Ok this is only an idea.

But maybe as a group we should all come together and write an open letter (Signed by all) to Leeds City Council and to the Labour MP in question Alex Sobel and others showing our support for the future growth of Leeds/Bradford Airport.

The also maybe chance we could involve members from other groups out there that support LBA.

Air Yorkshire Aviation Society - https://www.airyorkshire.org.uk/
Yorkshire-Spotters
Facebook groups:
leeds bradford airport enthusiasts (lba-egnm)
Leeds Bradford Airport LBA-EGNM
Leeds Bradford Airport - locals


How we go about it is another question, aslo do we try and get the local press involved?
 
The expansion of LBA might actually reduce emissions especially the roads around Yeadon and rawdon as a link road would be required to the airport allowing traffic to move more freely so yeadon,rawdon,the A65 and even the horsforth roundabout if a new junc was put in place would not be so clogged up resulting in less emissions.
Also an extension to the horsforth railway line to the airport would reduce traffic, so im not just looking at aircraft emissions here, im thinking about ways of reducing vehicle polution too. key points i feel?
 
As someone who has to stand for ages at the bus stop at Horsforth Fleece with cars just stuck there in long jams pumping out toxic fumes, I think that congestion is much more of a priority than targeting an airport, which as things stand is actually contracting and not expanding. It is the ring road from Dawsons Corner to Lawnswood Roundabout that needs sorting.
 
Just one thought....has anyone seen the car park at Kirkstall forge train station. It's actually drawn traffic into the area and my work colleague who lives near to it to it says traffic is much worse since it opened and their neighbourhood committee has asked the council for resident permits to be introduced as the forge car park is full and its spilled out onto other roads. So my one concern is that the airport station could potentially draw traffic from otley, yeadon and rawdon. Admittedly kirkstall forge must have resulted in reduced traffic going into Leeds but on local roads around Kirkstall Forge it's caused worse congestion.
 
This is what is being discussed on the 7th. In a nutshell, they are still backing the parkway station and the employment hub, but have abandoned the link road proposals.


