How do we square that circle?
It is rather off-topic, but here we go…
Well, here’s the clever bit. Accountants and right wing supporters please look away now…
We have to actually find out what people actually want. There is absolutely no point running a service if it suits almost no one. And an infrequent service, or a service that operates at unhelpful times, or for many other reasons, is always going to be unsustainable.
So we need to get the frequency correct, have a good timetable, and not have long waits at stations where many passengers may use to interchange.
Secondly, the trains have to be reliable. By reliable I mean better than 99% (and not the rubbish performance that a lot of the railway currently manages).
Trains have to be properly staffed, so that if things go wrong, the passengers/customers have some one to deal with the issue or at least able to exchange information.
Trains have to be clean and tidy, no grubby interior with rattles and bits falling off. The seats need to be comfortable. Good enough that you don’t want to get out of them.
And the ticketing prices need to be far simpler than the crazy mess we currently have.
Unless multiple miracles happen, we can’t build railway lines to every town and only have only trains. So, we also need an integrated public transport policy. Busses and coaches need to call at stations and be timed to allow passengers to interchange without excessive waiting. Just like you can buy a through ticket that can be used on mainline trains and the London Underground, the same should apply to trains and buses. Also, the same with other metro systems.
In addition, until passenger numbers pick up, we need to have special offers and promotions (heavy discounts) to attract new customers/passengers. Maybe a loyalty scheme.
I mean, with the price of petrol and diesel going up again, and the general cost of private car ownership being relatively high, plus in urban areas the road vehicle congestion, it shouldn’t be too difficult to attract more people to use public transport.
But unfortunately, at the moment, the mainland U.K. is going in the opposite (wrong) direction.
Oh, one other thing. I’ve just had a nightmare journey on the railways. The railways need to be much better at coming up with solutions to help passengers get to their destination when things go wrong. And get much better at deal with incidents so that trains can resume running as soon as possible. It is completely unacceptable to abandon passengers at an unstaffed station where there is no service (for the destination they want) for hours when normally the journey time is less than half an hour or less.
BR often managed to find solutions, but the current railway system appears unable to. Safely obviously
comes first. But, there is safe and then there is ridiculously stupid. Ideally, infrastructure and rolling stock shouldn’t get to the state where deficits get reported that take them out of service immediately. But when an incident does occur, the railways need the appropriate staff to get to site so that the problem can be resolved. As the railways reduce the staffing levels, the response time will increase, which absolutely wreaks the timetable.
The trouble is, all the above costs money… Never mind that if we get it right, in the longer term it may save money…
The way it is structured, even tinkering seems to require parliamentary time for secondary legislation so I'm not convinced - if they are going to invest the effort I think they will repeal it. Yes, relieved that the Tories introduced it I agree with.
It depends on what legislation is introduced. There have been multipurpose bills in the past. It also depends on if, and how big, a majority Labour get. If it’s repeals, it’s a lot easier than new legislation that introduces brand new laws, or extensive alterations to existing laws.