Unfortunately my post was too long for you to understand a little bit of why that might be.It's only when you take a train just about anywhere outside of the UK that you fully appreciate how much you're being ripped off in the UK
Unfortunately my post was too long for you to understand a little bit of why that might be.It's only when you take a train just about anywhere outside of the UK that you fully appreciate how much you're being ripped off in the UK
SWT made a profit last year I think.
Future profits will now be re-invested in the network instead of being siphoned off to shareholders or overseas companies.
SWT made a profit last year I think.
Future profits will now be re-invested in the network instead of being siphoned off to shareholders or overseas companies.
This and the brilliant contribution from @Shins illustrates just how short-sighted the previous government's scaling back of HS2 is.One of the biggest issues affecting the network is that it was built in a time when the population was a lot smaller, so hasn't the capacity really required in the modern era. Whoever runs it, that fact will not change that and by changing it, we won't suddenly add new routes, or increased capacity, to the network etc...
Strange. When I was working in Government departments we were introducing accrual accounting, precisely to prevent this "We've got a budget and we've got to spend it" mentality - it mucked up your budget something cruel if you persisted with this.Government run services have annual budgets, which they have to spend so it doesn't promote efficiency and finding savings as they will still have to spend that cash by years end anyway, even if on stuff that's not really required. (eg. when i worked in the public service, there was a year when a lot of computer towers were purchased to use up the budget, which were put into storage and never issued before eventually being disposed of - they weren't required and the way our services are run means that saved money isn't rolled over or even encouraged and leads to poor value contracts from suppliers who can charge a premium as they are tied into a contract to supply, and means that the public service are unable to shop around and go elsewhere which would be cheaper) That's where a lot of savings are made and where the profit / fee that the operators make comes from.
The most profitable bit is the stock leasing companies, which aren't getting nationalised, so some siphoning to shareholders and overseas companies will continue.
All came down to how empty the public purse is, and the ever increasing costs to deliver such a scheme (always the case with public projects) not helped by high inflation increasing the borrowing costs and amount of tax revenue needing to be diverted to service the national debt.This and the brilliant contribution from @Shins illustrates just how short-sighted the previous government's scaling back of HS2 is.
The problem there is that the profit margins are small and will have little impact on fairs. This is the false ideal folk have.SWT made a profit last year I think.
Future profits will now be re-invested in the network instead of being siphoned off to shareholders or overseas companies.
The problem there is that the profit margins are small and will have little impact on fairs. This is the false ideal folk have.
The rail network, despite being private, still has government subsidy. That's why, as much as I believe in public ownership, I'm not thinking that good old days that never were will return.
The only thing that will make our railways cheaper and more efficient is government investment, and they can't afford it. The network is old and frail and the original lines were never really built for passengers anyway. The problem goes back nearly 200 years.
South West Trains are not the first private operator back into Government Ownership, there are quite a few, google it and you’ll surprise yourself
Still a member of the union ?Good to see the money tree shaken again as taxpayers will no doubt be responsible for the deficits in pension funds due to the colossal wages demanded by unions for train drivers
Don't forget the billions we taxpayers have lost because Major sold off British Rail cheap, and allowed foreign private companies to soak the British public for 30 years.Good to see the money tree shaken again as taxpayers will no doubt be responsible for the deficits in pension funds due to the colossal wages demanded by unions for train drivers
It's worth your time!TL;DR sadly
An unfixable mess for all routes into London, apart from the high speed from Ashford/Ebbsfleet, which is amazing.The rail operators they are claiming this back from are the operators who won the franchise rights to run the rail on behalf of the Government for a fixed term, and had to follow rules set by the Government on how they ran and operated the services they provided.
The thought was that they would provide the levels of investment required to modernise the network (replacing slam door carriages, etc) and to be able to deliver this for less than it would cost the Government to do the same, even though the franchise operators would take some profit for running them.
Government run services have annual budgets, which they have to spend so it doesn't promote efficiency and finding savings as they will still have to spend that cash by years end anyway, even if on stuff that's not really required. (eg. when i worked in the public service, there was a year when a lot of computer towers were purchased to use up the budget, which were put into storage and never issued before eventually being disposed of - they weren't required and the way our services are run means that saved money isn't rolled over or even encouraged and leads to poor value contracts from suppliers who can charge a premium as they are tied into a contract to supply, and means that the public service are unable to shop around and go elsewhere which would be cheaper) That's where a lot of savings are made and where the profit / fee that the operators make comes from.
One of the biggest issues affecting the network is that it was built in a time when the population was a lot smaller, so hasn't the capacity really required in the modern era. Whoever runs it, that fact will not change that and by changing it, we won't suddenly add new routes, or increased capacity, to the network etc...
Water, gas, and electric to go...Well done again labour
Solid start to their reign
How old are your old days? Are you thinking of the 1980s when BR was deliberately starved of funding and subsidies because Thatcher hated public transport and social good? Even then, I used the trains constantly - and they were much more reliable than they are now. And cheaper.Certainly not great now but have I have my doubts because can remember old days. Hopefully will get round stupid system where cheapest ticket can be got by buying 2/3 tickets to one destination. Always felt managers find it easier to spend public money then private money.
Bound to be a far superior service as the drivers will have had at least one 25% pay rise in the first few years.Maybe like a few i can remember the days of British Rail and let's face it wasn't great at the best of times. So and i believe that South West Trains has become the first private operator to back into government ownership, now we travel back to Sussex around twice a month and ok it's advanced tickets all in AWC, Tube and Southern anything from £45/65 and round trip of 500 mls and under 4 hrs more often than not. If i drove i spend more time driving plus fuel costs, so from our POV it's hard to see how it can improve. As for GBR won't the management team be ex employees from the former private companies who might have some idea of what they are doing rather than a complete novice ? I am personally not convinced one way or another if the actual service will improve. Your thoughts.