21 April 2004
Contact:
David Roney at Oldham & Rochdale Green Party, 07990 808202
Spencer Fitz-Gibbon at North West Green Party, 07973 736351
Foreword by Professor John Whitelegg
It was revealed this year that
Oldham has suffered a massive 28% increase in traffic in just six years. That
was the second highest increase in the country.
This means an increase in
congestion and pollution. It means more people are made ill by noise and air
pollution. Already some 12,000-24,000 people die prematurely in the UK every
year because of air pollution – much of it from traffic – and this is set to
get worse. In fact, the government expects traffic to increase by 17%
nationally within ten years.
We know from long experience
that building roads generates more traffic. It’s the M60 extension through
Hollinwood and Chadderton which has attracted Oldham’s huge increase. Yet the
government wants to spend another £30 billion building and widening roads, and
the European Union encourages it.
Meanwhile public transport is
crumbling from lack of investment. This is not progress!
Sorting out Britain’s
transport problems will require national action, from re-regulating the buses
and renationalising the railways, to investing massively in public transport.
The Green Party has shown how this is possible nationally, and how to pay for
it. But here in Oldham we can make a start. We need the council to adopt a
Green transport plan.
That would be Real Progress – and that’s what the
Green Party stands for. To make Real Progress on transport in Oldham
we need Greens elected to Oldham borough council this year. And we need more
Greens in the European Parliament to help stop the EU promoting more
roadbuilding in Britain.
Note: Oldham-born leading transport consultant John Whitelegg is Professor of Sustainable Transport at Liverpool John Moores University, Professor of Sustainable Development at the University of York, and Leader of North West Green Party.
The Greens want to put
transport in Oldham back on the right road. This will cost an estimated £25
million over five years. [Source: Lancaster-based transport/environmental
consultancy Eco-Logic Ltd.]
Accessible, convenient, reliable transport choices are
vital for communities, to sustain local facilities and to keep people
connected, preventing social exclusion. But so far, all we have been given is a
deteriorating public transport system, congestion on the roads and frustration
for travellers. And as well as wasted time, money and effort, more traffic has
resulted in more lost lives along the way, both from crashes and from air
pollution.
Real Progress means making public transport
an easy option. It means keeping our citizens safe. The council should work
with the community to meet their needs and create cleaner, safer and more
reliable ways of getting around in Oldham. This is what Green councillors will
do. Our proposals would provide superior standard of transportation for
everyone without compromising our health or the environment.
The money can be found partly
from existing budgets. If congestion charging and taxation of workplace car
parking are introduced, the whole project could become independent of reallocation
from the roadbuilding budget. In any case when the government is made to
understand that building more roads is a counter-productive waste of £30
billion, more money will become available for further local transport
improvements. The Green Party has argued that the £30 billion could be divided
roughly equally between the regions, giving approximately £3 billion to the
North West, of which up to £1 billion would come to Greater Manchester and its
surrounding area.
We need Oldham council and
other local authorities to campaign for this change in government policy, for
the resulting switch of funding away from roadbuilding and into sustainable
transport. We need Greens elected to Oldham council to help make this happen.
ENDS
Printed and promoted by David Roney for the Oldham & Rochdale
Green Party, both at 79 Belgrave Road OL8 1LU.