The Welsh Government have unveiled a £55 Million funding package for councils to encourage people to take up healthier travel for short local journeys.
The funding
boost represents an eleven-fold increase in the dedicated budget for investment
in Active Travel in the last five years.
“We want to make
it easier for people to make everyday journeys in ways that benefits their help
and the environment” Lee Waters, Deputy Minister for Economy and Transport,
said.
The 2021-22 budget
has allocated more than £55m to be spent on active travel, an increase of £20m
from last year - up from £5 million in 2016 at the start of this Welsh
Government term.
The big rise in
investment is part of a major push to support sustainable transport as part of
the Welsh Government’s action on climate change.
The new investment
comes alongside the publication of new guidance to improve the design of new
infrastructure
Lee Waters, Deputy Minister for Economy and Transport, said: “Changing travel habits is not easy to achieve but we have to make a big effort if we are to tackle our health crisis and our climate crisis. We want local authorities to be ambitious in their plans, and to reach out to people who currently would not consider swapping a local car journey for a bike ride or a journey on foot and design safe routes that would encourage them to give it a try.”
The new funding is
part of a reform package which includes a major local consultation exercise in
every local authority area to create a pipeline of schemes to make it more
attractive to walk and cycle.
Councils have been
invited to apply for schemes that can make a real difference to the numbers
walking and cycling in their areas. They can use the money for small-scale
schemes like upgrading narrow routes that have become overcrowded, or removing
barriers that block wheelchairs or cycle trailers, as well as for the planning
of bigger and more complex schemes.
Councils will be
encouraged to work together to better connect places that may happen to lie in
different council areas, but where many people travel between.
The Welsh
Government has also published two sets of guidance designed to further improve
conditions for active travel. The first set of guidance aims to ensure that
when streetworks are put in place that the safety of walkers and cyclists are
planned for. It has been drafted in collaboration with Sustrans and the Welsh
Highway Authorities and Utilities Committee.
The second
guidance focuses on active travel improvements on trunk roads, which the Welsh
Government are responsible for managing. The guidance is aimed at ensuring that
whenever improvements are made to trunk roads in Wales, full consideration is
given to how conditions for walking and cycling can be improved as part of the
project, both within and beyond the trunk road boundary.
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