Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#21
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Paul Corfield wrote on 03 June 2012 09:25:47 ...
On Sat, 2 Jun 2012 12:45:20 -0700 (PDT), wrote: From nationalrail.co.uk: Incident created 02/06/2012 19:59 Last updated20:34 - 02/06/2012 Route affected Stratford, Dalston Kingsland, Camden Road, Gospel Oak, West Hampstead, Kensal Rise, Willesden Junction, Shepherds Bush, Kensington Olympia, West Brompton, Imperial Wharf& Clapham Junction / Acton Central, South Acton, Gunnersbury, Kew Gardens& Richmond Train operator affected London Overground Description Overhead wire problems are causing disruption near Willesden Junction. Because of this, the following changes will apply until further notice: There are currently no trains between Willesden Junction and Clapham Junction There are currently no trains between Stratford and Richmond Journeys may be delayed by up to 60 minutes Passengers may use London Underground services on all reasonable routes. And it is still ongoing with trains seemingly now running via Primrose Road between Camden Rd and Willesden Junction. Trains aren't serving trains west of Kentish Town West. Whatever brought the wires down at Willesden did a good job if it can't be fixed overnight. National Rail were saying last night that they hoped to have it fixed by this morning. It sounds as if they re-opened the line but a train brought the wires down again. Latest tweet says "Repairs to overhead line will start after 9am - once we've moved the trapped train." It's even affecting GOBLIN (which was partly suspended anyway for engineering work today), presumably because they can't get the DMUs to Gospel Oak. -- Richard J. (to email me, swap 'uk' and 'yon' in address) |
#22
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() Quote:
|
#23
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Jun 3, 11:00*am, Peter Heather wrote:
On Jun 3, 9:09*am, e27002 wrote: On Jun 2, 10:39*pm, "Tim Roll-Pickering" wrote: e27002 wrote: **However, until 1996 the mailing address was CHESSINGTON, Surrey. *And, many residents think of themselves as part of Surrey. *None-the-less, they pay Council Tax to the GLA. This would be well and good if they had voted to become Londoners. They never did. *In 1974 they simply woke up within the GLC. Actually it was 1965. And I'm not sure it was that much of a surprise. Further east, Caterham and Warlingham UDC succesfully campaigned to be left out of Greater London, only to be swallowed up into the ridiculously named Tandridge District in 1974. Pity really as I would be entitled to a Freedom Pass by now and our roads would be maintained to a higher standard than the pathetic Surrey County Council manage. Not part of the 1975 Local Government re-organizations then? The new mega boroughs and districts are awful. Bognor Regis is now run from Littlehampton. Like Littlehampton gives a damn. We lost the borough of Paddington (to the City of Westminster). Nonsense, all of it. |
#24
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Jun 3, 11:00*am, Peter Heather wrote:
On Jun 3, 9:09*am, e27002 wrote: On Jun 2, 10:39*pm, "Tim Roll-Pickering" wrote: e27002 wrote: **However, until 1996 the mailing address was CHESSINGTON, Surrey. *And, many residents think of themselves as part of Surrey. *None-the-less, they pay Council Tax to the GLA. This would be well and good if they had voted to become Londoners. They never did. *In 1974 they simply woke up within the GLC. Actually it was 1965. And I'm not sure it was that much of a surprise. Further east, Caterham and Warlingham UDC succesfully campaigned to be left out of Greater London, only to be swallowed up into the ridiculously named Tandridge District in 1974. Pity really as I would be entitled to a Freedom Pass by now and our roads would be maintained to a higher standard than the pathetic Surrey County Council manage. But, you would be paying council tax at Surrey rates instead of GLA rates. |
#25
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 02/06/2012 22:15, Jarle H Knudsen wrote:
On Sat, 02 Jun 2012 20:59:38 +0100, wrote: On 02/06/2012 20:09, Paul Corfield wrote: My view is that Boris will be "rewarded" for his Mayoral election victory by government agreeing to either fund Overground improvements or devolve some franchises to TfL control or possibly both. I think there is some heavyweight lobbying going on at the moment. Which franchises, for example, Northern City Line? Doesn't the services that run on that line terminate well outside London? Welwyn Garden City is 20 miles out of Kings Cross station, whereas Amersham is 23.7 miles from Charing Cross TfL also ran services out to Aylesbury, which is almost 38 miles from Marlylebone, until 1961. Upminster is 16 miles out from Charing Cross, though I don't know how far out Watford Junction is from Euston. Don't forget that services once ran as far out as Ongar. Paris' RATP operates lines RER Lines A and B, though I don't know how far out they go from the centre of town or their respective Zero Miles. |
#26
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Jun 3, 11:36*am, "
wrote: On 02/06/2012 22:15, Jarle H Knudsen wrote: On Sat, 02 Jun 2012 20:59:38 +0100, wrote: On 02/06/2012 20:09, Paul Corfield wrote: * *My view is that Boris will be "rewarded" for his Mayoral election victory by government agreeing to either fund Overground improvements or devolve some franchises to TfL control or possibly both. I think there is some heavyweight lobbying going on at the moment. Which franchises, for example, Northern City Line? Doesn't the services that run on that line terminate well outside London? Welwyn Garden City is 20 miles out of Kings Cross station, whereas Amersham is 23.7 miles from Charing Cross TfL also ran services out to Aylesbury, which is almost 38 miles from Marlylebone, until 1961. The Metropolitan Ralway ran to Verney Junction where one could change for Bletchley and Banbury. So much for progress. Upminster is 16 miles out from Charing Cross, though I don't know how far out Watford Junction is from Euston. Don't forget that services once ran as far out as Ongar. Paris' RATP operates lines RER Lines A and B, though I don't know how far out they go from the centre of town or their respective Zero Miles. |
