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Reorganisation of railways (NSFW)
Comments
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killerandflash said:This looks like how the London Overground, DLR and London buses are operated, and their models have been reasonably successful and uncontroversial, with private operators being paid to operate services by TfL (to a strict specification) and all the revenue (and risk) reverting to TfL. I imagine a lot of people don't even realise that their DLR train or the 89 bus is being operated by a private company
My feeling is that we are learning that private doesn't always mean good and public doesn't always mean bad and that decent investment and strong management can exist in either or neither tenure.
We all know that what we want as passengers is a reasonably reliable reasonably affordable service that doesn't have to involve knowing which operator's train you can use when going Doncaster to Peterborough and doesn't need to have 3 browsers open when buying tickets. There can still be price differentials - we all accept that flying Lufthansa will be better than flying RyanAir - but these need to be clear rather than just the fact that the carriages are a different colour.5 -
iaitch said:Oggy Red said:stevexreeve said:Wheresmeticket? said:Hopefully one day it will be cheaper to get a train from London to Cornwall than to fly from London to Marrakech.
BA Heathrow to Marrakech £118.00
Rail fare could be cheaper but doesn't seem unreasonable to me.
Quicker to fly from London to Marrakech. Bargain!
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The biggest con trick that's ever been pulled on people is privatisation of the railways to increase 'competition'. What are we going to do - take the track next to it that starts and arrives at the same place?
It was an absolute disgrace from start to finish - irrespective of your political persuasion.15 -
stevexreeve said:Wheresmeticket? said:Hopefully one day it will be cheaper to get a train from London to Cornwall than to fly from London to Marrakech.
BA Heathrow to Marrakech £118.00
Rail fare could be cheaper but doesn't seem unreasonable to me.
BTWLondon Gatwick to Marrakech
Marrakech to London Gatwick
Basket £70.99£70.99
Train to PenzanceOUTSun 4 Jul
London Paddington to Penzance
5h 7m, 0 changesRETURNSun 11 Jul
Penzance to London Paddington
5h 6m, 0 changesSuper Off-Peak Return£124.40
So not just more expensive, apx twice as much. 2 people can fly to Marrakech and back for the price of one person going to Penzance and back.
And you are less likely to be ripped off or mugged in Marrakech.5 -
You can buy better Cornish paasties in Penzance, though.
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stevexreeve said:Wheresmeticket? said:Hopefully one day it will be cheaper to get a train from London to Cornwall than to fly from London to Marrakech.
BA Heathrow to Marrakech £118.00
Rail fare could be cheaper but doesn't seem unreasonable to me.
**edit
Just looked, £1500 -
Leroy Ambrose said:The biggest con trick that's ever been pulled on people is privatisation of the railways to increase 'competition'. What are we going to do - take the track next to it that starts and arrives at the same place?
It was an absolute disgrace from start to finish - irrespective of your political persuasion.
But then the real competition is with the car and the plane, and for the railways to smash the competition you need increased speed, and that means infrastructure like HS2 and only the State can do that.1 -
A few years ago I went to Edinburgh for the weekend. The shortness of the trip took car out of the equation as realistically I'd have needed to stop overnight on route both ways.
The options were:
Coach - £28pp
Plane - £45pp (plus parking at Stansted and Dartford toll)
Train - £110pp
So we chose the overnight coach because at the time we worked in London so already had season tickets that made getting to Victoria essentially free. Regretted it, because whilst the overnight coach gave us the most time in Edinburgh, I didn't get much sleep so ended the weekend so exhausted I needed another break to recover.
The point is of course that those price differentials are ridiculous. Nobody in their right mind is going to choose the train unless they're travelling along, really need to travel city centre to city centre, and can use the journey to get some work done, i.e. lone business travellers who are probably expensing the rail fare anyway. Leisure travellers are always going to drive or fly. If the UK is serious about it's environmental goals then they urgently need to fix this, and not buy penalising the airlines and their passengers.
If I want to get the train from Sittingbourne to St Pancras, I'm looking at pretty much that airfare from above to travel just 450 miles.
