minister or any other Members were to travel further down the south-west peninsula on the M5, going one more junction beyond junction 25—the principal Taunton junction—and turning off at junction 26, they would come to the second town in Taunton Deane, which is called Wellington. It is well known for the Wellington monument, which overlooks the M5, and it has a population of approximately 10,000, depending on how one calculates some of the outlying parts of the town. It is a substantial community in its own right and has a very strong and proud identity.

The purpose of securing this morning’s debate is to talk about the infrastructure requirements of Wellington. There is a danger, because the town is smaller and is only six or seven miles away from Taunton, that Wellington’s transport infrastructure needs will otherwise be overlooked. I want to discuss two aspects of the transport infrastructure that I hope could be improved, if we think in terms of a five-year or 10-year project. We have a vision for improving the quality of life of Wellington residents by upgrading their transport infrastructure. The two elements are, in my view, the two core components of a transport infrastructure vision for Wellington.

The first one is the problem of traffic congestion in the town. I recognise that every Member of Parliament could stand up and identify a town in their constituency where traffic congestion was a problem, but it is becoming more of a problem in Wellington, in part because extra house building is going on in the town. The Cades Farm development has brought forward several hundred houses, which are now occupied, and the Longforth Farm development will have the space for about 500 houses when it is completed. It is only in its first phase at the moment. Obviously, that is adding a substantial percentage population increase to the town of Wellington.

If you were to come a mile or two into Wellington from junction 26 on the M5, Mr Gray—it is a very underused junction, so there is a lot of opportunity for development and it is attractive to people who can access the motorway quickly at that junction—and you were trying to get across to either the northern part of the town, coming in from approximately the east, or to places north of Wellington from the motorway, such as Milverton or Wiveliscombe, you would be hugely frustrated. You would have to go pretty much into the centre of the town, into the high street, and then turn right into a road called Longforth road.

That junction and the junction right in the centre of the town become hopelessly congested at peak times. You would almost certainly be stuck, Mr Gray, possibly for one or two phases of the traffic lights, and it would be even worse coming back, if you were coming back from Longforth road and looking to turn left and exit Wellington at that same junction. At peak times, the congestion is becoming intolerable and with the extra house building, the situation will become much worse.

What Wellington residents and I had hoped is that the Longforth Farm development would allow for a northern relief road for Wellington. At the moment, the traffic can flow round the southern part of the town without coming into it, but to get to the northern part of the town or north of it, traffic has to come into the town and out again, so Wellington needs a northern relief road. The Longforth Farm development, which is just getting under way, and will have, as I say, about 500 houses when it is complete, was widely thought to provide the opportunity for a northern relief road as part of the project. That seemed a very sensible trade-off, which would allow people to get around Wellington. I think that Wellington residents, even those who are perhaps uncomfortable with the scale of that development, would have seen that there was a quid pro quo and that there would be benefits for them in having the northern relief road.

Instead, I regret to say, the development of up to 500 houses has a road accessing the development, but it is a dead end—it is a road to nowhere. It means that if the people living in those 500 houses, when they are built, want to go to the northern part of Wellington, only 100 or 200 yards from their homes, they will have to drive out of their extended cul-de-sac into the middle of Wellington, exactly to the junction or junctions that, as I described, are already hopelessly congested at peak times. They will then have to drive back out to the north again. There is no northern relief road, just more scope for congestion.

The only beneficial caveat relates to Relyon, which is a major employer in Wellington that makes mattresses. Next time you are going along the motorway, Mr Gray, you may see a lorry with Relyon written on the side. When you are thinking of buying a mattress yourself, you may consider buying a Relyon mattress, and you would be very well advised to do so. It makes very high-quality mattresses and is one of the two big employers in Wellington, along with a company called Swallowfield, which makes aerosols and other cosmetics. We want to keep both those in Wellington. The one advantage of this new cul-de-sac is that it allows Relyon lorries to get out of Wellington without coming into the town centre, because it goes up to their factory. However, it does not allow any residents—any normal traffic—to bypass the town centre.

