Plans for the formal abandonment of Queensbury Tunnel were included in a report developed by
Jacobs, an engineering consultancy, for
BRB (Residuary) Ltd in October 2009. It recommended that the tunnel should be infilled from both entrances for a distance of , substructure plugs placed beneath the five completed ventilation shafts, and all seven shafts backfilled and capped. Jacobs estimated the cost of this work would be £5.125 million. A programme of remedial works to permit safe entry was costed at £1.975 million. Jacobs submitted a second study – the Queensbury Tunnel Options Report – to Highways England's Historical Railways Estate team in February 2016. This was not progressed beyond the draft stage; however, HRE decided to move forward with two of the abandonment options outlined in it. The first required the tunnel to be infilled from both entrances for a distance of ; the second involved backfilling the seven shafts. In July 2018, the Queensbury Tunnel Society – which is campaigning for the tunnel to be reopened as part of a cycle path – published a report claiming the structure was "generally stable". In an accompanying media statement, it said "the condition of Queensbury Tunnel presents no short-term threat to the people of Queensbury – contrary to the claims last week from Highways England – so those trying hard to secure a positive outcome should be allowed the time they need to undertake a full and thorough assessment of the cycle network proposal." A contract for the tunnel's abandonment was awarded to AMCO-Giffen in August 2018 at a cost of £3.57 million, comprising £550,000 for preparatory works – which involved strengthening the lining below the shafts – and £3.02 million for the main phase. In October 2018, Bradford Council informed Highways England that its planning application for the abandonment works would have to be accompanied by an Environmental Impact Assessment, as a result of concerns that the scheme was likely to have significant effects on the environment. The preparatory works got underway at the same time but their scope had to be broadened in November 2018 due to the tunnel's southern entrance being inaccessible because of flooding. The £50 annual rent had not been paid on a pumping station, resulting in it being shut down. Highways England denied that it was responsible for paying the £50, but campaigners pointed out that Clause 5.4 of its Protocol Agreement with the Department for Transport included "meeting from existing funding all costs associated with the property" and that Schedule 6 Clause 6 of an associated lease required the rent to the paid "whether formally demanded or not". The additional works included the establishment of a temporary pumping system and strengthening to a long section of tunnel which had previously been designated as an exclusion zone. By the end of September, around 80% of the floodwater – estimated at – had been removed; however, over the following week, the southern half of the tunnel was again inundated due to a prolonged period of heavy rain. In response, AMCO-Giffen demobilised most of their equipment from the tunnel and the preparatory works were suspended. In October 2019, No.2 shaft, from the south end of the tunnel, was infilled under emergency powers after concerns were raised about a failing refuge close to the base of the shaft. A spokesman for Highways England said they had "no option other than to complete this work immediately to ensure both the safety of those communities living close by and the workforce who need to maintain it." However, the action was condemned by campaigners who claimed that "Both the shaft and the supporting tunnel lining are in generally fair condition. Even if the defective area did fail, there's no plausible mechanism whereby any effect could be felt at ground level. Load paths from the shaft would redistribute through unaffected parts of the tunnel lining and, more importantly, the shaft lining itself was built in two separate sections, with the upper portion independently supported on a rock ledge 39 metres below ground level." The leader of Bradford Council wrote to the Secretary of State for Transport to request an immediate halt to the infilling, but the work was completed on 28 October at a cost of £119,000. On 3 December, Bradford Council, as the local planning authority, wrote to Jacobs, Highways England's agent, to assert that "the LPA do not accept that the recent works to Shaft 2 do not require planning permission" and that "the Council's Legal Team will be writing to you separately on this matter." The overall cost of the preparatory works had risen to £3.44 million by the end of November 2019. On the same day,
Grant Shapps MP, the
Secretary of State for Transport, told the
Telegraph & Argus newspaper that "Queensbury Tunnel, I've taken a specific personal interest in it. The plan and official advice was to fill it in but I have specifically prevented that from happening to work with local leaders and the Combined Authority to come up with a better solution." He raised the possibility of the tunnel being used either for a cycle route or as part of a local tram/light rail network. == Cycle path proposal ==