Ormskirk

Merseyside figures recognised in 2024 New Year Honours

Community leaders, healthcare workers and a champion race walker are among the Merseyside figures to be recognised in the King’s 2024 New Year Honours.
The honours are handed out as part of the new year celebrations by the monarch and see people recogn…

Sister of woman killed by Chorley HGV driver James Majury calls for …

The sister of a woman killed in a crash by a HGV driver from Chorley who was checking Facebook on his phone is calling for tougher penalties for people who text drive.

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James Majury, 33, of Milton Road, Coppull, hit a school minibus on the M58 in Lancashire[2] in January 2019 with his 19.2 tonne truck, killing pupil Joe Cairns[3], 14, from Bury, and teaching assistant Anne Kerr, 50, and seriously injuring others while distracted by his phone.

Ms Kerr’s sister, Elaine Wyper, said her death had left a lasting impact on the family: “It’s been awful. It’s that empty seat at a table at Christmas.

“My dad never, ever got over it. He passed away last year and he could never accept that Anne was gone and also the sentence that the lorry driver got.”

Anne Kerr's death has left an unbearable void in the lives of her family and friendsAnne Kerr's death has left an unbearable void in the lives of her family and friends
Anne Kerr’s death has left an unbearable void in the lives of her family and friends

Mobile phone records showed Majury, of Milton Road in Coppull, Chorley[4], had been using his phone throughout his journey.

During his trial, it was heard he sent texts, made calls, used sports apps, opened a medieval fantasy game and finally scoured Facebook[5] while behind the wheel.

He only noticed the minibus carrying children to Pontville School, a special needs school in Ormskirk, half a second before the impact.Despite braking hard, his lorry hit the minibus at 50mph.

Majury admitted causing death by dangerous driving and was jailed for eight years and 10 months. He was also banned from driving for nearly 10 years.

James Majury from Chorley had been using his mobile phone at the wheel moments before the fatal crashJames Majury from Chorley had been using his mobile phone at the wheel moments before the fatal crash
James Majury from Chorley had been using his mobile phone at the wheel moments before the fatal crash

How you can get a share of £25m in cost-of-living help if you live in Preston, S…

[6]

Ms Wyper is now calling for tougher penalties for people who use their phones while they drive.

“How anyone, especially a lorry driver driving a nineteen tonne truck would think it was acceptable to open his phone and play games, send texts, make phone calls. Everything that you just don’t do when you’re driving.

“The judge at the time said, effectively, it was a nineteen tonne battering ram. There was hardly anything left of the minibus Anne was in.

People[7] who witnessed it have contacted me to say it will live in their mind forever because it was so horrendous.

“I think there’s a heck of a lot of work still to do.”

She said people “still think ‘I won’t get caught'”.

Ms Wyper added: “I think there needs to be tougher sentences, bigger fines and longer lengths of bans if you are caught.”

References

  1. ^ Visit Shots! now (www.shotstv.com)
  2. ^ James Majury, 33, of Milton Road, Coppull, hit a school minibus on the M58 in Lancashire (www.lep.co.uk)
  3. ^ Joe Cairns (www.lep.co.uk)
  4. ^ Chorley (www.lep.co.uk)
  5. ^ Facebook (www.lep.co.uk)
  6. ^

Merseyrail services disrupted as trespassers get onto track

Rail users are facing disruption this evening after trespassers got onto the tracks at Liverpool Central station.
Services on both the Wirral[1] line and the Northern line are subject to delay and short notice cancellations. Merseyrail[2] said disrupti…

Green light for Merseyrail Boxing Day services

Rail passengers in the Liverpool City Region[1] will be able to blow away the Christmas[2] cobwebs as Merseyrail[3] has announced that train services will be running on Boxing Day.
Trains will be running every day over the festive period, with the exce…

Merseyrail services disrupted after trespasser chased by police

Merseyrail services were disrupted after a trespasser was pursued by police.
Train services on the northern line were disrupted due to a person being on the line near Liverpool Central. Merseyrail[1] said the trespasser was being pursued by police.
Tra…

My train to meet the transport secretary was cancelled

There was a grim sense of inevitability as I glanced up.
I scanned the screen of departures information. New Brighton[1] on time, Ormskirk[2] on time, Liverpool Central on time, West Kirkby[3] on time, Headbolt Lane….cancelled.
Now I am not a regular…

New dual carriageway between South Ribble and Preston ‘to be …

Watch more of our videos on Shots!and live on Freeview channel 276

Visit Shots! now[1]

The widening of the A582 – between Lostock Hall and Penwortham[2] – has seemed an increasingly distant prospect in recent years, with a perennial question mark hanging over funding for the near decade-old scheme.