The first task of all is a northern relief road in Wellington, which we would very much benefit from. There are, essentially, two options—a modest option and an ambitious option. The modest option would be a road that goes into the new Longforth Farm development, but would then exit at Brendon road. It would not, in other words, try and cross the railway line, because as soon as a bridge is put over the railway line, it becomes more expensive and more complicated. It would not bypass as much of the town, but it would bypass the junction of the high street and Longforth road that I discussed a moment ago, which causes difficulties by Waitrose.

The more ambitious option would be a northern relief road that made a slightly broader sweep—there are different options as to where it could go on the map—crossed the main railway and came in at the end of either Wardleworth way, on the other side of the railway line, or possibly further along Station road, towards Milverton.

Either of those options would be an improvement on the current situation. The latter would be a sizeable improvement on the current situation and would set up Wellington for the next generation, because there would then be a southern relief road and a northern relief road. The northern relief road would not go all the way round to the north, but it would take out a substantial proportion of the traffic, and I think that it would allow Wellington’s extra development to be absorbed. It would be a long-term solution, not a sticking-plaster solution. It would stand Wellington in good stead for a considerable time.

The second big infrastructure project in the vision for Wellington’s infrastructure is a train station, and this links to the first point that I was just making about the northern relief road. Wellington is on the main line from Paddington to Penzance—or the line that normally runs from Paddington to Penzance; it is not running there at the moment. It is the main line that comes through Reading and then through Wiltshire, Somerset, Exeter and Plymouth and goes through to Penzance. Wellington did have a station; historically, it was a town with a station, but it has not had a station for many decades. There has been a debate for an extended period—longer than I have been the MP, which is almost nine years—about the feasibility and desirability of Wellington’s having its own train station.

I recognise that Wellington could not be expected to have a train service that was as frequent as Taunton’s, because Taunton is a much bigger town and virtually all the inter-city trains stop at Taunton, but there are other stops on the line between London and Penzance that are comparable to or smaller places than Wellington. I travel frequently on that line—almost every week—and shall give some examples. The fast service from Taunton to Paddington stops only at Reading, but some of the slower services stop at Castle Cary in Somerset or at Pewsey in Wiltshire, and in Cornwall the service stops at many places that are much smaller still.

It would be possible for there to be a stopping inter-city train—the slower service—stopping at towns such as Wellington. That would not require a diversion—Wellington is on the line; the line runs through the northern part of Wellington. It would require a new station, and the expectation would be that some of the trains in-between the inter-city trains, perhaps those running between Bristol and Exeter or Bristol and Plymouth, would stop in a number of places, including Wellington, and a few—not many, but one or two—of the inter-city trains would also stop at Wellington.

Such a new station would be hugely advantageous, because at the moment people who live by the train line in Wellington have to drive—even though they see the trains going past their front door—either to Tiverton Parkway or to Taunton. If they do not have a car, it is hugely inconvenient for them to get to either of those locations. They would probably need to get a bus into the centre of Wellington. Then they would need to get another bus, from the centre of Wellington to the centre of Taunton, which is 6 or 7 miles away. Then they would either have to walk from the centre of Taunton to the train station in Taunton, which is not at the same place in Taunton as the bus depot, annoyingly, or have to get a third bus, from the bus depot in Taunton to the train station in Taunton. If they allow enough time for those three bus journeys—enough time for contingencies—it is possible that getting the 6, 7 or 8 miles from their home in Wellington to the train station in Taunton would not take much less time than getting the train 150 miles from Taunton to London. That is how much extra time and inconvenience is built in.

To have a few inter-city services a day—I would not expect it to be a service every hour or so—stopping at Wellington, as they do at Castle Cary or Pewsey, would be of transformational benefit to people in Wellington and surrounding areas such as Milverton and Wiveliscombe, which I have mentioned. What would potentially work so well and make this a coherent vision would be building that station as part of the same project that came with a bridge, which made the superior version of the northern relief road possible. In other words, when I was talking about the traffic congestion and northern relief road and about the station, I was talking about not two unrelated projects, but potentially related elements of a project that would transform Wellington.

The project would provide opportunities for some more development in the town. That development would obviously need to be proportional to the size of the town, but the project would allow some reasonable development to take place. It would be hugely beneficial to the residents of the town by alleviating congestion in the centre of town. It would be beneficial to the major employers in the town, who would be able to access the motorway better. It would be beneficial to people from nearby communities, who would be able to get through Wellington and out the other side; at the moment, they get stuck in Wellington when they do not even want to be in the town. It would also be beneficial to the people who were able to use the services from that train station.

