Maybe everybody really wants to go to Scunthorpe which line doesn't serve.Indeed. These are all abominations that should have been reversed over the years, but have been hard-baked into timetables since privatisation.
Maybe everybody really wants to go to Scunthorpe which line doesn't serve.Indeed. These are all abominations that should have been reversed over the years, but have been hard-baked into timetables since privatisation.
Maybe everybody really wants to go to Scunthorpe which line doesn't serve.
So that's 1 prospective passenger, any more? A taxi might be better a better service from the railway.I like Snaith and would like to be able to do a day trip.
Well according to the ORR stats 736 entries and exists a year.So that's 1 prospective passenger, any more? A taxi might be better a better service from the railway.
1 daily passenger making a return trip?Well according to the ORR stats 736 entries and exists a year.
So that's 1 prospective passenger, any more? A taxi might be better a better service from the railway.
I haven't, but 'I like the place and would like to make an occasional day trip' does not sound like there is a stunning argument for spending a large amount of taxpayer money on running an hourly service 6 days a week.Have you studied the prospect of the route as part of the regional railway![]()
I haven't, but 'I like the place and would like to make an occasional day trip' does not sound like there is a stunning argument for spending a large amount of taxpayer money on running an hourly service 6 days a week.
In contrast, opening a new station in suburban Doncaster near the old airport and running a Doncaster-Gainsbrough-Barnetby service that might actually serve some local transport need may be worth having a look at.
Did it? And was it scrapped for political or completely understandable economic reasons.The route obviously justified a service before it was scrapped for political reasons.
Did it? And was it scrapped for political or completely understandable economic reasons.
And you have the DfT's minutes outlining both that it was economically viable and that this specific reason was chosen as the justification for withdrawal?It did, and the route was scrapped to make it more paletable for privatisation.
And you have the DfT's minutes outlining both that it was economically viable and that this specific reason was chosen as the justification for withdrawal?
Tinie Tempah can’t keep a whole railway line open on his own now can heMaybe everybody really wants to go to Scunthorpe which line doesn't serve.
To be fair, you can easily do that by changing at Selby. The 401 takes under twenty minutes to Snaith and runs ten services per day Monday - Saturday. It continues through to Goole. Only £2 now too.I like Snaith and would like to be able to do a day trip.
To be fair, you can easily do that by changing at Selby. The 401 takes under twenty minutes to Snaith and runs ten services per day Monday - Saturday. It continues through to Goole. Only £2 now too.
The final nail in the coffin came after the 1991 financial crash and the need to reduce Regional Railways DMU diagrams to free up Class 158s to go to Network SouthEast for Waterloo-Exeter. Reducing to a Saturday Only service meant that the route needed zero additional diagrams. Various other cuts around the same time, such as Dundee-Arbroath locals, Sheffield-York locals via Pontefract, Whitby branch down to a single diagram and Knottingley-Goole locals down to 'shoulder' peak extensions only, were all for the same reason.
Indeed. These are all abominations that should have been reversed over the years, but have been hard-baked into timetables since privatisation.
Tinie Tempah can’t keep a whole railway line open on his own now can he
BR got far more out of the subsidy it was allowed than the current railway does. BR had the ability to control its costs - the privatised railway is utterly incapable of doing so.A horrible era, but maybe one worth studying again to warn us of how a government controlled network might pan out
But BR were seemingly more than happy to rob Provincial to pay NSE, not just the 158s or the cutbacks you’ve mentioned above but also the cutting up of most 155s to squeeze thin resources further
This is why I’m tired of hearing just how wonderful BR apparently were because of the investment in NSE (and the fixation with some Artists Impressions of stock that they’d have introduced on NSE despite the financial realities)
It seems often forgotten on here that there is a ~£2bn funding gap from increased work from home. The rise in leisure travel should hopefully see some investment in XC, the 8/9 car trains from the reduced timetable are well filled and the push for moving some business out of London should see them get busier.That’s rather unfair on Conrad.
In my experience there is no one in the DfT who is advocating reducing the size of the network. Those that I know have spent much of the past 18 months frantically working out how to minimise the impact on passengers of the budget settlement. To be frank I think they’ve done a pretty good job in the circumstances, as the potential alternatives don’t bear thinking about. I don’t think anyone commenting on this thread would have done any better.
Where from? Castleford to Snaith is 35 minutes so it would be over an hour from Normanton. Surely journey times to Leeds are what really matters though and these are about the same via Selby as a through train would be.Well, it would take me an hour to get to Selby on top of that, whereas the train would be a direct half an hour or so.
Quite the opposite I'm afraid. The loss of business travel means CrossCountry are in an even weaker position financially than they were before. Anyone who has travelled on their early morning trains will see they are very lightly loaded for long distance passengers.The rise in leisure travel should hopefully see some investment in XC
A horrible era, but maybe one worth studying again to warn us of how a government controlled network might pan out
But BR were seemingly more than happy to rob Provincial to pay NSE, not just the 158s or the cutbacks you’ve mentioned above but also the cutting up of most 155s to squeeze thin resources further
This is why I’m tired of hearing just how wonderful BR apparently were because of the investment in NSE (and the fixation with some Artists Impressions of stock that they’d have introduced on NSE despite the financial realities)
Technically it isn't. It is because the taps are at their maximum flow, and can't go any further.The current malaise is because the government have turned the funding taps off.
Late 80s BR didn't have the same cost base and it was a time when passenger journeys were increasing. The decisions early 90s BR took are some of the things being tried now.But I think it is obvious that late-80s BR were able to get a lot more bang for their buck than any of the current TOC managers- nationalised LNER aside- are.
So the government say. I’m sceptical, to put it politely.Technically it isn't. It is because the taps are at their maximum flow, and can't go any further.
It has been nationalised since March 2020So the government say. I’m sceptical, to put it politely.
If the railways are burning through the money the government says it is then that’s an even more damning indictment of the privatised railway.
Technically it isn't. It is because the taps are at their maximum flow, and can't go any further.
Yes, both of those things are wrong. However, I don't think the railway would be getting any extra funding if different decisions were made regarding either.Yet they can somehow afford to freeze fuel duty and give tax breaks to pensioners…
I think you are being extremely generous to the government with this assessment. The taps are open to the level set by the government - they could be open more, but it is a political calculation not to do so.Technically it isn't. It is because the taps are at their maximum flow, and can't go any further.
Definitely.The railway is trying to cope with less money coming in and struggling.
BR didn’t have the same cost base because it didn’t have contractors and outsourcers and franchisees and ROSCOs all taking their slice of the cake. And you didn’t have TOCs all paying different rates to staff depending on how acute competition was for staff in a given region (e.g. Northern eastern wages being higher than western because Freightliner kept nicking all their drivers)Late 80s BR didn't have the same cost base and it was a time when passenger journeys were increasing.
It has been nationalised since March 2020
It is all about choices. Far more votes in fuel duty and pensioners and the NHS and whatever else is being funded than there are in railways.Yet they can somehow afford to freeze fuel duty and give tax breaks to pensioners…
Make no mistake, defunding the railway and other services is a conscious choice rather than something that can’t be avoided - of course it suits the government to push that line.
First rail declared a dividend of £65 million pounds that is absolute chicken feed for running the multi billion pounds rail business that includes;I’d agree that the DfT are micromanaging, which makes the current situation even more stupid. DfT are paying significant management fees to companies and then doing all the actual management for them. Talk about buying a dog and barking yourself.
Still, First Rail’s dividends to the parent company were nice and fat.