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#1
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http://www.standard.co.uk/news/transport/transport-secretary-chris-grayling-gives-backing-to-crossrail-2-a3594416.html
The £30 billion Crossrail 2 project took a major step forwards today as Chris Grayling confirmed that he supported the scheme. The Transport Secretary said there was no doubt London needed new infrastructure in order to retain its status as the UK’s economic powerhouse. His remarks will calm nerves among London politicians and businesses that the Government had gone cool on the capital’s flagship infrastructure project. There had been fears the scheme could be derailed by competing pressures from the North after it was left out of the Tory manifesto and Queen’s Speech. Yet despite the Transport Secretary’s backing for the major north-south rail link there remain concerns about how it will be funded. Mr Grayling said: “I am a supporter of Crossrail 2 but given its price tag we have to ensure that we get this right”. He issued a joint statement with Mayor Sadiq Khan announcing plans to work together on a financial package ahead of this autumn’s Budget. Transport for London was already expecting to pay for at least half of the cost of the project - but much of it in arrears, as with Crossrail 1. However, the Department for Transport has now said it wants half of the construction costs paid for up-front. Mr Grayling added: “The Mayor and I have agreed to work together on it over the coming months to develop plans that are as strong as possible, so that the public gets an affordable scheme that is fair to the UK taxpayer.” This would be followed by a fresh public consultation on issues including the route. Crossrail 2 is embroiled in a series of disputes over the location of stations, with major local opposition to proposed stops at Chelsea and Wimbledon. Mr Khan added: “Crossrail 2 is essential for the future prosperity of London and the South East, so I’m pleased that the Transport Secretary and I have reached an agreement to take this vital project forward. “We will continue to work together to ensure the project is value for money and provides the maximum benefits for jobs and growth in the region over coming decades.” Crossrail 2 is seen as critical to London’s future rapid growth and will unlock an estimated 200,000 new homes and 200,000 jobs. Business groups welcomed the announcement. David Leam, infrastructure director of London First, said: “With this joint statement, Crossrail 2 has moved forward - from whether we do it to how we do it. “The Government’s funding ambition is a challenging one but London business will play its part in developing an affordable funding package, as we did with Crossrail 1.” The announcement follows a meeting between the two politicians last week that was described as “constructive”, marking a thaw in relations after disagreements over the devolution of suburban rail. |
#2
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On Monday, 24 July 2017 15:59:57 UTC+1, Recliner wrote:
http://www.standard.co.uk/news/transport/transport-secretary-chris-grayling-gives-backing-to-crossrail-2-a3594416.html The £30 billion Crossrail 2 project took a major step forwards today as Chris Grayling confirmed that he supported the scheme. Why has everyone fallen for this guff from Grayling? He said a few vaguely supportive words but has not given any go ahead nor committed any money. Think about where we were recently - TfL delivered the Strategic Business Case to the DfT for approval. Nothing happened. We had an election. Nothing happened. The Mayor, business leaders, London Assembly all start shouting "why haven't you given the go ahead to CR2?". Nothing happens until we get this meaningless statement which a) does not mention the business case approval at all b) does not guarantee any funding at all c) makes the next round of consultation conditional. d) sends TfL and the Mayor away to do more work on a completely different funding package. e) sends TfL and the Mayor away to "make the scheme affordable" as clearly it currently isn't affordable if your name is Grayling f) sends TfL and the Mayor away to confirm the route (i.e. cut it back) g) sends TfL and the Mayor away to remove uncertainty about the safeguarding (e.g. scrap Chelsea station, stop wittering about an eastern branch). All yesterday's nonsense does is get the pressure off the DfT for a few months, avoids the DfT making any commitments at all, gives the Mayor and TfL a funding requirement that is the complete opposite of what they submitted (they wanted to borrow and hypothecate future revenue streams). There is no mention about a Land Value Capture Tax that was rumoured to be Grayling's preference for review but the lack of government majority no doubt means this can't be taken forward as legislation would be needed. The demands from Grayling for "up front" funding from TfL is a way of trying to force the Mayor to scrap his fares freeze and implement higher than inflation fare increases to create an annual funding stream. Alternatively or even additionally it may also mean the TfL precept being increased vastly or TfL's activities being scaled back even more to generate funding for CR2.. This is payback for every time the Mayor has said "give me Southern to run", "let me run South Eastern", "government operation of trains is useless", "you have to freeze rail fares as I've done on the tube and DLR". Grayling hates all this so time to show who's boss. I know I am being very negative here but Grayling hates everything Khan stands for. However he holds the power here as CR2 cannot proceed without government funding nor can changes to NR services to implement CR2 proceed without DfT sign off. I am sure there are a thousand other issues which also need DfT / govt support. This announcement is actually an exercise in power by Grayling as I am sure Khan understands all too well. However he has no choice but to do what Grayling wants otherwise he has to give up on CR2 and then he'd be in the firing line - a result Grayling would no doubt be delighted with. -- Paul C via Google |