#27
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sun, 3 Jun 2012 03:34:41 -0700 (PDT), e27002
wrote: On Jun 3, 11:00*am, Peter Heather wrote: On Jun 3, 9:09*am, e27002 wrote: On Jun 2, 10:39*pm, "Tim Roll-Pickering" wrote: e27002 wrote: **However, until 1996 the mailing address was CHESSINGTON, Surrey. *And, many residents think of themselves as part of Surrey. *None-the-less, they pay Council Tax to the GLA. This would be well and good if they had voted to become Londoners. They never did. *In 1974 they simply woke up within the GLC. Actually it was 1965. And I'm not sure it was that much of a surprise. Further east, Caterham and Warlingham UDC succesfully campaigned to be left out of Greater London, only to be swallowed up into the ridiculously named Tandridge District in 1974. Pity really as I would be entitled to a Freedom Pass by now and our roads would be maintained to a higher standard than the pathetic Surrey County Council manage. But, you would be paying council tax at Surrey rates instead of GLA rates. Surrey council tax rates are slightly higher than Sutton: Surrey: http://www.surreyheath.gov.uk/ctbene...ciltax1213.htm Sutton: http://www.sutton.gov.uk/index.aspx?articleid=9145 |
#28
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sun, 3 Jun 2012 03:39:04 -0700 (PDT), e27002
wrote: On Jun 3, 11:36*am, " wrote: On 02/06/2012 22:15, Jarle H Knudsen wrote: On Sat, 02 Jun 2012 20:59:38 +0100, wrote: On 02/06/2012 20:09, Paul Corfield wrote: * *My view is that Boris will be "rewarded" for his Mayoral election victory by government agreeing to either fund Overground improvements or devolve some franchises to TfL control or possibly both. I think there is some heavyweight lobbying going on at the moment. Which franchises, for example, Northern City Line? Doesn't the services that run on that line terminate well outside London? Welwyn Garden City is 20 miles out of Kings Cross station, whereas Amersham is 23.7 miles from Charing Cross TfL also ran services out to Aylesbury, which is almost 38 miles from Marlylebone, until 1961. The Metropolitan Ralway ran to Verney Junction where one could change for Bletchley and Banbury. So much for progress. Of course this was when the Met was a private company with mainline ambitions, not part of the LPTB; after it became part of the LPTB, the Brill and Verney Junction lines were closed in quick succession. But it's interesting that the former LPTB did cover an area with a radius of ~30 miles from Charing Cross, so there is a precedent for train and bus services outside the GLC area being run by TfL's predecessor body. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/London_...Transport_Area |
#29
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
e27002 wrote:
You can put "Chessington", "Chessington, Surrey", "Chessington, London", "Chessington, Greater London", "Chessington, Occupied Surrey", "Chessington, Neverneverland" or "Chessington, [Whatever]" on a postal address. Royal no longer require counties to be included - they gave up in 1996 around the time of technological advancements and yet another round of local government reorganisation changing county boundaries. Understood. And it was a good thing. AFIK, the UK was the only entity still utilizing counties in mailing addresses. However, until 1996 the mailing address was CHESSINGTON, Surrey. And, many residents think of themselves as part of Surrey. None-the-less, they pay Council Tax to the GLA. This would be well and good if they had voted to become Londoners. They never did. In 1974 they simply woke up within the GLC. 1965 actually. Southwark, Putney, Wimbledon, et al, suffered the same fate in 1889. The London County Council broadly followed the Metropolitan Board of Works boundary. The metropolis had already reached that far. No liberals screaming for democracy on this one! Too late I'm afraid. There wasn't a tradition of local referendums on these things back then (or even now) but their neighbours in Epsom & Ewell kickd up enough fuss about the initial proposed boundary to get it revised for their exclusion (hence on the map Chessington looks like a penis). During the last GLA count we had hilarity when one ballot came up with a written message saying it was a disgrace the election was happening because Chislehurst voted by 95% against the Mayor & Assembly. The world does not revolve around Chislehurst. -- My blog: http://adf.ly/4hi4c |
#30
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sun, 03 Jun 2012 11:39:34 +0100, Recliner
wrote: On Sun, 3 Jun 2012 03:34:41 -0700 (PDT), e27002 wrote: On Jun 3, 11:00*am, Peter Heather wrote: On Jun 3, 9:09*am, e27002 wrote: On Jun 2, 10:39*pm, "Tim Roll-Pickering" wrote: e27002 wrote: **However, until 1996 the mailing address was CHESSINGTON, Surrey. *And, many residents think of themselves as part of Surrey. *None-the-less, they pay Council Tax to the GLA. Nobody pays council tax to the GLA, it is paid to the local burgh with the GLA and Met Police taking their cut. This would be well and good if they had voted to become Londoners. They never did. *In 1974 they simply woke up within the GLC. Actually it was 1965. And I'm not sure it was that much of a surprise. Further east, Caterham and Warlingham UDC succesfully campaigned to be left out of Greater London, only to be swallowed up into the ridiculously named Tandridge District in 1974. Pity really as I would be entitled to a Freedom Pass by now and our roads would be maintained to a higher standard than the pathetic Surrey County Council manage. But, you would be paying council tax at Surrey rates instead of GLA rates. Surrey council tax rates are slightly higher than Sutton: Surrey: http://www.surreyheath.gov.uk/ctbene...ciltax1213.htm Sutton: http://www.sutton.gov.uk/index.aspx?articleid=9145 |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
London Bridge: 'Life threatening chaos' | London Transport | |||
London Bridge cable theivery chaos | London Transport | |||
Snowflake causes chaos | London Transport | |||
Tube chaos : Government spins into action | London Transport | |||
Airport chaos - It won't change | London Transport |