Showing posts with label Metro. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Metro. Show all posts

Sunday, 1 November 2015

Leeds Trolleybus Inquiry Revisited…


Leeds Trolleybus Inquiry 
Revisited…

It is now a year and a day since the Leeds Trolleybus Vehicle System Order Inquiry was completed, or as it is known better to some of us, The Leeds Trolleybus Inquiry.



We understand that the Inspector, Mr Martin Whitehead, did, as promised, duly submit his report to the Secretary of State about the time of the election in May.  Some small progress has been made in the removal of the original supremo, Mr Robert Goodwill, from the decision making position, due to his former clearly stated view in favour long before the plans were developed or the Public Inquiry carried out.



Full detail on this story and all other ongoing news in recent times is to be found on the blog page of the Stop The Trolleybus campaign.




But are we any closer to finding out the decision?



Councillor James Lewis still claims that the case for the trolleybus is ‘compelling’, Mr Dave Haskins of NGT has been globe trotting telling the world how Britain is taking the lead in exciting new transport developments with his trolleybus


and a letter to the Telegraph




claims that “There are now as many trolleybus systems running worldwide as there are trams, and Leeds will have such a system in 2020”  Perhaps this gentleman knows something we others in the public don’t? 



We have often seen the shadowy presence of Tbus, a trolleybus promotional group working here and there in the NGT campaign and this is just the kind of trick that they would pull, hoping that the Minister will chance upon such a letter as he leafs through the papers over his morning coffee.  Neurolinguistic and predictive programming are well recognised psychological techniques whereby suggestions are put to recipients of such information which already assume the desired outcomes in veiled ways, couched behind other statements.  But this is no more than a convenient lie and doubtless the writer knows it. 



Emeritus Professor of Transport Planning Peter Bonsall was quick off the mark in repost. 




He and the illustrious Gregory Jones QC took up many fascinating hours last summer picking apart the trolleybus scheme, and demonstrated amongst other things that trolleybus schemes are disruptive to traffic when they do not have fully segregated lanes, as would occur along this route, and that with the new advances in battery bus technology this much more flexible option is to be preferred.  This is not to mention even that NGT witnesses admitted it would cause more congestion than at present, and the fact that the business case was brought into serious doubt when the laughable examples of ‘public consultation’ were exposed.  You would have to listen to the audio recordings to believe it was possible.  Which conveniently, you can do, here.  (More on that later.)


Index of which can be found here




So what we have seen in recent time is a war of words to influence the final decision of the Minister, who should really be following the advice of the Inspector.



We as the Objectors felt that it was us, and First West Yorkshire who had the ‘compelling’ case, as the Professor and Mr Jones dismantled the case presented by NGT.



We have been told that a decision may well take until the end of the year, so we should not be impatient, but there are still matters of concern which are at last coming into the light of day.



I was always dissatisfied with the attitude of Leeds City Council, Metro and NGT towards the documentation of the proceedings of the Public Inquiry.  It may well be the case, as the Inspector told me more than once, that the recordings which our Objectors group made of all the sessions of the Inquiry, and which I co-ordinated the uploading of on my Mixcloud site


cannot be accepted as an official record of the Inquiry.  However, I raised the matter of a formal record of the Inquiry with various different people and they were all adamant that there was to be no official record, neither audio nor a written transcript.  Mr Whitehead had no personal secretary and made all his own notes.  Perhaps for that he can be thought to have earned his £630 per day, but how can we be sure that every detail he wrote down is correct, if there is no objective record? 



It was a matter of some alarm to us in the Objectors group that it was some weeks into the Inquiry before Mr Whitehead apparently became aware that the trolleybus route was not fully segregated.  Probably the single most important factor in whether a system such as this would improve or harm the existing state of affairs.



And with Cllr Lewis claiming that the case is ‘compelling’, then we surely must have the compelling points explained to us, since we cannot see them.  Besides which, the idea of compulsion is somewhat repugnant, but the pugnacious bully boy of Metro is determined to compel us.



Well, it may be that I in my humble estate was unable to prevail upon Leeds CC or the Inspector to set about the institution of a formal record, but those perhaps more recognised by their positions have set matters in motion which need to be resolved.



Professor Christopher Todd has dug out some information about Public Inquiries which we should all have known before this began, and it has been drawn to the attention of Greg Mulholland, MP for the constituency through which much of the route would travel.



So I have reprised my pursuit of the goal of some recognition of the need for a public record and wrote this to the Yorkshire Evening Post the other day.



Sir,



There is a debate behind the scenes of the trolleybus inquiry which will not go away.



At the pre-Inquiry meeting last year I asked if an audio recording or video live stream would be made available.  Councillor John Illingworth also supported this request, and put it to Leeds CC.  At the time I asked the Inspector if it would be acceptable for the public to make recordings, and I was told yes. 