New North West Leeds Employment Hub and airport connectivity plans to be considered by senior councillors
New proposals for investments in sustainable transport infrastructure in north west Leeds including a new parkway rail station and park and ride facilities will be discussed by senior councillors early in January.
At the meeting of the council’s executive board to be held at Civic Hall on Tuesday 7 January, a report will be considered on the latest position regarding potential improvements to transport connectivity in the north west of the city, as well as creating an alternative sustainable public transport option for commuting into Leeds from the north of the city, and links from the proposed new rail halt to Leeds Bradford Airport and a new North West Leeds Employment Hub.
Leeds City Council, working with West Yorkshire Combined Authority and partners including the airport, had previously put forward plans for three possible road improvement options, with option A and B proposing to create a new link road from the A65 to the A658 while a third option C would see the existing A65 and A658 enhanced.
Further investment was also proposed to create a new parkway rail station on the Leeds to Harrogate line, with a short connecting spur road to give access to the airport. The station would include new park and ride services to Leeds and Harrogate with 350 parking spaces and a bus interchange.
Public consultation was carried out on three road options in 2015 and the road and rail options earlier this year, together with ongoing dialogue with stakeholders, local residents and partners.
As a result of the feedback received and the views of key stakeholders including local residents, which showed support for the parkway station but no clear backing for any of the road options, Leeds City Council is now proposing a new plan which also factors in climate change considerations and integrates with its declaration of a climate emergency earlier this year.
This new plan would see further engagement and feasibility work carried out on the parkway station and spur road proposal, along with a connecting road from the A658 to access the new North West Leeds Employment Hub on land adjacent to the airport. The previous options for either of the link road options or improving the A65/A658 would not be developed any further.
Integrating with the council’s climate emergency strategy and a need to improve air quality in the north west Leeds area due to pollution caused by road transport emissions, the revised proposals have a strong focus on achieving a shift in travel behaviours by investing in sustainable public transport infrastructure to encourage a reduction in car use.
The parkway station proposal, being managed by West Yorkshire Combined Authority, was given support from 50 per cent of the more than 2000 survey responses in the public consultation held this year. It would offer a connection to Leeds Bradford Airport via rail services for the first time, providing a solution to a long-held need for the city with a direct rail link not being taken forward due to the prohibitive cost and the topography of the local area.
The parkway station would also offer the potential for current car users to switch to public transport each day, either by using the train to the area or by using park and ride services at the new parkway station to connect with Leeds, Harrogate and York. Forecasts for the station when operational would see it used by approximately 455,000 people each year, with more than half of those journeys being for non-air travel.
In addition, the new proposals would see the creation of a shorter new road from the A658 to serve the new North West Leeds Employment Hub. This land has been identified as meeting a need for local job creation, with the potential for approximately 5,500 new jobs. Future consultation will guide the development plan for the site, which has been allocated for a range of different employment types from research and development to general industrial use. The new section of road would open up access to the site, and in keeping with the council’s approach access by public transport will be a key priority.
The council will continue to press Leeds Bradford Airport and partners to develop a new travel plan with public transport at its core, as well as a carbon reduction and offsetting scheme to address carbon impacts at a local level.
As part of its climate emergency strategy, Leeds City Council and West Yorkshire Combined Authority will participate in national and international discussions on airport growth projections as part of a revised national aviation strategy, with the aim of distributing aviation share across the country in a way which minimises carbon emissions and promotes an economic rebalancing of the regions.
All of the proposed further feasibility work would include cycling and pedestrian infrastructure to further encourage sustainable travel options.
The road elements of the new proposals would potentially cost a third of the previous road options, which were estimated at up to approximately £100million. No budget has been committed to delivering these proposals, with a funding plan to be developed as part of the final business case.
Along with the new proposals, the feasibility work will look at other possible upgrades to the local road network in north west Leeds to further improve air quality by addressing congestion to cut emissions levels. This would address an issue raised by local residents and would aim to make public transport journey times faster and more reliable, resulting in sustainable travel options becoming more attractive as part of the council’s Connecting Leeds transport strategy.
Leeds City Council executive board member for climate change, transport and sustainable development, Councillor Lisa Mulherin said:
“The council takes consultation with the public very seriously and we have taken on board the feedback we have received about the previous road proposals, and the support for the rail halt.
“We have asked people including local residents and stakeholders twice about the road proposals and the lack of clear support for any of the options has been consistent so it is only right that we have listened and are responding to what people are telling us they do want. That is why we are taking forward proposals for a parkway station, investing in sustainable public transport infrastructure.
“This will help to take cars off the roads travelling into the city centre from the north of the city and provide public transport links to the existing airport facility and the new North West Leeds Employment Hub to support the demand for new jobs in that part of the city.”
Councillor Kim Groves, Chair of the West Yorkshire Combined Authority Transport Committee, said:
“Developing a new railway station on the Leeds-Harrogate line will provide a low carbon alternative for travel to the airport, help reduce congestion and improve air quality while also supporting economic growth by connecting to the North West Leeds Employment Hub.
“We are working to help people across the region to switch from cars to public transport, cycling and walking and this approach is at the centre of our £500m-plus bid to the government’s Transforming Cities Fund to help make clean, affordable, sustainable travel available to all.
“We continue to urge the government to set out a national approach to addressing the contribution of aviation to carbon emissions as we pursue our target to be a carbon-zero region by 2038 with significant progress by 2030.”
Notes to editors:
Public consultation on the previous proposal of options A, B or C as well as the parkway rail station took place between February and April 2019. A total of 2069 survey responses were received, with the key themes being:
· The majority of respondents agreed that there is a need for better surface access to Leeds Bradford Airport (76%) and that there are existing traffic congestion issues in the area (72%).
· Half of all respondents (50%) indicated they are supportive of the proposals for the parkway station. Of those likely to use the rail station to access the surrounding area, over half (59%) currently travel by car, representing a potential mode shift.
· Across all three road options, more respondents were unhappy than happy with the plans. Of the three road options, option A was most favoured (40% happy, 48% unhappy).
· Geographically, respondents who were unhappy with Option A, tended to live closest to the proposed new road – in Horsforth and Rawdon.
· Many respondents identified the need to address a different part of the road network first
· As with Option A, those who live nearest to Option B and C, perceive it to be more negative.
· Many respondents who stated they were unhappy with the Option C proposals, stated that they didn’t think the proposals would not address traffic congestion.
This followed an initial public consultation carried out on the road options only between November 2015 and February 2016 (the parkway rail station only became a possible option following the approval of £173.5million funding for transport improvements in Leeds from the Department for Transport in May 2016).
In total 2207 responses were received in this first round of consultation, with the themes being:
· Support for a rail link to the airport
· Concerns over congestion and rat-running
· Opposition to all three highways options (55% were opposed to any option, 36% were supportive)
· Issues relating to airport growth and location
· Environmental impacts and greenbelt protection
· Lack of detail
· Minimise impacts / design concerns
 