EDIT: Just checked the rail fares for Sittingbourne to St Pancras. If I want to travel before 9am then it's £53.80, how the fuck can that be justified for journey of just over an hour and just over 50 miles?
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I thought it was supposed to be Communism.1
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The bit I'm always in is how they brand it, see there keeping the double arrows and Rail Alphabet font, but always interested in what the trains will look like, the uniforms etc etc0
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Leroy Ambrose said:The biggest con trick that's ever been pulled on people is privatisation of the railways to increase 'competition'. What are we going to do - take the track next to it that starts and arrives at the same place?
It was an absolute disgrace from start to finish - irrespective of your political persuasion.2 -
addick1956 said:stevexreeve said:Wheresmeticket? said:Hopefully one day it will be cheaper to get a train from London to Cornwall than to fly from London to Marrakech.
BA Heathrow to Marrakech £118.00
Rail fare could be cheaper but doesn't seem unreasonable to me.
Is this an admission that the current system is crap. On the continent train fares are more reasonable.
Off-peak savers offer an hourly service and you turn up whenever you like and get on any train - even if it's "full". (Off-peak of course!).
Airlines rarely offer that sort of deal unless you pay hundreds of pounds.
When you compare "advanced against advanced" I don't think there's usually that much difference.
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A quick google search.
2015, the telegraph:11 Aug 2015 — Labour's desire to renationalise railways would fail passengers.2017, the telegraph:1 Jun 2017 — The case for renationalising the railways proposed by the Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn does not "stack up "Today:
Telegraph: “Flexible season tickets will be formally unveiled as Grant Shapps, the Transport Secretary, lays the groundwork for a series of radical changes on Thursday”3 -
Sample LNER advance fares advertised today
Standard Class Sat, 10 Jul 2021 From £35.00LONDON TO EDINBURGH
Standard Class Sat, 10 Jul 2021From £17.90HARROGATE TO LONDON
Standard Class Mon, 12 Jul 2021 From £18.501 -
Southeastern are introducing flexi season tickets from 21st June.1
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@randy andy one thing I would disagree with in your otherwise sound post, is that (we) air travellers are benefitting from a global scam,namely the fact that kerosene isnt taxed. That has to be fixed and fast, but the trouble is no one country can go it alone.Personally I would whack a carbon tax on air travel too.1
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it will end in tears, the tears of travellers, as private companies will still be running the services and taking large fees to do so, with the majority being foreign owned. The new GBR willl be Network Rail under a new name with a few extra responsibilities with the same people who have messed the system up over previous years.
Bring back full nationalisation b ut in a modern manner3 -
PragueAddick said:Never forget that while she hated trains, it wasnt Thatcher that sold them off. Presumably she realised it was a can of worms. But then again...water...
Thatcher never got round to privatising the railway because beforehand, she got stabbed in the back by her own party.
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Leroy Ambrose said:The biggest con trick that's ever been pulled on people is privatisation of the railways to increase 'competition'. What are we going to do - take the track next to it that starts and arrives at the same place?
It was an absolute disgrace from start to finish - irrespective of your political persuasion.2 -
PragueAddick said:Leroy Ambrose said:The biggest con trick that's ever been pulled on people is privatisation of the railways to increase 'competition'. What are we going to do - take the track next to it that starts and arrives at the same place?
It was an absolute disgrace from start to finish - irrespective of your political persuasion.
But then the real competition is with the car and the plane, and for the railways to smash the competition you need increased speed, and that means infrastructure like HS2 and only the State can do that.
But I think you'll find that passengers are also looking at:
Price
Comfort
Ease of connections
Food & drink
Connectivity as in Wifi
In today's world many of us might choose to spend travel time on here, watching Netflix or skimming the news and social media, as well as the odd call or even video call
And many of us find long drives unattractive. One thing lockdown and working from home has shown us is that time, comfort and quality of life are fairly important to help one both relax and think straight.0 - Sponsored links:
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@seriously_red sure, but speed is what causes “modal shift” from air to rail. The TGVs have wiped out whole airlines in France, such as Air Inter. Eurostar has seriously eroded the air travel from London to Paris and Brussels, etc. The other things you list are important but not game changing.2
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PragueAddick said:@seriously_red sure, but speed is what causes “modal shift” from air to rail. The TGVs have wiped out whole airlines in France, such as Air Inter. Eurostar has seriously eroded the air travel from London to Paris and Brussels, etc. The other things you list are important but not game changing.