However, it has now been named in the government’s new Network North strategy, which sets out how the £36bn saved by scrapping HS2[3] is purportedly going to be spent on a raft of other rail and road improvements instead.

The project – known as the South Ribble[4] Western Distributor – is the only transport upgrade for Lancashire that is specifically identified in the government document, although the county will share in a £2.5bn pot earmarked for as-yet-unnamed schemes in places that lie outside the “big city regions”.

The A582 would become a dual carriageway for its full length under the plansThe A582 would become a dual carriageway for its full length under the plans
The A582 would become a dual carriageway for its full length under the plans

South Ribble station where trains stop but passengers can’t get off could be reo…

[5]

However, the dualling of the A582 could have implications beyond a reduction in the gridlock that regularly dogs the route during rush hour. Current congested conditions on the road – and whether these might someday be alleviated by its conversion to dual carriageway – formed a key plank of the evidence at a public inquiry last year into a controversial proposal to build 1,100 homes on the Pickering’s Farm site in Penwortham.

As the Lancashire Post[6] revealed last month, the outcome of that inquiry – which is now to be decided by the government after ministers moved to give themselves the final say, instead of the planning inspector who chaired it – has been delayed for a third time. It is not now expected until the end of November, 15 months after the hearings concluded.

South Ribble Borough Council[7] leader Paul Foster told the inquiry that he did not believe the A582 could cope with the increased traffic that would result from the estate if it were not widened – and so said that the development should not be given the green light until that was the case. The authority has twice refused planning permission for the homes for a range of reasons, including various road-related concerns.

Would it matter to you if your journey along Farington Road slowed down by just one mile-per-hour?Would it matter to you if your journey along Farington Road slowed down by just one mile-per-hour?
Would it matter to you if your journey along Farington Road slowed down by just one mile-per-hour?

Speaking to the Post about the appearance of the dualling scheme in the Network North plans, Cllr Foster said that he would always “welcome investment” into the borough. However, he added that the timing – after the latest delay to the inquiry result – “smells a little bit fishy”.

“This does not change anything [regarding Pickering’s Farm]…because the infrastructure has to go in before any development.

“I have little confidence, unfortunately, that [the dual carriageway] will be delivered in a timely manner – within the next five or 10 years. Therefore, our planning view on Pickering’ Farm does not change at all.

“It actually hardens my view [about] protecting the local community from this, because making this announcement to try and open up [a potential] 1,500 houses in a completely unsustainable area – we’re not having it,” Cllr Foster added.

Last month, the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities told the Post that the hold-up to the Pickering’s Farm decision was because “more time [is] needed to consider the case”.

Meanwhile, South Ribble’s Conservative MP Katherine Fletcher said that she was “absolutely delighted that [the A582] is getting the priority it needs”.

“It’s a car park at five o’clock in the evening – a major traffic snarl-up spot. I have been hammering on about it and I managed to get it into the Liz Truss mini-budget last year – and I have been hammering on to get it reincluded [into the current government’s plans since],” Ms. Fletcher said.

On the issue of Pickering’s Farm and the interplay between the outstanding inquiry decision and the dualling of the A582, she noted that the land for the estate – between Penwortham Way and Leyland Road – was earmarked for development in South Ribble’s soon-to-be-replaced local plan.

“I’d be happy to work with Cllr Foster to make sure it’s the right outcome, but…I’d encourage him and Chorley [Council] to get a local plan together, because that’s what gives residents certainty.”

All three Central Lancashire district councils – South Ribble, Chorley and Preston – have been working on the creation of the first ever local plan to cover the trio of local authority areas collectively. The first of several rounds of public consultation took place earlier this year and – subject to approval by a planning inspector – it is expected that the new joint plan will be in place by the summer of 2025.