I conclude by saying that I appreciate that money is a finite resource and we live in straitened times. I am very grateful to the Minister for being willing to respond to what I appreciate is a very limited debate about a very specific project, or two potentially related projects. I hope that the message that I am leaving him is that if we can put in place a vision for this Wellington development that includes those two projects and that is supported by the borough council, the county council, Wellington town council and me as the Member of Parliament, the Department of Transport could look at putting those projects in some sort of future funding plan.

We could look at moving from just talking about the projects in a broad, generic, hypothetical sense to hoping that in one, two, three, five or 10 years we will have a plan that we can put in place, with some funding—not all the funding, but perhaps some—from a central Government pot. That could be used to turn the current situation in Wellington, which is pretty intolerable and in need of improvement, into the vision for the town that would serve its residents so well.

11:17
Stephen Hammond Portrait The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Transport (Stephen Hammond)
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It is a pleasure to see you in the Chair, Mr Gray. I congratulate my hon. Friend the Member for Taunton Deane (Mr Browne) on securing the debate, but it would be wrong of me not to start by saying how saddened I was to hear the news that Bob Crow died in the early hours of this morning. My thoughts are with his family, friends and colleagues. Like many, I will obviously remember him as a passionate advocate of safety on the railways and the well-being of people who work on the railways. Although it is probably clear to everyone that we may have had different opinions on how to run the railways, he was a man who led his organisation from the front and made an important contribution to the debate about how railway services are run in this country. My thoughts and, I am sure, the thoughts of everyone in the Chamber are with his family, friends and colleagues.

I commend my hon. Friend the Member for Taunton Deane for his eloquent and passionate speech. I listened to his opening remarks about the improvements in Taunton and clearly I welcome his support for the improvements that have been undertaken there. Of course, I also commend his realism in recognising that money is tight. That is a helpful prefacing remark.

The economic benefits of good transport are well understood and, in challenging times, transport investment is even more important. As my hon. Friend has pointed out, transport helps to support local communities by enabling businesses to move people and goods more quickly, easily and reliably, which helps them to grow and be competitive; by enabling people to get to work and creating more job opportunities; by supporting local projects and products such as Relyon mattresses, for which we heard an admirable advertisement; and by attracting inward investment to towns and cities to make them great places in which to live and do business.

It is useful to remind ourselves—this was implicit in my hon. Friend’s remarks—that the Government inherited not only a fiscal deficit but an infrastructure deficit. In the years leading up to 2010, there was a huge increase in demand on our transport network, but investment failed to keep up with that demand. As a result, nearly half of the respondents to a CBI survey at the time rated the UK’s transport network as well below average. It is to the Government’s credit that, at a time when we are trying to put the public finances in a sound place, we are investing record amounts in maintaining, upgrading and expanding the road and rail infrastructure in this country, investment that will, according to the International Monetary Fund, improve the long-run growth potential and boost demand.

Between 2011 and 2014, we invested £32 billion in roads, rail and local infrastructure, and between 2015 and 2021 we are committed to funding of £56 billion. We ensure that that money goes throughout the country. In the current two fiscal years, the Somerset block funding for road maintenance and highways maintenance will consist of more than £40 million. It is clear that the Government are committed to investing in reliable networks and providing the capacity that towns and cities across the country need.

The severe winter weather that we have suffered has made some parts of the network extremely vulnerable. As my hon. Friend knows, Somerset has had particular difficulties, so it is right that my right hon. Friend the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs announced last week the publication of an action plan, which contains several transport recommendations. In addition to £10.5 million of funding from the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs and the Department for Communities and Local Government, the Department for Transport is making £10 million of support available immediately to Somerset to enable it to start work on several short-term actions to help secure a sustainable future. As a result, I hope that Somerset will be able to begin to clear the roads of silt and debris, to deep clean the drainage system—that will help the road system—and to repair bridges and other structures. In addition, my right hon. Friend the Secretary of State for Transport has commissioned a review of the resilience of our transport networks. The challenge of the coming months is to get the network back to business as usual, to learn the lessons and to give the right support to the transport infrastructure in counties such as Somerset.