For all the failings of privatisation, passenger numbers have gone up massively, basically doubling , and this has been across all types of journey, so you can't say the policy was a complete failure.stevexreeve said:addick1956 said:stevexreeve said:Wheresmeticket? said:Hopefully one day it will be cheaper to get a train from London to Cornwall than to fly from London to Marrakech.
BA Heathrow to Marrakech £118.00
Rail fare could be cheaper but doesn't seem unreasonable to me.
Is this an admission that the current system is crap. On the continent train fares are more reasonable.
Off-peak savers offer an hourly service and you turn up whenever you like and get on any train - even if it's "full". (Off-peak of course!).
Airlines rarely offer that sort of deal unless you pay hundreds of pounds.
When you compare "advanced against advanced" I don't think there's usually that much difference.4 -
@killerandflash
It always makes me laugh when i hear the passenger growth numbers trotted out, usually by Tories with no real business experience, to justify privatisation. I dont include you in that lot, but before assuming this as proof, you need to consider the huge population increase since the mid 90s. We need to know whether rail has significantly increased share of long distance journeys vs air, car, and coach in that time. The Ministry certainly has the data, but I have never seen them published, let alone brandished in triumph, which makes me suspect the share hasnt increased that much. And even if it has, how much was positive choice? I mean the motorways seem choked all the time now. Cause and effect...0 -
PragueAddick said:@killerandflash
It always makes me laugh when i hear the passenger growth numbers trotted out, usually by Tories with no real business experience, to justify privatisation. I dont include you in that lot, but before assuming this as proof, you need to consider the huge population increase since the mid 90s. We need to know whether rail has significantly increased share of long distance journeys vs air, car, and coach in that time. The Ministry certainly has the data, but I have never seen them published, let alone brandished in triumph, which makes me suspect the share hasnt increased that much. And even if it has, how much was positive choice? I mean the motorways seem choked all the time now. Cause and effect...
https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/761352/rail-factsheet-2018.pdf
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jams said:0
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PragueAddick said:Well, its a step in the right direction.However as yet I’m not really seeing an answer to the big headache of the private railway which nobody has so far addressed.Privatisation makes sense if it encourages competition, which benefits customers. How’s your choice of water supplier working out?The UK system split the railway up into 20+ private monopolies. Now, I can certainly see that you can introduce competition on long distance routes, so long as you have a body that controls the timetables and fares, which GBR would do. So lets say you have two operators running high speed London- Manchester. You might be the sort that chooses one operator for the free coffee. But others just want to know that every half hour, on the same minute, there’s a train on that route. GBR would organise that. But will it be of interest to private operators compared to the old monopoly that Virgin enjoyed for years? Not sure. I am sure that you cant do this anyway on the commuter services. Better to hand it all to TfL, effectively the return of Network South East. But then it is all State owned, so where’s the pressure to deliver? Dunno.
Across Europe they run the Open Access system on these routes, which works better, but private operators say it is still unfair because they go up against a strong State operator such as Deutsche Bahn. Fact is though that you could get from Brussels to Prague for €29, — albeit you need the Man in Seat 61 to guide you through buying the tickets. So we aint got it sorted either.Never forget that while she hated trains, it wasnt Thatcher that sold them off. Presumably she realised it was a can of worms. But then again...water...
