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Labour revives Northern Powerhouse Rail project with pledge of £45bn funds

about 15 hours ago
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Long-awaited plans for better railways across the north of England have been given government backing with an undertaking to “reverse years of chronic underinvestment” by spending up to £45bn building Northern Powerhouse Rail,Just over £1bn has been allocated to work up a detailed three-stage plan to connect cities from Liverpool to Newcastle, which could fulfil most of the demands of northern leaders, in a series of long-term projects,However, mayors may have to raise local funding to pay for parts of the scheme, with the Treasury imposing a £45bn cap as it seeks to avoid the huge overspend that has blighted the construction of HS2,The government also “set out its intention” to build a Birmingham-Manchester line after the completion of Northern Powerhouse Rail (NPR), although it insisted this was “not a reinstatement of HS2”,It said NPR would form the backbone of a wider growth plan, with faster, more frequent train services transforming connections between cities.

Northern mayors broadly welcomed the three-stage plan, starting with the current works upgrading TransPennine links, which will be extended to a new Bradford station.A new line connecting Liverpool and Manchester will be in the second stage of works – on a route via Manchester airport and Warrington that follows part of the axed HS2 high-speed rail plan, allowing a possible future link to Birmingham.The third stage will bring further improved connections across the Pennines between Manchester, Leeds, Bradford, Sheffield and York.Work is expected to start in the 2030s but not be completed until at least 2045, with construction of any further new line between Manchester and Birmingham starting only after that.Mayors and local authorities, however, may need to raise revenue to ensure the NPR scheme goes ahead, as London did with Crossrail, should it breach the £45bn envelope.

Keir Starmer said the investment was “proof we’re putting our money where our mouth is, working with local leaders to deliver the transport links that will help working people do what they need to in life”.The prime minister said people in the region had “been let down by broken promises”, adding: “This cycle has to end.No more paying lip service to the potential of the north, but backing it to the hilt.”Government officials said that plans for how local contributions would be funded were being developed but could include business rates, tourist taxes or borrowing against future revenues.Doubt remains over a key demand of Andy Burnham, the Greater Manchester mayor, for an underground station at Manchester Piccadilly.

Burnham has argued it is essential to allow through trains and improve capacity and to build a new line without years of disruption and demolition in the city centre.The cost difference between an underground and overground Piccadilly is thought to run into several billion pounds.Burnham’s support for the plans had been in doubt, and he hinted at his frustration with the process earlier on Tuesday.Speaking at an Institute for Government event, the Labour mayor complained of having to “fight endlessly” in an “attritional battle” with Whitehall departments, accusing them of resisting devolution.However, he welcomed the news as “a significant step forward”, describing it as a “an ambitious vision for the north, firm commitment to Northern Powerhouse Rail and an openness to an underground station in Manchester city centre”.

He said Manchester would “work at pace” to prove the case for an underground station, as well as detailed designs for the line to Liverpool,Steve Rotheram, mayor of the Liverpool city region, welcomed what he called “a genuinely strategic approach … not another empty slogan or back of a fag packet plan but real investment, delivered in a proper partnership with local leaders”,Manchester airport, the UK’s biggest outside London, will have a new station on the line,Ken O’Toole, the airport group’s chief executive, said it was a “long overdue step towards the creation of a highly productive and internationally competitive northern growth corridor”,Yorkshire may be the biggest immediate beneficiary from the announcements, with Bradford confirmed to get a new station as part of the first stage of upgrades across the Pennines.

In a joint statement, the three Yorkshire mayors, Oliver Coppard, Tracy Brabin and David Skaith, said there was now “a clear national focus on connecting Sheffield, Leeds, Bradford and York with a frequent, electrified service”.Development work will also be taken forward on reopening the Leamside Line, a 21-mile route in County Durham, which was closed in 1964.Henri Murison, chief executive of the Northern Powerhouse Partnership, said the package would “enable a single labour market more like that of London and the south-east … The potential of the north will be unlocked, giving us better-paid jobs and new homes.”However, it is understood that talks between Whitehall and some mayors went right to the wire, with Burnham said to have been reluctant to endorse the proposals as recently as Friday.Another mayoral source said months of negotiations between Whitehall and northern leaders had led to a point where most mayors were happy: “The starting point for this was all wrong.

