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#11
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In message , at 20:00:00 on
Mon, 6 Feb 2012, Paul Corfield remarked: The Mayor has launched a proposal for further rail services to come under TfL control. http://www.london.gov.uk/mayor%E2%80...-services-lon\ don The proposal centres on taking over the local "West Anglia" routes out of Liverpool Street Only those to Chingford, Enfield and Hertford East. I did say "local" routes - I don't think anyone can reasonably say Cambridge or Stansted are local to London. I didn't catch on to the emphasis on *local* WA routes. The report says that the outer limit of stations aligns with the Mayor's wider boundary. Roughly inside the M25 I suppose. I was looking forward to Cambridge being in Zone 6 (with bargain fares as a result), but this seems unlikely. I guess you can dream but I can't imagine the good burghers of Cambridge would want a London Mayor controlling their train services. If it meant getting to London on a Z6 travelcard, I don't think they'd complain. -- Roland Perry |
#12
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On Feb 6, 3:00*pm, Paul Corfield wrote:
The report says that the outer limit of stations aligns with the Mayor's wider boundary. has TfL or the GLA ever produced a map showing what that boundary is? I did a quick Google but couldn't find anything. -- Roy |
#13
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If it meant getting to London on a Z6 travelcard, I don't think they'd
complain. Yerrbut it'd also mean London's tea-leafs 'n feral youfs getting to Cambridge on an Oyster (possibly the one they've just robbed off a visiting Cantabrigian.......) -- Robin reply to address is (meant to be) valid |
#14
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![]() On Feb 6, 8:36*pm, Roy Stilling wrote: On Feb 6, 3:00*pm, Paul Corfield wrote: The report says that the outer limit of stations aligns with the Mayor's wider boundary. has TfL or the GLA ever produced a map showing what that boundary is? I did a quick Google but couldn't find anything. It's the Greater London boundary, which has existed since 1965 (with a few minor amendments since then). This TfL Streets master map shows an overview of Greater London and its boundary: http://www.tfl.gov.uk/assets/downloa...Map_Master.pdf There's some outline mapping available in the wikipedia entry for Greater London: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greater_London Decent street maps such as the A-Z or the Collins Bartholomew mapping used by streetmap.co.uk show administrative boundaries. http://www.streetmap.co.uk/ OS's useful Election Maps site also shows administrative boundaries: http://www.election-maps.co.uk/ |
#15
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![]() On Feb 6, 8:35*pm, Roland Perry wrote: In message , at 20:00:00 on Mon, 6 Feb 2012, Paul Corfield remarked: The Mayor has launched a proposal for further rail services to come under TfL control. http://www.london.gov.uk/mayor%E2%80...ervices-london The proposal centres on taking over the local "West Anglia" routes out of Liverpool Street Only those to Chingford, Enfield and Hertford East. I did say "local" routes - I don't think anyone can reasonably say Cambridge or Stansted are local to London. I didn't catch on to the emphasis on *local* WA routes. The report says that the outer limit of stations aligns with the Mayor's wider boundary. Roughly inside the M25 I suppose. Greater London - I think Paul's phrase "the Mayor's wider boundary" is potentially confusing - the GLA/Mayor have one boundary, and it's the GL boundary. Of course arrangements can be made for TfL provided services to run beyond the GL boundary - there's the Met line, and in recent times London Overground beyond Hatch End up to Watford - sensible arrangements could be made elsewhere. |
#16
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In article , Robin wrote:
If it meant getting to London on a Z6 travelcard, I don't think they'd complain. Yerrbut it'd also mean London's tea-leafs 'n feral youfs getting to Cambridge on an Oyster (possibly the one they've just robbed off a visiting Cantabrigian.......) Lahdahn LOOT .... Nick -- "The Internet, a sort of ersatz counterfeit of real life" -- Janet Street-Porter, BBC2, 19th March 1996 |
#18
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On Feb 6, 8:13*pm, Ganesh Sittampalam
wrote: On Feb 6, 5:22*pm, Neil *Williams wrote: It is absolutely nonsensical that you are penalised for a journey that requires two buses, and you are penalised for changing from Tube/train to bus. Isn't it cheaper for the operator if your journey has one leg rather than two? There's overhead from getting on/off - people getting on buses, interchange capacity at stations, etc. It seems like a good thing to me to encourage people at the margins to not change - though the current fares structure isn't right for that either since it does allow unlimited tube changes for free; and the "penalty" for changing in the circumstances you describe is probably too high. Ganesh Interchange is a necessity to counter the practical inability to serve all possible journeys whilst exploiting the high carrying capacity of trains on core routes. Outer bus journeys transfer to tube or bus for a faster & more reliable trunk leg to popular city destinations. Inner bus distribution takes people from rail station to wider range of possible destinations. The whole journey may not be possible in one leg, or on bus mode alone. People 'endure' transfer because it gives them overall journey time, reliability or comfort benefits, but it brings it's own anxieties (will i catch the next connection?). I think transfer penalties should be minimal if any, although I agree there are areas where it needs to be managed to avoid overcrowding. -- Mark |
#19
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On Feb 6, 8:13*pm, Ganesh Sittampalam
wrote: On Feb 6, 5:22*pm, Neil *Williams wrote: It is absolutely nonsensical that you are penalised for a journey that requires two buses, and you are penalised for changing from Tube/train to bus. Isn't it cheaper for the operator if your journey has one leg rather than two? There's overhead from getting on/off - people getting on buses, interchange capacity at stations, etc. It seems like a good thing to me to encourage people at the margins to not change - though the current fares structure isn't right for that either since it does allow unlimited tube changes for free; and the "penalty" for changing in the circumstances you describe is probably too high. Ganesh Interchange is a necessity to counter the practical inability to serve all possible journeys directly whilst exploiting the high carrying capacity of trains on core routes. Outer bus journeys transfer to tube or rail for a faster & more reliable trunk leg to popular destinations. Inner bus distribution takes people from rail station to wider range of possible city destinations than is practical to walk to. The whole journey may not be possible in one leg, or on bus mode alone. People 'endure' transfer when it gives them overall journey time, reliability or comfort benefits, but it brings it's own anxieties (will i catch the next connection?). I think transfer penalties should generally be minimal (if any), although I agree there are areas where it needs to be managed to reduce overcrowding on trains where there are realistic alternatives. -- Mark |
#20
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On 06/02/2012 17:22, Neil Williams wrote:
On Feb 6, 5:10 pm, wrote: If good for London, why not every other major city in the UK? Surely, we already have such tickets. In London, they have the Railcard and that even covers the Croydon Tramlink. In Birmingham, they have something similar so do all the other PTEs. What’s being proposed here that’s any different? Single tickets as well, presumably. It is absolutely nonsensical that you are penalised for a journey that requires two buses, and you are penalised for changing from Tube/train to bus. I'm not sure that having a third TOC which runs trains into both Liverpool Street and Marylebone (or whatever) would be necessary for getting through bus tickets. Getting NS to accept passengers kicked off DB buses which stop short would be a good start. There should be one zonal fares system for the entire network for single fares, completely irrespective of what mode(s) of transport is/ are used. The one exception is that I'd allow for a "bus only" variant to avoid Tube crowding in central London - but even then changes should not be penalised. Being able to change buses would be nice. But who cares about the bus passengers who actually /pay/? Chances are they aren't the Poorest + Most Vulnerable Members of Society. -- Arthur Figgis Surrey, UK |
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