When the Inquiry began Cllr Illingworth informed me that LCC claimed it was too expensive and that no recordings would be made.



With the co-operation of concerned Objectors I co-ordinated our own recordings and uploads of this material.  Unofficial though these were, they were referred to many, many times during the Inquiry, by the Inspector himself, counsel and witnesses.



The Objectors have always been disappointed that officials of LCC such as James Lewis were dismissive of the need for a public record.



It recently came to my attention that this was the subject of legislation and guidance.

 

In A Guide to Public Inquiries, put out by the Office of the Traffic Commissioner:


one finds: “RECORDING OF THE INQUIRY 3.11 The proceedings will be recorded so that a transcript can be produced should one be required.”



And when Inquiries Act 2005 was examined in select committee


the importance of “transcripts of evidence” was stressed. Otherwise people “are largely left painfully to acquire such knowledge for themselves.”



It is my understanding that this shortcoming in the lack of official recordings or transcripts has been drawn to the attention of Greg Mulholland, MP, who one hopes will pursue the matter.



Certainly it is unsatisfactory that there should be no official public record of proceedings which ran to 72 days over six months and cost Leeds taxpayers several million pounds.



Yours,





This has not yet been published, but it is my hope that it will be, and then with the support of an MP there may at last be questions asked of people who need to give better answers than they have in the past. 



As one who has long been unhappy with the shilly-shallying of Leeds City Councillors it would not in the least surprise me if the avoidance of the making of a formal public record was somewhere in the back of someone’s mind as a get out if the evidence was required to be subjected to further scrutiny.  If it wasn’t, one is left to consider the abject lack of standards that could lead to the expenditure of some £2.6 million pounds on an inquiry into an infrastructure project that would radically transform the areas affected and be expected to run for some 60 years or so, and there is no actual record of the evidence that was given. 




This is really crucial.  When I approached Cllr Lewis about this, all he was interested in were the documents which NGT entered, and neither did he attend the Inquiry as a witness to be examined on this, nor did he even come to listen to the examinations of others or Objectors evidence.  He claims not to have even listened to the recordings online. So he has absolutely no idea of the shortcomings of the scheme as exposed by both the professionals as well as the local amateurs opposed to it.



As a political cynic from way back, forgive me for saying, but this looks like an attempt at a whitewash to me.  I can’t speak for the Inspector, perhaps his hands were tied in ways we don’t know, but the dismal disregard for the needs or rights of the local citizenry to even know what was going on at the Inquiry should call the entire bid by Leeds City Council into doubt.  The truth fears no investigation, and if the likes of Cllr Lewis and his cronies are so convinced that their case is compelling, they won’t have any difficulties in endorsing the recordings which the Objectors group and I made public for the greater good.



This is all rather reminiscent of how the Inquiry began, when Chris Foren, Chair of the A660 Joint Council requested the release of feedback material which had been given at consultation events.  The NGT team resisted for a short time, but clearly their counsel, the erudite Neil Cameron QC will have prevailed upon them to release this material, which they did before long.



This is a much larger body of material to transcribe, but if they are so convinced of their case, I hope they won’t mind spending a little bit more of our Council Tax on making it available, or at least endorsing the recordings (which were made at our own expense), so that the material can be recognised for what it is, the only truly objective record of the proceedings of the trolleybus inquiry, and be open to scrutiny by a wider public. 



It is as I have said, the Truth Fears No Examination.  I do not fear the forensic examination of these recordings, either technically to verify that they have not been altered beyond the needs of enhancement of audibility (as I stated in an affidavit document to the Inquiry), nor in their spoken contents.  It is perhaps this latter which the august Councillors who propose the NGT scheme fear, and why they would prefer that there were no objective record, but only their quips and soundbites, which find no support in the actual evidence as presented to the Inquiry.



 This is an exercise in transparency.  Will LCC and Metro come clean?










Monday, 13 October 2014

Leeds Trolleybus Enquiry Day 61



Leeds Trolleybus Public Enquiry

Day 61


Friday 9th October 2014

Links to the audio recordings for the day are included here and commentary follows below.

In the first morning session of Day 6 of the Leeds Trolleybus Public Enquiry, Friday 9th Oct 2014, Mr Stuart Natkus on behalf of Morley House Trust (LGHS) and other local Statutory Objectors, gives their cases against the NGT proposals.

In the late morning session of Day 6 of the Leeds Trolleybus Public Enquiry, Friday 9th Oct 2014, Mr Stuart Natkus on behalf of Morley House Trust (LGHS) and other local Statutory Objectors, completes their cases against the NGT proposals and Neil Cameron QC for the Applicant begins his cross examination.

In the afternoon session of Day 6 of the Leeds Trolleybus Public Enquiry, Friday 9th Oct 2014, Mr Stuart Natkus is cross examined by Neil Cameron QC for the Applicant NGT as well as by the Inspector.


