squizzler
Established Member
I hope this means the campaign to reopen the railway has focused minds on improving the bus service and that the Welsh Government will now be arranging funding for improvements.
That may be true of many of the pepole promoting the idea but I wouldn't necessarily go along with that being 'the only reason'. My personal opinion is that the TrawsCymru bus network has underdelivered; if I recall correctly when the rebranding was officially announced the two launch routes (TC1 and TC4) were to have brand new buses with improved legroom, coach-style seats and the TC1 was to run from 6am to 8pm. In the event the TC1 didn't happen due to Arriva blocking the Welsh Government's plans and the new buses were stored until finding a use on the Cardiff Airport Express (T9). Thus when the T1 finally arrived normal buses were used and the first bus from Aberystwyth remains at 06:40; reaching Carmarthen at 08:57 (too late for commuters, although there is an earlier bus from Lampeter), the last bus from Carmarthen is 19:05 and the 19:45 from Aberystwyth (last bus for Carmarthen) is a T5 to Cardigan; change at Aberaeron for the T1 to Carmarthen. (Times are from the 2015 timetable, but I don't think it has changed much).
Even the T(C)4, which did get the promissed new buses, isn't particularly great; when I sampled them on the T9 I didn't find the coach-style seats to be any more comfortable than the normal seats on most buses. Also, the 'improved legroom' was limited to a few seats (and even those actually had less legroom than the two 55-plate buses ordered for the TrawsCambria X50 service several years before).
If pepole consider the current public transport offering to be poor it is no wonder that there are demands for improvements; in my opinion it is just a shame that TrawsLinkCymru went straight for a Carmarthen-Aberystwyth rail link as phase 1 of their scheme. I think they should have focused on new/improved Bangor-Caernarfon and Carmarthen-Cardiff rail services with the section in between getting enhanced bus services (and safeguarded rail routes just in case). Maybe throw in an extra passing loop or two on the Cambrian Coast Line to enable a fast Machynlleth-Porthmadog service in (some of) the opposite hours to the current stoppers.
I wouldn't go as far as "absolutely no potential" either, but I object to such sums of money being spent just to decide whether to take a specific scheme forward; especially if it is fairly obvious you don't have the budget to built it anyway. If you are paying a consultant £300,000 it would have been better to set an objective in terms of either reduced car use or reduced greenhouse gas emmisions. The consultant's role would then be to examine various options including bus and different rail routes to establish which offers the best cost:benift ratio (where the benifit is reduced emmisions/car-mileage).
Mwnt isn't on a bus route that you could connect to from a Carmarthen-Aberystwyth train either; if I recall correctly it has two buses each way daily between Quay West and Cardigan in summer and the same timetable (but only 2 or 3 days per week) in winter.
Thank you for what is a more thoughtful post than many we have seen on this thread so far. I would disagree with the premise that many of the benefits can be met by bus improvements. Whilst better value on paper and perfectly acceptable to those in the know, restoring the credibility of bus transport will be a multi-generational project akin with that of restoring the credibility of train travel in the public mind (shall we say that started with the intercity era?).
My opinion is that the economy of west wales will, for as long as the current economic structure of the UK endures, always be heavily dependent on subsidy. I know it well - it is a beautiful area but cut off from markets by the poor transport links. If we accept that the economy will require many millions a year in state investment, how do we go about that? Do you want to be forever dependent on handing out grants for farm maintenance / diversification, or for tourism, or do you invest in the infrastructure that primes the pump for further privately funded development. In fact the railway itself could also be privately funded on a design/build/operate contract (not the same as it being viable in farebox receipts, before anybody says). I say that all other things being equal the latter option is better, because at least you got a useful piece of infrastructure at the end of it.
Besides, whatever the current leader of the Welsh Government might say, the construction of this railway is a longer term project than the currently residing welsh government, which is likely to change in the next election.
I am too young to remember the original railway line between Aberystwyth and Caermarthen. The only change I see people having difficulty accepting on this thread is the change in thinking from the Beeching era - when the railways were expected to be viable in narrow fare-box revenue terms - to being an important part of the infrastructure which supports economic and social activity in an ecologically less damaging way.Some people have a very hard time accepting change and accepting that the world will move further and further away from what it was (or what they remember it was) like during their favourite part of their lives. Someone once told me change happens one funeral at a time... Its harsh but there is a lot of truth in it. Reopening the line would clearly be a colossal waste of money and the lack of interest in more sensible options such as enhanced coach services and joint ticketing betrays the motivation for wanting to reopen the line.