Towpath Talk - November 2018 - Preview

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Issue 157, November 2018

The regeneration gain

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P17 Once a scene of post-industrial dereliction, the canalside regeneration at Ebley Mill near Stroud. PHOTO: JANET RICHARDSON By Janet Richardson

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THE economic impact of waterways restoration was the focus of the All Party Parliamentary Waterways Group’s October meeting. Speakers Mike Palmer, Inland Waterways Association trustee and chairman of the Waterways Recovery Group, David Marshall, canal project manager for Stroud District Council, and Robin Stonebridge, chairman of the Chesterfield Canal Trust, gave presentations highlighting the importance of engaging funding bodies, local authorities and communities to enable schemes to get off the ground. Mike said that funders were often not willing to wait around for five years for a major scheme to materialise and he challenged MPs and others to change this

Canal and HS2 question

NORTH-east Derbyshire MP Lee Rowley asked a question in the House of Commons seeking assurance that HS2 would not stop boats from being able to pass underneath its proposed line to the Infrastructure Maintenance Depot at Lowgates near Staveley. The Secretary of State for Transport replied that he could give that assurance. The MP also mentioned the Chesterfield Canal’s 250th anniversary in 2027. Toby Perkins MP for Chesterfield had also asked a question about the canal and HS2 back in April. Chesterfield Canal Trust said it was “hugely grateful” to its MPs for this support.

thinking enabling the ‘waiting game’ to become the ‘waiting gain’ by kickstarting restorations. He gave the Eden Project as an analogy, commenting that it was still a ‘work in progress’ but it had delivered right from day one. On the waterways, the Hollingwood Hub had also achieved this despite the full restoration of the Chesterfield Canal being some way ahead. Mike commented: “Restoration is not just a means to an end, there are quantifiable benefits at every stage. The vision is to turn unfinished business to everyone’s immediate advantage.” Before introducing the presentations on the two in-depth studies, he added there were currently 12 case studies in the restoration portfolio, ranging from microtourism at Sowerby Bridge on the Rochdale Canal to the Heritage Heroes’ road to rehabilitation.

David Marshall stressed the importance of partnership working on the phased restoration projects: Stonehouse to Brimscombe and Stroudwater Reconnected. He said there had been all-party political support for the scheme, including the regeneration of Ebley Mill which has been transformed from post-industrial dereliction to a vibrant place to live, creating jobs and giving the whole area an uplift. In Stroud itself, the Wallbridge locks restoration had provided an interface between the town centre and the canal, with the Cotswold Canals Trust’s visitor centre and neighbouring café opened by one of the volunteers. He added that work was about to start on a new canalside development with a landing stage. • Continued on page 4

Eco-mooring zone

Weaver dredging complete

THE Canal & River Trust and Islington Council are creating an ‘eco-mooring zone’ for visiting boats, between York Way and Danbury Street on the Regent’s Canal. Supported by funding from Defra, the zone will include electric charging points to provide boaters with an alternative to running boat engines to generate energy. CRT research shows that, while the impact of boat emissions is minimal in comparison to pollution from road traffic, the people most at risk from engine fumes are the boaters themselves and using cleaner sources of energy could benefit their health.

A FIVE-month £850,000 project to deepen a two-mile stretch of the River Weaver from Saltersford Locks, north of Weaverham, to Anderton Boat Lift, near Northwich, is now complete. One of the beneficiaries of the deeper river is the Daniel Adamson ‘The Danny’ steam ship which now offers passenger trips along the river. The enlarged channel will also boost boat and ship repair business Northwich Drydock Company, which took over a former commercial boatyard at Hunts Lock in 2017. The phased dredging programme will continue in 2019 at the confluence with the River Dane and down to Hunts Lock.


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