I Just hope that they do the job right as far as the railway station is concerned. They need to ensure that there are good bus services feeding in from Yeadon and Otley in particular. Let's face it...unless the whole of the ring road is sorted, a link road was never going to work.
 
Come on.....I have called him an idiot now its your turn.


Your right..He seems to be aligned with some latter day Captain Mainwarings who have called themselves the `Leeds Climate Change Citizens Jury`...:banghead::devil:..Bet they`re mostly non earning students..You honestly couldn`t make this stuff up..
 
L
Plans for link road. scrapped !
No public support. That is utter bollocks. There's no public support for continued house building in the Horsforth or Aireborough area but they keep building them. So we've gone from three different options to no option at all with cars tailing back bumper to bumper down the A65. At this stage it means even if another idea can be drempt up it will be years more public consultation before anything is done. It's no wonder LBA has stalled it's expansion.
 
I don't know why they don't just use the money to bore a rail tunnel from just North of Horsforth under the airport (with a new station right at the terminal), and then out at Otley and then head on the old railway track to come out at Burley-in-Wharfedale.
 
Clarification that the terminal extension has previously been approved so don't think there is any issue on this front, at least.
 
I have the feeling that this climate business is a very convenient get out for Leeds City Council. They have never been interested in the Airport and the areas surrounding it, even when they were part owners, and clearly still arn`t. They see the plans for the development as expensive and time consuming. It may be a City Council but has the mentality of a Parish one. Its slow to react, parochial in its outlook and seems to be happy with things as they are..Just my thoughts obviously
 

Upload Media

Remove Advertisements

Subscribe to help support your favourite forum and in return we'll remove all our advertisements. Your contribution will help to pay for things like site maintenance, domain name renewals and annual server charges.



Forums4aiports
Subscribe

NEW - Profile Posts

If anyone would like to share their local airport news right here in our news area let me know so I can give you the correct permissions to do so. It only takes a couple of minutes to upload a news story with an accompanying image. The news items can then be shared on the site homepage by you. #TakePart #Forums4airports Bring the news to one place!
survived a redundancy scenario where I work for the 3rd time. Now it looks likely I will get to cover work for 2 other teams.. Pretty please for a payrise? That would be a no and so stay on the min wage.
Live in Market Bosworth and take each day as it comes......
Well it looks like I'm off to Australia and New Zealand next year! Booked with BA from Manchester via Heathrow with a stop in Singapore and returning with Air New Zealand and BA via LAX to Heathrow. Will circumnavigate the globe and be my first trans-Pacific flight. First long haul flight with BA as well and of course Air NZ.
15 years at the same company was reached the weekend before last. Not sure how they will mark the occasion apart from the compulsory payirse to minimum wage (1st rise for 2 years; i was 15% above it back then!)
Ashley.S. wrote on Sotonsean's profile.
Welcome to the forum, I was born and bred in Southampton.

Trending Hashtags

Advertisement

Back
Top Bottom
  AdBlock Detected
Sure, ad-blocking software does a great job at blocking ads, but it also blocks some useful and important features of our website. For the best possible site experience please take a moment to disable your AdBlocker.