The Government clearly have a role to play in supporting communities through such extreme events and, as my hon. Friend the Member for Taunton Deane identified, in supporting communities with their priorities for transport. However, the days when Westminster decided and dictated to local communities what those priorities should be are over. Local priorities should be identified, and local decisions made, by local communities, local highways authorities and local enterprise partnerships. That is why the Government have committed £2 billion a year over the six years from 2015-16 to the local growth fund, which will be available to LEPs. Those growth deals can provide the resources required to facilitate local communities’ priorities, and such deals may well be appropriate for some of the targeted growth priorities that my hon. Friend described. The funding is not ring-fenced, but it will be available to support long-term planning infrastructure, including the transport priorities.

Many hon. Members will be aware that the growth deals are a competitive process, and moneys will be made available to the places that demonstrate the clearest-cut and most convincing arguments for delivering growth. It is important for local communities to engage with their local economic partnerships, and for local authorities and LEPs to work together to shape local priorities. I know that my hon. Friend has been involved in discussions with his LEP, Heart of the South West. I stress how important it is for the ambitions that he has described that the LEP is intimately involved in the discussions and that it recognises and supports his priorities.

I turn to the two interrelated schemes that my hon. Friend has described. He spoke about the congestion in Wellington and the need for a northern relief road to bypass the town centre by connecting roads to the east and the north, which has long been sought. The development that he mentioned will provide much of the road. It will provide access to some of the new residential development and to the factory, and it should reduce HGV traffic in the town centre. As he pointed out in an article last November, however, it will not be a

“proper northern relief road…we have the road to nowhere.”

I understand his concerns about the continuing congestion, delay and air pollution that are caused by the fact that the road is unconnected. He set out two aspirations for a northern relief road: one modest and one—a broader sweep that would cross the railway line—more ambitious. Both those ambitions are excellent examples of the solutions that the local growth fund has been established to support. As far as I am aware, and he may wish to correct me, they have not yet featured in the draft of the LEP’s strategic economic plan. I urge him to engage with the LEP and ensure that it recognises that ambition as a strategic priority. That is a route through which the scheme might be pursued.

Jeremy Browne Portrait Mr Browne
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If we were able to bring forward a joint vision for those two projects, would there be any national impediment to Wellington having a railway station? Would the Department for Transport object to that on the basis that it might have implications for other traffic on that line? That might not be an entirely local point, but it would be beneficial to local people if there was not a national impediment.

Stephen Hammond Portrait Stephen Hammond
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I will come on to discuss the railway station in a moment, so I will tackle that point shortly. Local pinch point funds, of which there have been two tranches under this Government, have helped with schemes such as the rail route that my hon. Friend mentions. Such problems are likely to be a priority for a future Government, and if such a scheme is re-established in future I hope that he might look at it as a potential way forward.

My hon. Friend is right to say that people in Wellington see the train services going past, but the station was closed in 1964. Wellington is thought to be the largest town on the Penzance to London line that does not have an operational station. I am aware that Mid Devon district council and Devon county council have spoken about how they might work together to re-establish local rail links between Exeter and Taunton. I understand that Somerset council has a long-term aspiration to reopen the rail line, but it has yet to identify a suitable service or adequate funding.

To come to my hon. Friend’s essential point, if Wellington station were to be re-established, the issue would be to ensure that a stopping service that called at Wellington did not interfere with the timings for some of the faster services, or with the ambition to provide accelerated services to some of the key markets such as Plymouth, Exeter and further into Cornwall. He is right to say that whatever happened, not all services would call at Wellington. The best way to achieve a semi-fast service that called at Wellington, fitted in with the timetable and allowed faster trains to pass would clearly be a discussion point. I do not see it as an impediment, but it would be a discussion point. I suggest that the next stage is to consider the proposal and to work up a business case, so that that work can be developed in partnership with the local transport body and the LEP. My officials will be happy to provide advice and guidance on how a viable case might be made.

As I have tried to convey in my short speech, I strongly believe that local priorities and local decisions should be made locally. My hon. Friend has made an eloquent case for his local priorities, and one of the main routes through which those priorities might be pursued is the local growth fund.

11:30
Sitting suspended.