Massive transport investment plans by-pass the borough
Wandsworth 
          councillors fear that the borough has been 'dropped off the map' by 
          transport planners after work on two major tube and rail projects ground 
          to a halt.
          
          The problems were highlighted in a report to the council's regeneration 
          and transport committee in September and confirmed in the Mayor's transport 
          plan published this week.
          
          Now the council has written to the Mayor of London calling for an urgent 
          meeting to review the lack of progress.
          
          The major casualty is the East London Line extension with Clapham Junction 
          dropped from the first phase of the work. Instead the line will serve 
          West Croydon and Crystal Palace despite these areas already having good 
          north-south links. 
          
          Work on Crossrail 2 - otherwise known as the Chelsea Hackney Line - 
          has also stopped. This removes any realistic prospect of Clapham Junction 
          getting on the tube map.
          
          Meanwhile in another blow to local commuters the first Crossrail project 
          will not now include a route to Richmond and Kingston. This would have 
          relieved overcrowding on trains to Waterloo from south west London.
          
          Cabinet member for regeneration and transport Guy Senior wants the Mayor 
          of London to start speaking up for Wandsworth:
          
          "Everywhere you look there is a transport project that has stalled. 
          It is as if the entire borough, including the UK's busiest station at 
          Clapham Junction, has been forgotten. We must get a firm commitment 
          to the second phase of the East London Line extension which must surely 
          include Clapham Junction. It is all very well linking this line to the 
          Olympic Games bid but 2012 is far too long to wait for a decent east-west 
          rail connection that can bypass central London. 
          
          "Local commuters will also be dismayed at the complete lack of 
          progress on the Chelsea - Hackney link which would at last have put 
          Clapham Junction on the tube map.
          
          "At a time when local rail services are more congested than ever 
          the failure of the Government and the Mayor to move forward on this 
          much needed investment in south London's rail and tube infrastructure 
          is unforgivable."
          
          Even the first Crossrail project is still bedeviled by funding problems. 
          Although a bill will be presented to Parliament later this year no decision 
          has been made on how the £10 billion project will be financed. 
          There is also concern over the practicality of running such an intensive 
          service through central London.
          
          Work on a further project, Thameslink 2000, is also held up pending 
          the outcome of a second public inquiry next year. The line, which includes 
          Tooting, would benefit from additional capacity south of the river. 
          The earliest start date is now is likely to be 2007.
          
October 20, 2004