I’d argue your average measured water bill of approx £1-2 a day is astonishing value compared to most other services. And most measured customers could do a lot to bring their own costs down.0 -
killerandflash said:PragueAddick said:@killerandflash
It always makes me laugh when i hear the passenger growth numbers trotted out, usually by Tories with no real business experience, to justify privatisation. I dont include you in that lot, but before assuming this as proof, you need to consider the huge population increase since the mid 90s. We need to know whether rail has significantly increased share of long distance journeys vs air, car, and coach in that time. The Ministry certainly has the data, but I have never seen them published, let alone brandished in triumph, which makes me suspect the share hasnt increased that much. And even if it has, how much was positive choice? I mean the motorways seem choked all the time now. Cause and effect...
https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/761352/rail-factsheet-2018.pdf2 -
The_Organiser said:PragueAddick said:Well, its a step in the right direction.However as yet I’m not really seeing an answer to the big headache of the private railway which nobody has so far addressed.Privatisation makes sense if it encourages competition, which benefits customers. How’s your choice of water supplier working out?The UK system split the railway up into 20+ private monopolies. Now, I can certainly see that you can introduce competition on long distance routes, so long as you have a body that controls the timetables and fares, which GBR would do. So lets say you have two operators running high speed London- Manchester. You might be the sort that chooses one operator for the free coffee. But others just want to know that every half hour, on the same minute, there’s a train on that route. GBR would organise that. But will it be of interest to private operators compared to the old monopoly that Virgin enjoyed for years? Not sure. I am sure that you cant do this anyway on the commuter services. Better to hand it all to TfL, effectively the return of Network South East. But then it is all State owned, so where’s the pressure to deliver? Dunno.
Across Europe they run the Open Access system on these routes, which works better, but private operators say it is still unfair because they go up against a strong State operator such as Deutsche Bahn. Fact is though that you could get from Brussels to Prague for €29, — albeit you need the Man in Seat 61 to guide you through buying the tickets. So we aint got it sorted either.Never forget that while she hated trains, it wasnt Thatcher that sold them off. Presumably she realised it was a can of worms. But then again...water...
I’d argue your average measured water bill of approx £1-2 a day is astonishing value compared to most other services. And most measured customers could do a lot to bring their own costs down.
There's the reservoir. There are the pipes from the reservoir, which I presume are owned by Thames Water for many Lifers. The pipes go down your street and into your house. The water coms out of your tap. You pay Thames Water. They say thank you and shove your prices up next year in gratitude. So how exactly will a "competitor" be inserted into that flow? Not having a dig at you mate, by all means just send me a link to something about it; I'm really surprised I haven't picked this up before, as the water privatisation does my head in, and it's all over Europe thanks to the Brits pushing it in the early 90s.0 -
PragueAddick said:The_Organiser said:PragueAddick said:Well, its a step in the right direction.However as yet I’m not really seeing an answer to the big headache of the private railway which nobody has so far addressed.Privatisation makes sense if it encourages competition, which benefits customers. How’s your choice of water supplier working out?The UK system split the railway up into 20+ private monopolies. Now, I can certainly see that you can introduce competition on long distance routes, so long as you have a body that controls the timetables and fares, which GBR would do. So lets say you have two operators running high speed London- Manchester. You might be the sort that chooses one operator for the free coffee. But others just want to know that every half hour, on the same minute, there’s a train on that route. GBR would organise that. But will it be of interest to private operators compared to the old monopoly that Virgin enjoyed for years? Not sure. I am sure that you cant do this anyway on the commuter services. Better to hand it all to TfL, effectively the return of Network South East. But then it is all State owned, so where’s the pressure to deliver? Dunno.
Across Europe they run the Open Access system on these routes, which works better, but private operators say it is still unfair because they go up against a strong State operator such as Deutsche Bahn. Fact is though that you could get from Brussels to Prague for €29, — albeit you need the Man in Seat 61 to guide you through buying the tickets. So we aint got it sorted either.Never forget that while she hated trains, it wasnt Thatcher that sold them off. Presumably she realised it was a can of worms. But then again...water...
I’d argue your average measured water bill of approx £1-2 a day is astonishing value compared to most other services. And most measured customers could do a lot to bring their own costs down.
There's the reservoir. There are the pipes from the reservoir, which I presume are owned by Thames Water for many Lifers. The pipes go down your street and into your house. The water coms out of your tap. You pay Thames Water. They say thank you and shove your prices up next year in gratitude. So how exactly will a "competitor" be inserted into that flow? Not having a dig at you mate, by all means just send me a link to something about it; I'm really surprised I haven't picked this up before, as the water privatisation does my head in, and it's all over Europe thanks to the Brits pushing it in the early 90s.0