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Business Travel


Sector Focus Taking a tour of region’s transport


Top Government officials were given the opportunity to see several major transport schemes now underway across the West Midlands. More than 100 senior Department


for Transport (DfT) managers, including Permanent Secretary Bernadette Kelly, travelled from Whitehall to Birmingham for a regional tour, which included a welcoming speech by West Midlands Mayor Andy Street, who also chairs the West Midlands Combined Authority (WMCA). Transport for West Midlands


(TfWM), the transport arm of the WMCA, provided the civil servants with a tour of key schemes already under construction and part funded by Government. The tours also included visits to the locations of other major projects in the pipeline. Some of the schemes, between


them, represent up to half a billion pounds worth of investment. Laura Shoaf, managing director


of TfWM, accompanied the Permanent Secretary on a tour of UK Central Hub, at the National Exhibition Centre and Birmingham Airport site. They were met by Deputy Mayor of the West Midlands


‘We will be spending £3bn on transport infrastructure over the coming decade to provide more tram and rail lines, better roads and more cycle routes’


and leader of Solihull Council, Cllr Bob Sleigh and Huw Rhys Lewis, managing director of the Urban Growth Company who explained plans to transform Birmingham International railway station into a major transport hub. The project aims to provide


seamless connections to Birmingham Airport and the new HS2 Interchange Station by 2025, bringing together rail, tram and bus services, as well as private vehicles, taxis and bicycles. Other DfT officials were taken to


the Midland Metro depot at Wednesbury to see plans for the tram extension to Brierley Hill which was given government funding last November. A third party went to


Wolverhampton to see the Bob Sleigh: Transport renaissance


Wolverhampton Interchange project which involves a redevelopment of the city’s railway station and an extension of the existing tram line. Cllr Sleigh said: “The West Midlands is enjoying a renaissance right now but we need to make sure we have a transport network


that can not only meet the increasing needs of passengers and businesses but also help accelerate that economic growth. “That’s why we will be spending


£3bn on transport infrastructure over the coming decade to provide more tram and rail lines, better roads and more cycle routes.”


March 2018 CHAMBERLINK 65


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