Ring road costs set at £215m as budget talks loom
The cost of completing a ring road around Shrewsbury has been calculated at £215m, Shropshire Council has revealed.
The authority set out the costs of the Shrewsbury North West Relief Road (NWRR) ahead of next week's budget meeting, and the implications of continuing with it, or cancelling.
Council chiefs said the government or the council could cancel, but whoever did so would become liable for £39m of money already spent.
Councillors have heard building the road would add £6m annually to day-to-day spending, but it would be better than cancelling.
James Walton, Shropshire Council's top finance officer, said from a purely financial point of view, "it would be better to build it."
Councillor Gwilym Butler, cabinet lead for finance, said: "It is vital that councillors fully understand, and carefully consider the implications of the various possible outcomes."
It comes as the council heads towards local elections in May and council leader Lezley Picton denied that the move to release the figures was a political decision.
She said she remained committed to the scheme and this was the year when final decisions had to be made. Picton said she believed the scheme aligned with the government's growth agenda.
If the Tories lost control of the council in May, any new political leadership would face the same issues, she added.
Three opposition parties have said they will scrap the scheme if they win in May, it was revealed earlier this month.
The NWRR comprises two road schemes, the Oxon Link Road and the North West Relief Road.
It is the largest infrastructure scheme ever undertaken by Shropshire Council.
One of the options is to progress with the Oxon Link Road and cancel the relief road, but that move was estimated to come with a further £46m costs and £32m sunk costs, with a total liability of £78m.
Planning permission for the overall NWRR scheme was given in 2023, subject to agreements between the council and a developer.
Once that is in place, a business case can go to full council and then, if approved, the Department for Transport.
Follow BBC Shropshire on BBC Sounds, Facebook, X and Instagram.
'Near-bankrupt' council finds £51m to balance books
Plan to scrap bypass revealed ahead of election
'Significant weakness' in relief road funding
No commitment to relief road funding in MP meeting
Shropshire Council
Shrewsbury North West Relief Road
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
a day ago
- Yahoo
Mobile signal blackspots to be eliminated on many of the UK's major train routes
Train journeys can be frustrating at the best of times - with passengers having to put up with delays, noisy commuters or a lack of available seats. However, train users could soon have one less thing to worry about as mobile signal blackspots - where the internet cuts out and pauses your favourite TV show or game - are set to be eliminated on many of the UK's major train routes by 2028. The move, called Project Reach, comes after the Department for Transport (Dft) signed a deal with Network rail and telecoms companies Neos Networks and Freshwave. The installation of infrastructure is expected to begin next year and will initially see Neos Networks install 621 miles of ultra-fast fibre optic cable along parts of the East Coast Main Line, West Coast Main Line, Great Western Main Line and Chiltern Main Line. There is an ambition to expand the cabling beyond 3,107 miles in the "near future", the DfT said. Freshwave will tackle blackspots in 57 tunnels - covering nearly 31 miles - including the Chipping Sodbury tunnel near Bristol and the Gasworks and Copenhagen tunnels outside King's Cross. As part of the deal, mobile network operators will also invest in new 4G and 5G infrastructure at these 12 railway stations: Birmingham New Street, Bristol Temple Meads, Edinburgh Waverley, Euston, Glasgow Central, King's Cross, Leeds, Liverpool Lime Street, Liverpool Street, Manchester Piccadilly, Paddington and Waterloo. Read more from Sky News The DfT said the agreement "brings together public and private sector investment and infrastructure", and is expected to save taxpayers "around £300m". Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander said: "This is a game-changer for passengers up and down the country, and will revolutionise journeys from Paddington to Penzance and Edinburgh to Euston. "By boosting connectivity and tackling signal blackspots, we are also ensuring a more reliable and efficient service. "This means better journeys for passengers while supporting our broader plan for change goals of economic growth and digital innovation."
Yahoo
2 days ago
- Yahoo
Conservatives fear welfare reforms will not head off ‘tax rises' this autumn
Angela Rayner has said she is 'proud' of Labour's record in Government, after the Tories challenged her to say whether she was 'embarrassed to be defending' proposed welfare reforms. Deputy Prime Minister Ms Rayner promised a debate on the welfare Bill next Tuesday as planned, despite 120 Labour MPs publicly backing a move to block the reforms. She criticised the Conservatives for having 'no plan, no idea', amid Labour efforts to temper benefits spending. But shadow chancellor Sir Mel Stride warned that 'tax rises are coming' in this autumn's budget, with the number of benefits claimants set to rise. Sir Mel asked: 'When you cut out the blather, isn't the reality that this Labour Government has condemned us to higher taxes, more debt, fewer jobs, more pain for businesses right up and down our country? 'Borrowing up, unemployment up, inflation up, yet (the Deputy Prime Minister) tells us the Government's plan is working. 'It's not just me who isn't convinced, the people behind her are not convinced either and neither are the public. 'In fact, I'm not even sure if (Ms Rayner) herself is convinced, so can I ask her, isn't she just a little embarrassed to be defending policies she doesn't even agree with herself?' At the despatch box, Ms Rayner replied: 'I'm proud we've got a huge boost to the minimum wage, the biggest uplift to affordable housing in a generation, and expanding free school meals to half a million children. 'The Tories' choice? Billions of pounds in unfunded tax cuts for the very wealthiest. 'We know where that gets us, it's the same old Tories' failed approach. 