The Prime Minister is set to chair a Cabinet meeting in the
Yorkshire & Humber region tomorrow (Monday 26
February).
It comes as the Transport Secretary is set to announce the
funding allocations of the Local Transport Fund across the North
and Midlands which empowers local authorities to invest in the
transport projects that matter most to their communities.
This investment package has been made possible through
reallocated HS2 funding and will deliver an unprecedented long
term transport funding uplift across the North and
Midlands.
At Cabinet, the Prime Minister will call on Ministers and MPs to
hold local authorities to account to ensure the funding is used
appropriately and that the voices of local people are heard when
decisions are made on where this funding goes and how this
funding is spent.
The Transport Secretary is expected to update Cabinet on the
delivery of Network North and how the Government is sticking to
the plan to better connect communities through improved transport
infrastructure across the country.
The Prime Minister, Cabinet Ministers and ministers across
government will also meet with communities, businesses, and
organisations across the North and Midlands to discuss their
priorities for the Local Transport Fund and how their area can
best benefit from the funding.
Prime Minister said:
“Local transport is at the heart of connecting our communities
and this government has a clear plan to level up our country with
greater transport links that people need right across the
UK.
“The long-term decision to reallocate funding from HS2 marked a
step change in how we invest in transport infrastructure across
the country. It gave us the opportunity to put £36 billion into
projects that will make a real difference – benefiting more
people, in more places, more quickly.
“Tomorrow marks a historic moment for the North and Midlands. We
are investing billions directly across the region through the
first of its kind Local Transport Fund – which fully empowers
local people to invest in the transport priorities that matter
most to them and their communities.
“Whether it’s repaired roads, or refurbished train and bus
stations - it will be local leaders who decide what transport
projects to invest in based on local needs. This is part of our
long-term plan to build a brighter future for generations to
come.”
Transport Secretary said:
“Tomorrow’s multi-billion-pound investment is unprecedented and
will be transformational for smaller cities, towns, and rural
communities across the North and the Midlands. This funding
increase is only possible because this government is willing to
take tough decisions like reallocating funding from the second
phase of HS2.
“We are sticking to our plan to level up communities with greater
transport links right across the country. This investment is
going to make a real difference to millions of people for years
to come, empowering local authorities to drive economic growth,
level up communities, and improve the daily transport connections
that people rely on.
This investment demonstrates our commitment to reinvest all of
the £19.8 billion from the Northern leg of HS2 in the North and
all of the £9.6 billion from the Midlands leg in the Midlands,
while the £6.5 billion saved through the new approach at Euston
will be spread across every other region in the country.
This government recognises that investing in the right transport
projects in the right places is key to spreading opportunity
across the country.
We have a clear plan to better connect the country and we’re
already making progress by delivering the biggest-ever increase
in funding for local road improvements with an extra £8.3 billion, enough to
resurface more than 5,000 miles of local roads across
England, with the first tranche of funding already delivered from
this financial year.
We’ve also invested over £200 million to extend the £2 bus fare cap in
England outside London until the end of 2024 and £1 billion to improve bus
services in the North and the Midlands, with £150 million
delivered from April this year. Since the £2 bus fare cap was
introduced across England on 1 January 2023, millions of
passengers have benefitted from lower fares.
Taken together, this shows that the Government is delivering on
our plan to improve local transport and drive better connectivity
across the country – building a brighter future for generations
to come.