As week 15 ground to a close, and the Enquiry has now extended to over twice the length originally anticipated (by NGT I should hasten to add), we saw Mr Stuart Natkus for the statutory objectors along Headingley Lane and on Headingley Hill present his case against the trolleybus scheme, or at least against a lot of details which are part of it.

I have a little joke I make about Mr Natkus, for which I hope he will forgive me.  Doubtless my readers will know the saying ‘The enemy of my enemy is my friend’.  And Mr Natkus, or at least the clients whom he is representing, are enemies of NGT.  So in this he is our friend.  However life is never simple.  While, of necessity, their case is made on as many technical heritage grounds as can be found, and they are essentially restricted to objections around the properties which they own, their prime objective must be to minimise the impact on those properties. 

And several of those properties have highly contentious developments pending in one way or another.  If the trolleybus doesn’t go ahead then there is still the application to build on the fields which are currently grazed by horses.

And clearly the old Leeds Girls’ High School site which is the principle property that is being defended has great development potential and has failed to realise this because of the planning blight which has hung over it for so long.  Desirable residences could be established in several of the old buildings, but the question of whether a slice of land would be taken from the northern edge of it along Headingley Lane has been the problem.

However, for a good many of the objectors, what was already a complicated local heritage and development issue is made a great deal more so because of the proposed building development on the Victoria Road playing fields site which is attached to this.  And Mr Natkus is involved with this highly controversial issue which has raised questions in the minds of local residents about the planning decision to build on a green field in such a heavily built up area.

And so, while the enemy of my enemy is my friend, in the particular context of the Trolleybus Enquiry, at the same time he is our enemy, as he is working for the interests who would cause this asset of green space to be lost forever as well as quite possibly the field on Headingley Hill.

The subjects of his evidence were fairly predictable if you have heard his cross examinations of some of the witnesses, focussing on the question of whether it would not be better and more practicable to leave out the proposed segregated cycle track on Headingley Lane, and leave any road widening to the northern, uphill side of the road.  He also concentrated on arguing that if widening were to take place on the southern side (his clients side) that the old Design Freeze 2 plans should be implemented, only taking a very narrow slice on this section, rather than the 3 to 5 meters of the more recent Design Freeze 7.  Interestingly, this is the same preference for DF2 as Mr Barraclough had for the grounds around Headingley Castle a few days, earlier, and when you take into account that both argue for the trolleybus track to go in the defile now occupied by St Columba’s church car park, and that that should be relocated to the adjacent part of the field now currently grazed by horses, (proposed for the ‘pocket park’) it seems not impossible that they might have co-ordinated their cases.  Which they are entitled to do.  Clearly First West Yorkshire and the Leeds College of Art have done the same thing in that they are employing the same counsel, and it cannot have been out of their ken that this would make a stronger and more comprehensive case.

And so quite possibly with the owners of these other pieces of land such as the Roman Catholic Diocese, Hinsley Hall and Headingley Properties and Headingley Castle.  They would almost be fools not to organise some pincer attack.

One thing I do wonder about though, is whether by offering the kinds of alternatives that they do, they are trying to impress on the Inspectors the severe limitations of the proposed trolleybus route, especially through this heritage rich zone on Headingley Hill.

I’m thinking here of the, in my own view at least, unworkable idea of widening Headingley Lane on the north side.  It would be one thing to build up the south side where the hill falls away in order to create a new carriageway, an ugly and destructive proposal, but one which would be possible in engineering terms.  However, to cut away several meters of land on the north side for this purpose creates a serious regrading problem from the very steep side roads such as Cumberland Road, Grosvenor Road and the listed Ashwood Villas, amongst others.

There are listed buildings, structures and walls on both sides of the road and it is so rich, despite the run down nature of some parts, that I am frankly staggered at the audacity of Metro in attempting to pull such a road widening off.  Perhaps we should remember Councillor Richard Lewis’s remark at the Headingley Public Meeting last summer that this is ‘far more of a Highways scheme than one of public transport’.

They want road widenings is what I read from this.  Cllr Lewis is disingenuous in the extreme in his zealous crusade to implement the NGT scheme, claiming that the need for it is driven by the fact that there is too much traffic on the A660, but he himself was instrumental in helping to seal the deal for the (ghastly) new Victoria Gate development (for which we have lost half of our heritage in Eastgate) which has an increase of some 375 car parking spaces for shoppers who wish to bring their cars into the city centre.

Mr Martin Farringdon, Chief Development Officer for Leeds City Council and the first witness at the Enquiry proudly stated at the beginning of his testimony that one of his recent achievements was his involvement with that very Victoria Gate development.  These two gentlemen work closely in Council, as befits their positions, but they apparently see no contradiction in on the one hand encouraging hundreds more cars into the city centre while at the same time complaining that there are too many cars coming into the city centre and arguing that that is sufficient reason to demand we are subjected to the trolleybus scheme. 

