Minilad
Established Member
But if Branston takes over we will finally get these steerable trains we so desperately deserve.
If Branston takes over we really will be in a pickle
But if Branston takes over we will finally get these steerable trains we so desperately deserve.
Yes; British Rail was one of the most efficient railways in the world. Given the level of public funding the privatised railway gets today, it could have been one of the best as well.
Indeed. This has always been my view. However, it's difficult to see how a Virgin trains, as it stands (i.e. purely Intercity) could support the break up of NR into what would inevitably be regional structures. Surely this would lead to vertical integration, which would lead to Virgin becoming custodians of local trains and commuter stoppers!
Why is it that people in this country always say companies are getting too "big"?
Privatisation smashed up the best and most successful railway organisation we have had in this country since Grouping in 1923 -- an organisation that was really beginning to deliver a better system as well as a more efficient one, with great benefits for the passengers. It was seen by many of the operators on the European mainland as a leader to be followed, which was certainly not true of Britian's railways for many decades before. Privatisation did not have to take such a destructive (and expensive) form. That was a political decision.
What is to be done? Railtrack and Network Rail both appear to have been disasters. Maintenance by TOCs on the principal main lines doesn't really seem a readily practicable proposition. Is there really any alternative to one or more track-owner-and-management companies, but if that is the road we are stuck with, how is it (are they) to be controlled so as to avoid a repeat of the fiascos we have grown to know and love over the last twenty years?
If the things that were within the control of VT were perfect, I might be willing to believe that they'd maintain track and signaling properly. But do they have every station shiny and clean and looking smart? Are all of their staff friendly, approachable and relentlessly customer-focussed? Is their First Class service ambitious and delivers consistently? Do they offer good value travel at short notice? Do they manage yield effectively to reduce overcrowding, and expand capacity in every way they can? Do their trains have a comfortable, modern interior that's OK for 4 hour journeys even in Standard, with the features everyone wants: free wifi and sockets?
Just like most train companies, these are all areas that need work. Some more than other TOCs out there. So don't try and blame Network Rail, and don't tell me you value your reputation until we see some effort to get some of these things improving.
Agreed..
I worked for BR between 1966-1994......
It was privatisation that is a failure. I joined Railtrack and they lasted less than 10 years..
Do they? I've not noticed it. But if they do then they're being unusually perspicacious.
I've worked for companies big and small and my observation is that once they get beyond a certain size they don't work very well. I liken them to the extra large dinosaurs, who needed a second (pea-)brain their tail because it was so far away from the main one. Basically they get too big (for one group of people) to control. Those at the centre have little idea what goes on away from the centre. What they think is happening is not usually what is actually happening on the ground.
There are multitudes of examples of this in practise, an obvious one being everybody's favourite whipping boys - the banks.
God forbid that I should actually know something about the company I work for...It IS already far more fragmented than you guys realise. Just because it's all called Network Rail, doesn't mean everyone in NR is pulling in the same direction.
Please, no more divisions and fragmentation! The railways are already fragmented enough, so leave it as it is at the very least but please no more!
It is 10% of East Coast, and 55% (or is it 51%?) of West Coast. Either way, even if you combined the two, he doesn't even own a whole company, and his main contribution to those is a brand and marketing unless someone can correct me! I am hence amazed (and thinkit's disgusting) that Mr Branson has or thinks he has so much control over the railways!
Of course he does. But this is too obvious an opportunity for a good old UK Rail Forums Branson bash. A great chance for people to make the pickle joke for the 400th time, and the silly Beardy jibes for the 4000th. And fling in the obligatory rants about Pendolinos and Voyagers, despite their being of no rele vance to the thread topic.He probably doesn't think that at all but he is allowed to voice his opinion on the railways just as much as you and others do on here and he has a vested interest in it too.
Of course he does. But this is too obvious an opportunity for a good old UK Rail Forums Branson bash. A great chance for people to make the pickle joke for the 400th time, and the silly Beardy jibes for the 4000th. And fling in the obligatory rants about Pendolinos and Voyagers, despite their being of no rele vance to the thread topic.
The root cause of the problem was that the privatisation model was misguided. "Managed Decline" being the idea. The point being that the government didn't want to have to cope with a slowly collapsing railway while the economy was doing poorly (as whoever the beancounters were at the time would have them believe).
