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S7 Stock to Barking
On Mon, 14 Jan 2013 11:51:54 +0000
Recliner wrote: On Mon, 14 Jan 2013 11:39:11 +0000, Paul Corfield Of course it is. I thought, given your stated political leanings, that you would fully support fares increasing and revenue being maximised so subsidy is as low as possible. I don't see flat fares on the tube being helpful in terms of subsidy reduction. From memory, Boltar describes himself as right wing on social issues, but left wing on economic ones. So he probably approves of public Pretty much. transport subsidy, as long as it's targeted only at people he approves of (white adult British males) but not those he doesn't (eg, immigrants, women, gays, etc, etc). Now you're just being silly. The fact is that since other critical infrastructure in the UK is subsidised by the public purse I see no reason why the underground shouldn't be to a greater extent either. I suspect the same people who champion rail travellers paying through the nose to lessen subsidy are the same people who would baulk at the sort of PAYG road pricing thats been mooted by the government even though in principal its exactly the same thing. The road tax as it exists at the moment is to all intents and purposes a flat fare. B2003 |
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In message , at 09:53:30 on Tue, 15 Jan
2013, d remarked: The road tax as it exists at the moment is to all intents and purposes a flat fare. Most of the revenue to maintain the roads comes from fuel duty & VAT. -- Roland Perry |
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wrote:
On Mon, 14 Jan 2013 11:51:54 +0000 Recliner wrote: On Mon, 14 Jan 2013 11:39:11 +0000, Paul Corfield Of course it is. I thought, given your stated political leanings, that you would fully support fares increasing and revenue being maximised so subsidy is as low as possible. I don't see flat fares on the tube being helpful in terms of subsidy reduction. From memory, Boltar describes himself as right wing on social issues, but left wing on economic ones. So he probably approves of public Pretty much. transport subsidy, as long as it's targeted only at people he approves of (white adult British males) but not those he doesn't (eg, immigrants, women, gays, etc, etc). Now you're just being silly. The fact is that since other critical infrastructure in the UK is subsidised by the public purse I see no reason why the underground shouldn't be to a greater extent either. I suspect the same people who champion rail travellers paying through the nose to lessen subsidy are the same people who would baulk at the sort of PAYG road pricing thats been mooted by the government even though in principal its exactly the same thing. The road tax as it exists at the moment is to all intents and purposes a flat fare. Actually, we agree on this point. |
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On Tue, 15 Jan 2013 10:31:56 +0000
Roland Perry wrote: In message , at 09:53:30 on Tue, 15 Jan 2013, d remarked: The road tax as it exists at the moment is to all intents and purposes a flat fare. Most of the revenue to maintain the roads comes from fuel duty & VAT. Well it all comes from the treasury pot so its rather academic how much is raised by which tax since none of them are specifically reserved to be spent on the roads. But you still have to tax an insure your car if its on a public road even if you pushed it yourself. B2003 |
Quote:
to reduce the subsidy from the tax payer and to release funds for improvements to the infrastructure. It's about the only thing Boris Johnson has got right in my opinion. |
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Roland Perry wrote:
Yet these increases in dwell time would probably not be as great as the increase when driver only operation[1] replaced rear platform buses with a conductor. [1] Especially where you have to pay the driver and receive change. Probably not as great but still a factor that needs to be considered - especially at peak times where buses can be full or already have long dwell times in Central / Inner London. Out in the provinces the existence of "all day" tickets (typically around £4) means people only have to pay once, and combine that with an "exact change only" policy and it's quicker overall than having people fumbling in their purses to find their bus pass. Providing of course later buses are signed up to the all day tickets. Many a traveller has tales of being caught in a suburb or satellite village and finding the only buses that turn up at that time won't accept the already purchased ticket. And this information isn't always easy to find online. -- My blog: http://adf.ly/4hi4c |
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On Jan 14, 10:15*pm, "
wrote: On 14/01/2013 20:21, Roland Perry wrote: In message , at 20:08:44 on Mon, 14 Jan 2013, " remarked: The last time I was in Amsterdam, about 7 years ago, the newer trams had conductors who sat in a booth and would stamp your strippenkaart as you boarded. Are they no longer there? The strippenkaarts are long gone. I was referring to the conductors, actually. Are they also gone? They were still there when I last visited Amsterdam, in May 2012. Robin |
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On 15/01/2013 10:31, Roland Perry wrote:
In message , at 09:53:30 on Tue, 15 Jan 2013, d remarked: The road tax as it exists at the moment is to all intents and purposes a flat fare. Most of the revenue to maintain the roads comes from fuel duty & VAT. The revenue to maintain the roads comes from general taxation. All UK taxes go into one pot and are distributed from there. -- Phil Cook |
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In message , at 11:38:26 on Tue, 15
Jan 2013, Tim Roll-Pickering remarked: Out in the provinces the existence of "all day" tickets (typically around £4) means people only have to pay once, and combine that with an "exact change only" policy and it's quicker overall than having people fumbling in their purses to find their bus pass. Providing of course later buses are signed up to the all day tickets. Many a traveller has tales of being caught in a suburb or satellite village and finding the only buses that turn up at that time won't accept the already purchased ticket. All-day tickets that are interavailable between operators are generally harder to find and more expensive. I've never found that people *expect* an all-day ticket to intervailable, so checking that the suburb you are travelling back from has buses from the right company, at the time you need them, is an inevitable (but trivially easy) part of the exercise. And this information isn't always easy to find online. For Nottingham, where I lived and there were several all-day tickets available, such information is very easy to find online. -- Roland Perry |
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