'They haven't listened and they haven't learned a thing.' Earlier during Deputy Prime Minister's Questions, Ms Rayner vowed not to 'walk away and stand by and abandon millions of people trapped in the failing system left behind by him and his colleagues'. Asked whether a vote on Tuesday 'will actually go ahead', including a potential vote on the reasoned amendment put forward by critics which would block the reforms, Ms Rayner replied that it 'will'. Sir Mel continued: 'There you have it, there will be a vote in this House on Tuesday on the welfare Bill, although many on the backbenches could be forgiven for thinking they've heard this before with the winter fuel payment, where they were marched up the hill – and we all know where that story ended. 'But on this side of the House, we're absolutely clear, we will help her to get their Bill through, if they can commit to actually reducing the welfare bill and getting people off benefits and into work. 'Can (Ms Rayner) make that commitment right now, yes or no?' The Deputy Prime Minister replied: 'Well, if ever we needed a reminder of the party opposite having no shame, it's their demands for this Bill. 'He demands a programme to help people into work – exactly what this Bill does – after he left one in eight young people out of the economy.' She added: 'He demands further welfare savings, from the man who was in charge, as the welfare bill absolutely ballooned. 'They say cut welfare bill, they failed. 'They say put people in work, they failed. 'They say no tax increases, they failed.' The reforms would 'see the number of people on welfare rising for every single year going forward' with 'no commitment' to cut the number of claimants, Sir Mel warned. 'And even if they manage to deliver these reforms, almost every respected economist now says tax rises are all but inevitable in the autumn,' he continued. 'But after the budget, the Chancellor (Rachel Reeves) said, and I quote, 'I'm not coming back for more taxes'. 'British businesses have been hit again and again by Labour's economic mismanagement. 'They are desperate for certainty, so can (the Deputy Prime Minister) give them that certainty now and repeat to the House the Chancellor's promise not to raise taxes at the budget?' Ms Rayner replied that the Tories had 'no plan, no idea' and added: 'This is a bit rich – unbelievable. 'Inflation above 11%, the biggest tax rises? By their party. 'I take no lectures and on this issue in particular, they can't make their minds up. 'First they said our reforms were taking too long, then they say they were rushed, then their front bench said our measures are too tough, and now they say they need to be tougher.' Responding, Sir Mel said: 'The whole House will have heard that (Ms Rayner) did not repeat the Chancellor's promise not to raise taxes and Britain's businesses have today been put on notice – tax rises are coming.' The Universal Credit and Personal Independence Payment Bill, if agreed, would restrict personal independence payment (Pip) eligibility and curb rises the sickness-related element of universal credit, with the aim of getting more people back into work and saving up to £5 billion a year. Conservative MP for Fylde Andrew Snowden later asked Ms Rayner who she would sack if she were in charge of a reshuffle, and criticised Chancellor Ms Reeves 'for killing economic growth', Work and Pensions Secretary Liz Kendall 'for the botched handling of the welfare Bill', and Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer. Ms Rayner suggested Mr Snowden might want 'a go' at asking questions from the despatch box, in place of Sir Mel. 'I'm just wondering when they're going to give the shadow justice secretary (Robert Jenrick) a go,' she added Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data
Yahoo
19-06-2025
- Yahoo
Tory leader accused of demonising young people with push for school exclusions
Scotland's First Minister has accused the leader of the Tories of a 'demonisation of young people' after he pushed for more exclusions to tackle disruption in schools. The Government this week released long-awaited guidance which attempts to deal with the issue, which has been worsening since the pandemic, telling teachers excluding pupils should be a 'last resort'. Speaking at First Minister's Questions, Conservative leader Russell Findlay branded the 49-page document 'nonsense' as he urged John Swinney to 'end the barrage of guidance and please empower teachers to take a stricter approach'. But Mr Swinney pointed to a summit he recently hosted in an attempt to limit school violence, where he said none of the attendees pushed for greater exclusions. 'A whole variety of different people involved, in violence reduction… all those organisations who are doing really good work to avoid violence in our society and to de-escalate, exactly what I'm talking about,' he said. 'Not one of them said to me that I should increase the level of exclusion from schools. 'So what we are getting from Russell Findlay today is a demonisation of young people and a failure to address the mechanisms and the interventions required to solve a difficult issue in our society. 'It is simplistic nonsense, and Parliament should ignore it.' Earlier in the session, Mr Findlay attacked the guidance, saying: 'Really, it's exactly what you might expect from this ineffective Government. 'Forty-nine pages of tedious, hand-wringing nonsense, complicated and confusing. When John Swinney was education secretary, teachers said he issued too much guidance, which made their jobs even harder.' Mr Findlay mocked some of the suggested measures in the guidance, including giving 'violent pupils laminated bullet points, telling them to think about their behaviour', and tackling dangerous behaviour by having 'a conversation to jointly problem solve with the child'. Responding, the First Minister said: 'I don't think for a moment that Mr Findlay's presentation of the guidance is in any way, shape or form representative of what is actually there. 'What the guidance is designed to do is to de-escalate situations in our schools to ensure that young people can participate in their education. 'Because if young people are unable to participate in their education, they are unlikely to go into good outcomes in our society, and we will simply repeat the difficulties that we have seen for many years of young people who do not go on to positive destinations.' The First Minister also told MSPs that, if excluded, pupils are no longer in the 'safe environment of school', adding: 'They are therefore likely to be out on the streets and therefore potentially able to become involved in some of the criminal activity that Mr Findlay himself has put to me with the last fortnight at First Minister's Questions as being a risk to which young people are exposed.' Mr Findlay – a former crime journalist – has repeatedly raised the issue of organised crime, particularly around the ongoing feud which has sparked violence across Scotland's central belt.