EM2
Established Member
Surely that's a concession, rather than a franchise?Merseyrail? (A 25-year franchise.)
http://www.railhub2.co.uk/rh4/business/briefs/RHB_franchise.php
Surely that's a concession, rather than a franchise?Merseyrail? (A 25-year franchise.)
Yeah never thought about it that way. It makes it much more rewarding to hvae local and long distance services connect into each other.
Well before this all kicked off it seemed that the DfT might have been thinking the same thing. There were parts of the East Coast consultation that suggested it would become a multi-role franchise absorbing some elements of FCC, Northern and EMT. However, with this fresh chaos heaven alone knows what they now think (assuming they were every seriously considering it in the first place).
Don't think many here would either. We are suggesting local services in the north east around hull, york, darlington, middlsborough and newcastle.I personally wouldn't want any of FCC being absorbed into EC.. Can't see any point in doing so at all.
But what they are saying is that Virgin Rail in its current form would effectively cease to exist during the bid period. That wouldn't stop them from bidding to take over as a new company 18-24 months later but would increase their costs as they would have to establish the new company, not simply use their existing structure. That cost could be the difference between winning and losing.I felt it was a bit off too - Virgin bid for and won Cross Country and West Coast in the 90s without any existing presence; and there's a precedent for two groups placing joint bids with no existing co-presence (TransPennine Express) if he's referring to the Virgin Trains partnership.
I personally wouldn't want any of FCC being absorbed into EC.. Can't see any point in doing so at all. The routes all integrate fairly well with the future TL routes, so why split them?
The DfT though were additionally suggesting the Moorgate services and the fast Great Northern services for possible inclusion in the ECML franchise.Don't think many here would either. We are suggesting local services in the north east around hull, york, darlington, middlsborough and newcastle.
That doesn't solve the problem of judging the bids, and stepping in is not the solution of choice.I'd have thought you'd have a 15 year franchise that is carefully watched throughout - either every year or every 3-4 years.
Well before this all kicked off it seemed that the DfT might have been thinking the same thing. There were parts of the East Coast consultation that suggested it would become a multi-role franchise absorbing some elements of FCC, Northern and EMT. However, with this fresh chaos heaven alone knows what they now think (assuming they were every seriously considering it in the first place).
I imagine with the local services in the north east it would be particularly good. Would love to see it personally, i think FGW has turned into a success. Take the local commute services out of paddington out of that and they have some of best satisfaction in country.
Could do some with east and west coast. West coast more difficult due to the large commuter networks of liverpool, manchester glasgow and birmingham. Something that isn't as replicated on East Coast and GW.
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Don't think many here would either. We are suggesting local services in the north east around hull, york, darlington, middlsborough and newcastle.
But what they are saying is that Virgin Rail in its current form would effectively cease to exist during the bid period. That wouldn't stop them from bidding to take over as a new company 18-24 months later but would increase their costs as they would have to establish the new company, not simply use their existing structure. That cost could be the difference between winning and losing.
Yes, but last I heard that had found no takers.The DfT though were additionally suggesting the Moorgate services and the fast Great Northern services for possible inclusion in the ECML franchise.
But what they are saying is that Virgin Rail in its current form would effectively cease to exist during the bid period. That wouldn't stop them from bidding to take over as a new company 18-24 months later but would increase their costs as they would have to establish the new company, not simply use their existing structure. That cost could be the difference between winning and losing.
Give the London - Birmingham - Wolverhampton part of Virgin to LM
Better than that (but still not optimal) would be:For me the best answer would be:
5) Franchises include local and longer distance services.
I disagree. When organisations get very large they start to get inefficient. Government, Banks, etc. are great examples of this.Better than that (but still not optimal) would be:
One franchise for the entire rail network.
Better than that (but still not optimal) would be:
One franchise for the entire rail network.
Yes, the same people who brought you the West Coast fiasco should be running the whole shebang. Illogical.That's only acceptable if that one franchise is operated by the government.
If we did that we wouldn't have the cheap "VT only" and "LM only" fares...with the result of less people travelling. A more cost effective railway but with less passengers fits with your agenda perfectly doesn't it?
That's complete rubbish. BRB was not the same as the MoT, just as DOR is not the same as the DfT, and a future national operator needn't be a part of whatever the department choose to call themselves then either.Yes, the same people who brought you the West Coast fiasco should be running the whole shebang. Illogical.
DOR did a fine with Southeastern, they've done a fine job with East Coast... I think as far as models for nationalising franchise by franchise go, they're pretty good.
Except they were single Franchises run by a Team much like a TOC (and the Directors running them have largely come from or gone to TOCs).South Eastern Trains wasn't owned by DOR (which didn't exist until 2009), it was owned by the SRA. But your point still stands.
And so an entity couldn't be created? Flawed rationale for perpetuating a bent and broken system.Except they were single Franchises run by a Team much like a TOC (and the Directors running them have largely come from or gone to TOCs).
That's not the same as one entity taking over the whole railway. The only entities to do that currently are DfT and NR.
Such an entity could be created for the cost of roughly £20 neccesary to file papers with Companies House to that effect.... although I suppose the state probably has an exemption from the cost.
An entity maybe but an actual organisation that could actually do the job I suspect would have a slightly higher start up cost...
Interesting article in the standard last night
http://www.standard.co.uk/business/...king-down-the-real-rail-culprits-8203849.html
It raises valid points but still seems rather political.
The Standard? Political? Never :roll:
[I almost wrote "the Daily Mail group", but apparently the Daily Mail is now only a minority owner of the Standard.]
It won't work. TOC HQs are smaller than they were under BR, and smaller still when you compare the far greater number of passengers they now carry. Take any comparable government or quasi-government body and you will find the backoffice staff are roughly double (in terms of ratio to frontline staff). Hell, in hospitals the backoffice outnumbers the Doctors and Nurses.You start with the existing structure and then start pruning to find efficiencies.