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Local transport bodies

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Local transport bodies are partnerships of local authorities in England outside Greater London. There are 38 local transport bodies. They cover similar areas to local enterprise partnerships, but are not permitted to overlap each other. Decision making for major transport infrastructure spending is devolved to these bodies from the Department for Transport.[1] They will receive funding from April 2015.[2][3]

Membership

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Membership of local transport bodies include non-metropolitan local transport authorities (county councils and unitary authorities) or combined authorities and integrated transport authorities which cover metropolitan areas. Local enterprise partnerships are also members of local transport bodies.[4]

List of local transport bodies

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NORTH WEST

NORTH EAST

YORKSHIRE AND THE HUMBER

WEST MIDLANDS

EAST MIDLANDS

  • D2N2 Local Transport Board

SOUTH WEST

  • Dorset Local Transport Body
  • Heart of the South West Local Transport Board

SOUTH EAST

  • Berkshire Local Transport Body
  • Enterprise M3 Local Transport Body
  • Coast to Capital Local Transport Body

EAST ENGLAND

  • Greater Cambridge and Greater Peterborough Local Transport Body

SOUTH EAST & EAST ENGLAND

  • South East Local Transport Board

LONDON

  • None

References

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  1. ^ Local Transport Body Report (25-9-2013).
  2. ^ "DfT's local transport bodies plan creates inter-council tensions | RUDI - Resource for Urban Development International". rudi.net. Retrieved 2014-04-05.
  3. ^ "Local transport body funding allocations - Written statements to Parliament - GOV.UK". gov.uk. 16 July 2013. Retrieved 2014-04-05.
  4. ^ Department for Transport (17 September 2012). "Devolving local major transport schemes: Next steps" (PDF). Retrieved 2014-06-28.