Unfortunately, the railway had other ideas, with unprecedented(-ish)*** passenger growth putting a greater strain on the network than ever before.
The problem was it was too late. The horribly complex system, which would have done a good job of managing the decline of the railways, was already in place. At this point the best that can be done is to make the best of a bad situation. I can't imagine that re-nationalising the railways could be done soon in any way that wouldn't screw over either passengers or the taxpayer any time soon.
I think that in any private model, infrastructure should be kept separate from the operators, but with better communication/integration. I would dread to want to return to the days of the Nottingham blockade, where a Midland locomotive was blockaded by a Central one at Nottingham Victoria
With regards to a collapsing railway, it's hard to see why the Government of the day assumed such a thing as the railway hadn't been in anything like a decline since the early 1980's. Passenger growth had been known to regularly pick up with every economic recovery.
In any case, there was a general belief at the time that rail had had it's [sic] day.
Evidence for this, please?
My memory. Evidence otherwise?
They hadn't been in significant decline it's true, but they hadn't been growing either; just a periodic rise and fall following a long period of decline. In any case, there was a general belief at the time that rail had had it's day.
Especially as Inter-City and Network South-East were actually in profit before privatisation.However widespread the general belief was, no one looking at the evidence objectively could have concluded that the railway was in a state of long term decline by the early 90's.
Of course he does. But this is too obvious an opportunity for a good old UK Rail Forums Branson bash. A great chance for people to make the pickle joke for the 400th time, and the silly Beardy jibes for the 4000th. And fling in the obligatory rants about Pendolinos and Voyagers, despite their being of no rele vance to the thread topic.
Of course he does. But this is too obvious an opportunity for a good old UK Rail Forums Branson bash. A great chance for people to make the pickle joke for the 400th time, and the silly Beardy jibes for the 4000th. And fling in the obligatory rants about Pendolinos and Voyagers, despite their being of no rele vance to the thread topic.
I'll refer to these again: http://www.railway-technical.com/statistics.shtml and https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rail_...#/media/File:GBR_rail_passenegers_by_year.gif.
I'll remind you that the recession was officially 1990 Q3 to 1991 Q3.
You can tell me where this BR growth is, because I can't see it.
They didn't grow route mileage either: https://www.gov.uk/government/uploa.../file/73093/rail-trends-factsheet-2010-11.pdf.
If you look at the rail passengers by year, you'll see that the trough in about 1987 was less deep than the one in 1983. The trough in about 1993 was in turn considerably less deep than the 1987 one.
Similarly, the 1989 peak in passenger numbers was much higher than that in around 1985. That is an upward trend.
Can the various TOCs be trusted to ensure maintenance is actually done even if it is to the detriment of their own train services?
Regardless of the fact that it's Beardy (who I trust no more than any of you), it has to be said that what he's saying here is essentially correct. When any entity gets too large then it tends to get out of control. It's the main reason why public ownership doesn't work; why banks are too big to fail; why Network is doomed to Fail.
These companies get too big, such that the right hand doesn't know what the left hand is doing. Any operation has to split into reasonable size pieces in order to work.
This is why the "Alliance" principle was a good idea in theory. Why hasn't it worked? The usual reasons - those who can't trying to protect their fiefdoms from those that can.
And your proof of this assertion is? (A rhetorical question, because I know that you don't have any).
On the WCML (south) Virgin could manage the Fast Lines; LM could manage the Slow Lines.
That should work.
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My memory. Evidence otherwise?
Sir George Young said:I anticipate the level of subsidy will be about the same. It’ll then fall, because we’re getting better value for money from the people who bid for the franchises than we got from British Rail, so the taxpayer will eventually save money, not lose money.
LOL. All you're describing is the different effect of different recessions. 1989 was about the same as 1970 and 1995 had dropped back to 1980 levels and below 1974. It was going nowhere. You can only make a trend by picking the right start and end years, and anyone who knows anything about trends knows that's flawed thinking.
I think SRB has done and achieved many great things and is no idiot in business, which is precisely why I'm amazed people can't see when he's doing something for good PR. His whole life has been around good PR.
I've had many dealings with Virgin Mobile and later Virgin Media and even used to work for Virgin for a year or two in the early 1990s. I've also had the pleasure of meeting him and he's someone who could teach anyone lots of things.
But remember how he got to where he is. It wasn't from being all extra nice and sweet all the time!