Witnesses:
Matt Furniss, Cabinet Member for Transport, Infrastructure and
Growth
Katie Stewart, Executive Director – Environment, Transport
& Infrastructure
Paul Millin, Assistant Director, Strategic Transport
Lucy Monie, Director, Highways and Transport
Steve Howard, Transport Strategy Manager, Environment, Transport
& Infrastructure
Key points
made in the discussion:
General
- The Chairman asked a
question on the impact of delays in the development of the Surrey
Transport Plan. The Transport Strategy Manager, Environment,
Transport & Infrastructure said that the Council had been
waiting 18 months for the Department for Transport to issue
guidance and an associated carbon reduction toolkit . The Cabinet
Member had written to the Secretary of State. The response would be
shared with the Committee.
- A Member asked how
national attitudes would affect motivations for delivery. The
Cabinet Member emphasised that the service was offering residents
as many sustainable transport options as possible. The Member noted
that some residents had encountered issues with EV cables running
over pavements. This was considered an obstruction. The Cabinet
Member explained that the Trojan Trial Project which allowed
residents to charge their vehicles by way of a gulley laid across
the pavement. A trial was underway. The Cabinet Member agreed to
revert to the Member with the cost to resident of implementing this
approach.
Delivery Plan Approach
- A Member asked a
question about pace of delivery of the Transport Plan –
numbers of car movements in Surrey had increased not decreased. The
Cabinet Member said that progress was being made where there was
public support for example for walking and electric biking
schemes. The Executive Director for
Environment, Transport and Infrastructure noted that even though there was no formal delivery plan yet in
place, delivery was nonetheless taking place.
- A Member asked if the
Council would bid for additional funding for the Transport Plan.
The Cabinet Member for Transport, Infrastructure and Growth
answered that HS2 diverted funds would be bid for by the Council
for major infrastructure improvements. Additionally, the Council
had recently been awarded £3.9 billion for bus services in
Surrey and the £2 bus cap fare remained in place.
Engagement
- A Member asked how
consultation could be managed in the context of residents feeling
that car ownership was under attack. The
Cabinet Member stressed that motorists were
not being attacked. A new and slower
co-design process was being adopted. This involved longer and more
thorough consultation to make sure residents were on board with any
plans.
Governance, Monitoring & Measuring Success
- A Member asked a
question on what measures might be considered to make short car
journeys less attractive. A range of possible options were flagged
including reducing parking, traffic calming and management measures
and road user charging. The Cabinet Member emphasised that this was
not currently under consideration. The Member also asked how the
Council would define the acceptable level of public support from
residents for any new measures. The Cabinet Member answered that
Councillors had an important role in deciding what was acceptable
in their division. An effective
codesign process was critical.
- A Member
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