Stonehenge: fund
the tunnel by toll trial - local MP
Salisbury MP Robert
Key has called on Tony Blair to find the money to build a tunnel by
trialling the road tolling initiative announced by his new Transport
Secretary this week
Robert Key has told
the Prime Minister that not just the local economy, but the whole
of the South West of England is being damaged by continuing indecision
over the road improvements and visitors centre planned for Stonehenge.
In a letter to
the PM, Robert Key says, “it
is an irony that after so many years of enquiry…we are now
closer to agreement than ever before between the majority
of heritage interests (led by English Heritage) and local interests
(led by Wiltshire County Council and Salisbury District Council),
plus the DCMS and the proposer of the scheme, the Secretary of State
for Transport”.
Robert Key argues
that taxpayers find it hard to justify the cost of the scheme when
set against local needs for hospitals, schools and homes, and Ministers
can’t afford it from their
budgets. So, he says, an exceptional manner of funding will have to
be authorised – and
that should be tolling, with the cost being met from future
road and tunnel tolls.
Former Heritage
Minister and Roads Minister Key believes that Stonehenge is an internationally
important site that is still labelled ‘a national disgrace’ for its poor
facilities for tourists and that a major strategic route to the South
West is now a bottleneck, causing traffic congestion and gridlock
conditions with local village communities (including Winterbourne
Stoke and Chicklade suffering from traffic, air, noise and light pollution).
‘If
Douglas Alexander is as good as his word, he will welcome
this initiative and all the challenges it brings, including rat-running
and tolling technology’, he said. |