Which, would widen roads, that when the trolleybus had died a doubtless swift and tragic death, could be filled up by the cars of those they have encouraged to park in city centre car parks.

So by defending their own patches on strong technical heritage grounds, the statutory objectors around Headingley Hill represented by Mr Natkus and Mr Barraclough are obliging the Applicant and the Inspectors to look at the fact that if you want to widen roads, the alternatives to those you have designs on are equally fraught in various different ways.  One hopes that they are getting the message that our narrow Victorian streets are not suitable for such a project and would be irrevocably damaged. 

Before I wind up I will just mention something that appears to be good news, and which I will elaborate upon later, but it seems that a witness for Leeds College of Art may be coming to speak.  There has been some uncertainty about this and Mr Jones has suggested that their position was not clear, but we are keeping out fingers crossed that this does not fall through. In the words of the Inspector ‘It doesn’t look like they are going to come to an agreement’ so their witness has been tentatively scheduled for the Wednesday 29th and Thursday 30th of October, which if that remains the case must be seen as good news for the Objectors.

Leeds Trolleybus Enquiry Day 60

Leeds Trolleybus Public Enquiry

Day 60

 Thursday 9th October 2014

The links to recordings of all the sessions from the day are included here.

Again I have got a little more behind with things and am now considering that it may be the end of the enquiry before I will be able to 'back blog' the gaps that have crept into this day by day diary of the proceedings.  However, since we do not expect there to even be the Inspector's report by the time of the General Election, it will remain a live political issue for some time to come and so it will be worth the trouble of going back and filling in the gaps.  Apologies to my readers that I am presently unable to give you updates in as near to real time as I have done for the earlier parts of the enquiry, but the audio recordings are the prime concern at present and these blogs are really just tasters to get you to listen to them, so I hope you will, regardless of when I am able to post a considered commentary.

In the first  morning session of Day 60 of the Leeds Trolleybus Public Enquiry, Thursday 9th Oct 2014, retired town planner Mr Tony Ray gives the Heritage case against the NGT scheme on behalf of the North West Leeds Transport Forum.

In the late  morning session of Day 60 of the Leeds Trolleybus Public Enquiry, Thursday 9th Oct 2014, Mrs Helen Pickering gives the Heritage case against the NGT scheme on behalf of the Drummond and Churchwoods Residents’ Association.

In the afternoon session of Day 60 of the Leeds Trolleybus Public Enquiry, Thursday 9th Oct 2014, Mrs Helen Pickering completes the Heritage case of the Drummonds and Churchwoods Residents’ Association against the trolleybus scheme and is then cross examined by Mr Walton for the Applicant NGT and then by both Inspectors.

Wednesday, 24 September 2014

Leeds Trolleybus Enquiry Day 49


Leeds Trolleybus Public Enquiry

Day 49




Tuesday 23 September 2014


Here are the links to the audio recordings for Day 49 of the Trolleybus Enquiry.  We are now getting into the Objectors and the pace is changing up a gear somewhat after the slow wearing away of the examination of the NGT witnesses over the last 48 days.

In the first morning session of Day 49 of the Leeds Trolleybus Public Enquiry, 23rd Sept 2014, Deborah Fahey of the Whitfields Against The Trolleybus group gives her evidence against the NGT scheme and is examined by Mr Walton for the Applicant and the Inspector, Mr Martin Whitehead.

In the late morning session of Day 49 of the Leeds Trolleybus Public Enquiry, 23rd Sept 2014, Professor Christopher Todd gives his statement of case in objection to the proposed NGT scheme and is examined by Mr Walton for the Applicant and then by the Inspector Mr Martin Whitehead.  Ms Elizabeth Reather for Leeds Cycle Action begins but is deferred to after the lunch break for circulation of documents.

In the early afternoon session of Day 49 of the Leeds Trolleybus Public Enquiry, 23rd Sept 2014, Ms Elizabeth Reather, on behalf of Leeds Cycle Action, gives their case for objection to the NGT scheme and is then examined by Neil Cameron QC and the Inspector, Mr Martin Whitehead. Following this Mrs Christine Perry gives evidence on behalf of Mrs Betty Claughton, a resident of West Park who would stand to lose part of her front garden to the road widening proposed by the scheme.  Questions follow from Mr Walton and the Inspector.


In the late afternoon session of Day 49 of the Leeds Trolleybus Public Enquiry, 23rd Sept 2014, evidence is given by Mr Doug Kemp on behalf of Mrs Bell, a resident of West Park whose property would be affected by the required works for the scheme, Ms Emma Stewart who amongst other concerns addresses disable access issues and Mr Ken Torode, a local resident who addresses discrimination against elderly passengers’ access to the scheme.  There is some cross examination by counsel for the Applicant.