The two public interviews the BBC put out on the day of the announcement were really feeble.
They were from Wrexham and Chester (not Cardiff, at least, and not bothered about the Metro).
The former said more trains would be nice, the latter said some of the many closed stations should be reopened (I think he was referring to local stops between Chester and Prestatyn).
And that was all.
Ugh, what a nauseating love-in. Ludicrous lack of substance in that interview.
"What's going to happen?"
"It's going to be great"
"What's changing?"
"These companies are great"
"When will it happen?"
"It will take time"
Perhaps by "The operators said while the changes would not happen overnight Wales' railway "would be unrecognisable" in five years time" they mean you can't paint all those Pacers a different colour overnight.
It's all rather pathetic isn't it. This process has only survived to the end becuase the weak 'media' in Wales have gone along with everything that TfW, Skates and Jones have said unquestioningly, and the few articles that have been written questioning TfW's process, for example by Rhodri Clark, have been buried on obscure websites that no-one outside of the industry will read.
When Skates is best mates with Sion Barry, the business editor at Wales Online, the biggest rival news outlet to the BBC in Wales, who has more than happily swallowed all the spin and printed whatever TfW have wanted him to, there was no chance of this process being given any proper scrutiny.
If TfW had made public everything they should have at every stage of the process, I doubt the whole procurement would have survived. The type of seceretive procurement would not have survived to the end in this form in England or Scotland, where the checks and balances on government are much, much stronger.