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Penrith A66 traffic problems hitting businesses, says BID
Penrith A66 traffic problems hitting businesses, says BID

BBC News

time4 days ago

  • Business
  • BBC News

Penrith A66 traffic problems hitting businesses, says BID

Businesses are losing over £100,000 each Friday due to traffic congestion, according to a business Broad, chair of Penrith's Business Improvement District (BID), said queues on and around the A66 were putting people off coming into Police, Fire and Crime Commissioner David Allen also said gridlocked traffic was increasing emergency response times.A plan to turn the whole of the A66 between Penrith and Scotch Corner into dual carriageway is currently under review. Mr Broad said the BID estimated it cost each business in town £300-500 every Friday, when the traffic is at its worst, and that this amounted to over £100,000 in total."Penrith in effect on a Friday becomes a place to avoid," he said. According to Mr Broad, the problem is caused by large volumes of tourist traffic, along with freight, using the A66 at Kemplay Bank roundabout and junction 40 of the believes traffic flow measures should be used to stop Kemplay Bank becoming "like a car park".Cumbria's police and fire and rescue services both have their headquarters next to Kemplay Bank Mr Allen said, while his teams met their response targets, it took longer to get to incidents when the roads were said: "If you were leaving police headquarters in a non-emergency scenario, it can take 30 minutes just to get 300 yards to the roundabout." Some locals have suggested switching off the traffic lights at Kemplay Bank or using a yellow hatched box to improve traffic Highways, which manages the A66, said traffic lights improved congested roundabouts and a recent inspection of those at Kemplay Bank "detected no issues". Follow BBC Cumbria on X, Facebook, Nextdoor and Instagram.

Woman assaulted by HGV driver after A66 crash near Richmond
Woman assaulted by HGV driver after A66 crash near Richmond

BBC News

time19-05-2025

  • BBC News

Woman assaulted by HGV driver after A66 crash near Richmond

A woman was assaulted by a HGV driver after the van she was driving was involved in a crash with his lorry in North collision happened on the westbound A66, where the road narrows to a single carriageway near Gilling West, at about 11:30 BST on Friday.A man driving a Renault lorry with a red cab and the woman, who was driving a grey Mercedes Sprinter van, got into a "heated confrontation", according to North Yorkshire man then assaulted the woman, leaving her with minor injuries, officers said. The force asked anyone who witnessed the incident or stopped at the scene to help to contact police. Listen to highlights from North Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, catch up with the latest episode of Look North.

Renewed calls to bring back shelved road dualling
Renewed calls to bring back shelved road dualling

Yahoo

time18-05-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Renewed calls to bring back shelved road dualling

The government has been urged to restore plans to dual the A66 road which runs across northern England. Mike Starkie, the former Conservative Mayor of Copeland, in Cumbria, said the upgrade was needed to "support growth." The project was put on hold indefinitely by the government in 2024 citing a "black hole" in public finances, but many want the chancellor to commit to the project as soon as possible in the spending review in June. Labour North Yorkshire Mayor David Skaith said "we know the money wasn't there in the first place" for major schemes promised by the previous government. The road is a key artery running east and west between Scotch Corner in North Yorkshire and Workington in Cumbria. Before the 2024 general election, the Conservative government was moving ahead with plans for sections between the A1(M) and Penrith, but Labour swiftly put the project on hold alongside a number of others. Explaining the decision, Skaith told BBC Politics North: "The government did inherit a terrible financial situation. "We have lots of conversations with local leaders and MPs in North Yorkshire about such projects. "We've invested heavily into our rural transport network and we're looking at active travel provision as well, and working with the rail operators to improve that connectivity as that's what I have power over." However, Starkie accused Labour of unfairly leaving road users behind. He said: "What we're seeing is a clear demonstration of this government's misguided priorities. "They can find £84bn to surrender the Chagos Islands, but then we've got infrastructure in our country that, to support growth, needs updating." "The projects that have actually got through the planning process - like the A66 - are getting shelved after already clearing the hurdles." BBC Politics North airs Sundays on BBC One at 10:00. Watch now on the BBC Iplayer. Follow BBC North East on X and Facebook and BBC Cumbria on X and Facebook and both on Nextdoor and Instagram. Plea to dual road after 'chilling' deaths A66 dualling finally gets government approval A66 dualling legal challenge fails Department for Transport

Renewed calls from Cumbrian politician for A66 dualling
Renewed calls from Cumbrian politician for A66 dualling

BBC News

time18-05-2025

  • Business
  • BBC News

Renewed calls from Cumbrian politician for A66 dualling

The government has been urged to restore plans to dual the A66 road which runs across northern Starkie, the former Conservative Mayor of Copeland, in Cumbria, said the upgrade was needed to "support growth." The project was put on hold indefinitely by the government in 2024 citing a "black hole" in public finances, but many want the chancellor to commit to the project as soon as possible in the spending review in June. Labour North Yorkshire Mayor David Skaith said "we know the money wasn't there in the first place" for major schemes promised by the previous government. The road is a key artery running east and west between Scotch Corner in North Yorkshire and Workington in Cumbria. Before the 2024 general election, the Conservative government was moving ahead with plans for sections between the A1(M) and Penrith, but Labour swiftly put the project on hold alongside a number of others. Explaining the decision, Skaith told BBC Politics North: "The government did inherit a terrible financial situation."We have lots of conversations with local leaders and MPs in North Yorkshire about such projects."We've invested heavily into our rural transport network and we're looking at active travel provision as well, and working with the rail operators to improve that connectivity as that's what I have power over." However, Starkie accused Labour of unfairly leaving road users behind. He said: "What we're seeing is a clear demonstration of this government's misguided priorities."They can find £84bn to surrender the Chagos Islands, but then we've got infrastructure in our country that, to support growth, needs updating." "The projects that have actually got through the planning process - like the A66 - are getting shelved after already clearing the hurdles." BBC Politics North airs Sundays on BBC One at 10:00. Watch now on the BBC Iplayer. Follow BBC North East on X and Facebook and BBC Cumbria on X and Facebook and both on Nextdoor and Instagram.

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