Children to lose free transport from local village to South Cheshire school

By Belinda Ryan - Local Democracy Reporter

19th Sep 2023 | Local News

Free school transport is set to be axed from Willaston to Brine Leas High School, Nantwich (Google).
Free school transport is set to be axed from Willaston to Brine Leas High School, Nantwich (Google).

A number of children are to lose their free school transport in South Cheshire, after councillors voted to re-designate a local walking route as available.

Cheshire East's children and families committee decided the route from Willaston to Brine Leas School in Nantwich will become an available walking route, after it was assessed by highways officers.

The same fate was also decided for a route from Prestbury to Fallibroome Academy in Macclesfield.

Affected families will be informed and given 12 weeks' notice.

A crossing has been in place at Cheerbrook Roundabout since October 2008 (Google).

The committee was told the Willaston route was originally deemed as unavailable to walk because of an inadequate crossing point at the Cheerbrook roundabout.

A crossing has now been in place there since October 2008.

With regard to the route to Fallibroome, a scheme to put a traffic light controlled pedestrian crossing on the B5087 Prestbury Road was completed in January 2020.

The re-designation means around 70 children from Prestbury will lose their eligibility to free school transport and about five from Willaston.

The move will save the council nearly £80,000 a year.

Poynton councillor Jos Saunders (Conservative), told Monday's (September 18) meeting: "My only observation is that it's taken so long. It was deemed suitable in 2020."

Cllr Jos Saunders, Poynton East & Pott Shrigley, Conservative (Cheshire East Council).

She said the council could have saved that money in the meantime.

"It's pretty unacceptable, to be honest, that we're discussing it three years later," said Cllr Saunders.

She added: "I am aware my colleague, Cllr Clowes, has brought up for many years the walking route in Wybunbury and by now I think it would have been savings of close to £1m.

"With the challenges facing this council we do need to be a bit swifter on these things."

Concerns were raised by some councillors about the route assessments being done in the summer - not taking into account darker winters.

Highways officer, Richard Hibbert, said there was no mandatory requirement for street lighting as part of the walking route audit 'but I'm absolutely certain if an auditor had been on site and identified a need for an additional streetlight, they would log it in their audit report.'

Cheshire East's children and families committee decided the route from Willaston to Brine Leas School in Nantwich hould become an available walking route (Wikimedia Commons).

The committee also approved the review of other sites across the borough to see if they could be made available for walking through improvement schemes.

Any considered appropriate would be decided upon a future meeting.

READ MORE: Extra four daily trains set to run between Crewe and Nottingham.

Free from clickbait, pop-up ads and unwanted surveys, Crewe Nub News is a quality online newspaper for our town.

Subscribe to our FREE weekly newsletter email HERE - just click the 'SIGN UP' button.

Please consider following Crewe Nub News on Facebook or Twitter.

     

New crewe Jobs Section Launched!!
Vacancies updated hourly!!
Click here: crewe jobs

Share:

Related Articles

Most businesses don’t realise they are paying too much for their energy. Let the team at Radius Energy help you fix that (Nub News).
Advertisement Features

Crewe businesses: Save up to 50 per cent on your energy bills

Crewe Nub News has you covered for new jobs to apply for in the town every week (Ryan Parker).
Local News

New jobs in Crewe this week: Clarks, McDonald's and more

Sign-Up for our FREE Newsletter

We want to provide crewe with more and more clickbait-free local news.
To do that, we need a loyal newsletter following.
Help us survive and sign up to our FREE weekly newsletter.

Already subscribed? Thank you. Just press X or click here.
We won't pass your details on to anyone else.
By clicking the Subscribe button you agree to our Privacy Policy.