CASH CONUNDRUM

The A582 widening project was one of those intended to be funded under the Preston, South Ribble and Lancashire City Deal, an agreement designed to unlock the cash for the infrastructure improvements needed to create 17,000 new homes and 20,000 new jobs across Central Lancashire.

Estimated in 2019 to cost £77m, it emerged at a City Deal meeting in March that year that the road scheme was facing “budget pressures”. Subsequent funding bids in an attempt to plug the gap came to nought and progress appeared to have halted.

Meanwhile, in 2020, campaigners opposed to the Pickerings Farm development produced a dossier claiming that the likely price tag for the road upgrade was actually £121m.

A huge element of the cost of the scheme lies in the need to construct two new bridges – one to carry the widened road over the West Coast Mainline, which would be built to the south of the existing structure so that the route could remain open during the works – and another to take the Preston to Ormskirk railway line across the newly-dualled road.

The new Network North plan does not put a price tag on the overall South Ribble Western Distributor project, but it is one of 21 “smaller road schemes” that will share £460m in funding.

Cllr Foster questions whether enough money could be allocated to the project under those circumstances – and warns against failing to complete the works in full.

“The A582 cannot be dualled without doing all of it. It would actually make matters far worse [to do only some sections], because it would bring more traffic into a real bottleneck.

“There’s no point in doing what they’ve done with HS2 and not finishing it,” Cllr Foster added.

The Post understands that no new cost estimate has been drawn up for the scheme since the £77m figure was arrived at in four years ago. However, an updated forecast is now expected to be made in view of the inclusion of the project in the Network North plans.

In 2019, County Hall cabinet members approved the use of compulsory purchase powers, should they be needed, to acquire the land required for the route. No properties would need to be demolished to make way for the road.

WHERE WOULD BE WIDENED?

Several junctions along the A582 were widened in the late 2010s, both to add capacity and in preparation for the dualling of the entire route – including at Pope Lane, Chain House Lane and Stanifield Lane.

Under the South Ribble Western Distribution plans, the following sections of road would be converted into a dual carriageway:

A582 east-west for 1.4 miles along Farington Road and Flensburg Way – from the roundabout connecting Stanifield Lane and Lostock Lane to the ‘tank roundabout’, close to the Farington waste recycling centre. New signal-controlled junctions will be introduced at Sherdley Road, Croston Road and the Lancashire Business Park, along with a shared cycle path and footway for the length of the route.

A582 north-south for 1.8 miles along Penwortham Way and Golden Way – between the ‘tank roundabout’ and Broad Oak roundabout (at the Brown Hare pub), where it will join with the dual carriageways of Golden Way and the Penwortham Bypass. This stretch would also include a shared cycle path and footway.

B5253 Flensburg Way north-south for 0.8 miles – between the ‘tank roundabout’ and the roundabout connecting Longmeanygate, Comet Road and Schleswig Way, which will be upgraded to a signal-controlled junction. Lancashire County Council said in 2019 that this part of the scheme was not included in the then £77m cost estimate.

References

  1. ^ Visit Shots! now (www.shotstv.com)
  2. ^ Penwortham (www.lep.co.uk)
  3. ^ HS2 (www.lep.co.uk)
  4. ^ South Ribble (www.lep.co.uk)
  5. ^

Northern cancel trains between Preston and Ormskirk due to crash

The crash, which has been described as “minor” by train operator Northern, happened at around 10.45am this morning (September 5) at a level crossing between the two stations.
Damage to the front of the train (Image: British Transport Police/X)
Services…

Two teenagers arrested after woman slashed

Two teenagers were arrested after a woman was slashed in the arm near to where Matthew Daulby was killed just weeks before.
Lancashire Constabulary[1] confirmed to the ECHO[2] that the force received reports that a woman had been slashed with a knife a…

Man, 19, killed and three others stabbed in weekend of violence

A 19-year-old was stabbed to death in a shocking weekend of violence across the North West.
People living on Merseyside and beyond were horrified to hear the news of Matthew Daulby'[1]s death following a disturbance in Ormskirk town centre[2] on Saturd…