We were concerned that it had to be a significantly new network and what some of the officials – not the politicians – have been advised was just the cheapest,We’ve ended up with something that’s workable,”
societySee all
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LGB+ people in England and Wales ‘much’ more likely to die by suicide than straight people

LGB+ people are much more likely to die by taking their own lives, drug overdoses and alcohol-related disease than their straight counterparts, the first official figures of their kind show.The 2021 census in England and Wales asked people aged 16 and above about their sexual orientation for the first time. The Office for National Statistics (ONS) has now analysed differences in causes of mortality from March 2021 to November 2024. The ONS research uses the acronym LGB+ rather than LGBTQ+.It found that people who identified as gay, lesbian, bisexual or “other” sexual orientation had 1

about 18 hours ago
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Football fan took his own life after using illegal ‘predatory’ betting sites, inquest told

A football fan took his own life after his love of the sport fuelled a gambling addiction that led him to bet with illegal offshore operators that “prey on” vulnerable people, a coroner has heard.Ollie Long, from Wendover in Buckinghamshire, died in February 2024, aged 36, after struggling with his addiction for eight years.In statements read by Long’s sister, Chloe, East Sussex coroner’s court in Lewes heard the “endlessly kind” Liverpool FC fan had started gambling through his passion for football and won £15,000 through a sign-up offer.She said the gambling websites he went on to use were “highly addictive, predatory systems designed to exploit”.The court heard the sites included illegal offshore operators that target UK consumers who have signed up with the the country’s self-exclusion scheme, GamStop, promoting themselves online as “Not on GamStop”

about 19 hours ago
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HMRC admits 71% wrongly targeted in child benefit fraud crackdown

Seven in 10 parents who had child benefit suspended in an HMRC fraud crackdown last year were in fact legitimate beneficiaries who had not emigrated, the tax authority has revealed.The chief executive of HMRC, John-Paul Marks, told the Treasury select committee that 71% of those targeted, higher than the 63% previously admitted, were in error.Marks said that “just under 5%” of the 23,700 parents who lost their child benefit were in fact fraudulent claimants.Meg Hillier, the chair of the committee, accused HMRC of causing unnecessary “pain” to innocent parents and making an “egregious error” in assuming parents who had used Dublin airport to return to Northern Ireland had emigrated.The admission shows a major system failure by HMRC, which had told the government before rolling out the scheme in July that it could save up to £350m in benefit fraud over five years

1 day ago
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Women are feral for Heated Rivalry. What does that say about men?

The explosive popularity of the gay hockey TV drama reveals women’s desire for sex and romance without violence or hierarchyThe first time gay hockey romance crossed Mary’s radar, she was warned off it. A 64-year-old non-profit executive from Toronto, Mary recalled mentioning the Canadian author Rachel Reid’s Game Changers series to her son, a twentysomething queer writer and fellow hockey obsessive, a few years ago.“I said: ‘Have you heard of these books?’ and he said: ‘Yeah.’ I said: ‘Should I read these books?’ And he said: ‘No. They’re not for you

1 day ago
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‘He tried so hard to get help’: the tragic results of NHS right-to-choose for ADHD patients

When Leigh White remembers her brother Ryan, she thinks of a boy of extraordinary ability who “won five scholarships at 11” including a coveted place at Bancroft’s, a private school in London. He was, she said, “super bright, witty, personable, generous and kind”.Ryan killed himself on 12 May 2024. A report written after his death acknowledged significant shortcomings in the support he received while seeking help for attention deficit hyperactivity disorder.Like many people the Guardian spoke to, he followed the “right to choose” pathway, whereby patients can pick a private provider anywhere in England for assessment, diagnosis and initial treatment

1 day ago
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Death on the inside: as a prison officer, I saw how the system perpetuates violence

There are hotspots for violence in prison. The exercise yard, the showers. There are peak times, too. Mealtimes and association periods are particularly volatile.But first thing in the morning is not when you expect to hear an alarm bell

1 day ago
cultureSee all
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Jacinda Ardern pulls out of Adelaide writers’ week as fallout over Randa Abdel-Fattah’s axing continues

1 day ago
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‘It was inspired by a snog in a photo-booth’: how Thompson Twins made Hold Me Now

2 days ago
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Post your questions for R&B star Jill Scott

2 days ago
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Mindy Meng Wang on the ‘disorienting’ experience of her father’s funeral – and the Chinese cyber-opera it inspired

2 days ago
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Hawaii: A Kingdom Crossing Oceans review – a feather-filled thriller full of gods, gourds and ghosts

3 days ago
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Three board members and board chair resign from Adelaide festival as Randa Abdel-Fattah sends legal notice

3 days ago