#3
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![]() "Paul Corfield" wrote in message ... I know I am being very negative here but Grayling hates everything Khan stands for. However he holds the power here as CR2 cannot proceed without government funding nor can changes to NR services to implement CR2 proceed without DfT sign off. I am sure there are a thousand other issues which also need DfT / govt support. This announcement is actually an exercise in power by Grayling as I am sure Khan understands all too well. However he has no choice but to do what Grayling wants otherwise he has to give up on CR2 and then he'd be in the firing line - a result Grayling would no doubt be delighted with. whatever the results of this, I doubt very much that Kahn will still be in office by the time that CR2 construction is started tim |
#4
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tim... wrote:
"Paul Corfield" wrote in message ... I know I am being very negative here but Grayling hates everything Khan stands for. However he holds the power here as CR2 cannot proceed without government funding nor can changes to NR services to implement CR2 proceed without DfT sign off. I am sure there are a thousand other issues which also need DfT / govt support. This announcement is actually an exercise in power by Grayling as I am sure Khan understands all too well. However he has no choice but to do what Grayling wants otherwise he has to give up on CR2 and then he'd be in the firing line - a result Grayling would no doubt be delighted with. whatever the results of this, I doubt very much that Kahn will still be in office by the time that CR2 construction is started Who is 'Kahn'? Whoever he is, Sadiq Khan probably hopes to be PM by the time CR2 construction might start in the mid 2020s. And Grayling's term at the DfT will be long forgotten. |
#5
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Recliner wrote:
Who is 'Kahn'? He's the guy who's ****ed off at Jim Kirk. |
#6
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In article ,
(Paul Corfield) wrote: On Monday, 24 July 2017 15:59:57 UTC+1, Recliner wrote: http://www.standard.co.uk/news/trans...hris-grayling- gives-backing-to-crossrail-2-a3594416.html The 30 billion Crossrail 2 project took a major step forwards today as Chris Grayling confirmed that he supported the scheme. Why has everyone fallen for this guff from Grayling? He said a few vaguely supportive words but has not given any go ahead nor committed any money. Think about where we were recently - TfL delivered the Strategic Business Case to the DfT for approval. Nothing happened. We had an election. Nothing happened. The Mayor, business leaders, London Assembly all start shouting "why haven't you given the go ahead to CR2?". Nothing happens until we get this meaningless statement which a) does not mention the business case approval at all b) does not guarantee any funding at all c) makes the next round of consultation conditional. d) sends TfL and the Mayor away to do more work on a completely different funding package. e) sends TfL and the Mayor away to "make the scheme affordable" as clearly it currently isn't affordable if your name is Grayling f) sends TfL and the Mayor away to confirm the route (i.e. cut it back) g) sends TfL and the Mayor away to remove uncertainty about the safeguarding (e.g. scrap Chelsea station, stop wittering about an eastern branch). All yesterday's nonsense does is get the pressure off the DfT for a few months, avoids the DfT making any commitments at all, gives the Mayor and TfL a funding requirement that is the complete opposite of what they submitted (they wanted to borrow and hypothecate future revenue streams). There is no mention about a Land Value Capture Tax that was rumoured to be Grayling's preference for review but the lack of government majority no doubt means this can't be taken forward as legislation would be needed. The demands from Grayling for "up front" funding from TfL is a way of trying to force the Mayor to scrap his fares freeze and implement higher than inflation fare increases to create an annual funding stream. Alternatively or even additionally it may also mean the TfL precept being increased vastly or TfL's activities being scaled back even more to generate funding for CR2. This is payback for every time the Mayor has said "give me Southern to run", "let me run South Eastern", "government operation of trains is useless", "you have to freeze rail fares as I've done on the tube and DLR". Grayling hates all this so time to show who's boss. I know I am being very negative here but Grayling hates everything Khan stands for. However he holds the power here as CR2 cannot proceed without government funding nor can changes to NR services to implement CR2 proceed without DfT sign off. I am sure there are a thousand other issues which also need DfT / govt support. This announcement is actually an exercise in power by Grayling as I am sure Khan understands all too well. However he has no choice but to do what Grayling wants otherwise he has to give up on CR2 and then he'd be in the firing line - a result Grayling would no doubt be delighted with. Wow! Don't hold back, Paul! Not that I can fault what you say. -- Colin Rosenstiel |
#7
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On Tue, 25 Jul 2017 08:42:06 -0700 (PDT), Paul Corfield wrote:
On Monday, 24 July 2017 15:59:57 UTC+1, Recliner wrote: http://www.standard.co.uk/news/transport/transport-secretary-chris-grayling-gives-backing-to-crossrail-2-a3594416.html The 30 billion Crossrail 2 project took a major step forwards today as Chris Grayling confirmed that he supported the scheme. Why has everyone fallen for this guff from Grayling? He said a few vaguely supportive words but has not given any go ahead nor committed any money. Think about where we were recently - TfL delivered the Strategic Business Case to the DfT for approval. Nothing happened. We had an election. Nothing happened. The Mayor, business leaders, London Assembly all start shouting "why haven't you given the go ahead to CR2?". Nothing happens until we get this meaningless statement which a) does not mention the business case approval at all b) does not guarantee any funding at all c) makes the next round of consultation conditional. d) sends TfL and the Mayor away to do more work on a completely different funding package. e) sends TfL and the Mayor away to "make the scheme affordable" as clearly it currently isn't affordable if your name is Grayling f) sends TfL and the Mayor away to confirm the route (i.e. cut it back) g) sends TfL and the Mayor away to remove uncertainty about the safeguarding (e.g. scrap Chelsea station, stop wittering about an eastern branch). All yesterday's nonsense does is get the pressure off the DfT for a few months, avoids the DfT making any commitments at all, gives the Mayor and TfL a funding requirement that is the complete opposite of what they submitted (they wanted to borrow and hypothecate future revenue streams). There is no mention about a Land Value Capture Tax that was rumoured to be Grayling's preference for review but the lack of government majority no doubt means this can't be taken forward as legislation would be needed. The demands from Grayling for "up front" funding from TfL is a way of trying to force the Mayor to scrap his fares freeze and implement higher than inflation fare increases to create an annual funding stream. Alternatively or even additionally it may also mean the TfL precept being increased vastly or TfL's activities being scaled back even more to generate funding for CR2. This is payback for every time the Mayor has said "give me Southern to run", "let me run South Eastern", "government operation of trains is useless", "you have to freeze rail fares as I've done on the tube and DLR". Grayling hates all this so time to show who's boss. I know I am being very negative here but Grayling hates everything Khan stands for. However he holds the power here as CR2 cannot proceed without government funding nor can changes to NR services to implement CR2 proceed without DfT sign off. I am sure there are a thousand other issues which also need DfT / govt support. This announcement is actually an exercise in power by Grayling as I am sure Khan understands all too well. However he has no choice but to do what Grayling wants otherwise he has to give up on CR2 and then he'd be in the firing line - a result Grayling would no doubt be delighted with. Is it true that Grayling will insist on diesel operation to avoid having to pay for electrification? |
#8
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![]() "Recliner" wrote in message ... tim... wrote: "Paul Corfield" wrote in message ... I know I am being very negative here but Grayling hates everything Khan stands for. However he holds the power here as CR2 cannot proceed without government funding nor can changes to NR services to implement CR2 proceed without DfT sign off. I am sure there are a thousand other issues which also need DfT / govt support. This announcement is actually an exercise in power by Grayling as I am sure Khan understands all too well. However he has no choice but to do what Grayling wants otherwise he has to give up on CR2 and then he'd be in the firing line - a result Grayling would no doubt be delighted with. whatever the results of this, I doubt very much that Kahn will still be in office by the time that CR2 construction is started Who is 'Kahn'? Whoever he is, Sadiq Khan probably hopes to be PM I suspect that he won't make it that far but he will have to be back on the commons in order to give it a shot tim |
#9
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I don't know if Mr. Grayling does hate everything that Mr. Khan
stands for, and he being a professional politician, I accept that his motives may not be entirely pure, public minded and honourable. However, it is not contrary to the public interest to force the Mayor to do his sums correctly, to make sure that Londoners one way or another pay for a London Tube line instead of scrounging off tax-payers elsewhere, and to insist that the scheme is finalised and quantified before work begins. We have had too many railway projects for which the costs and specifications have been changed after work has begun. Very few sensible people believe that Mr. Khan's policy of holding down fares is a rational way of financing public transport in London. |
#10
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tim... wrote:
"Recliner" wrote in message ... tim... wrote: "Paul Corfield" wrote in message ... I know I am being very negative here but Grayling hates everything Khan stands for. However he holds the power here as CR2 cannot proceed without government funding nor can changes to NR services to implement CR2 proceed without DfT sign off. I am sure there are a thousand other issues which also need DfT / govt support. This announcement is actually an exercise in power by Grayling as I am sure Khan understands all too well. However he has no choice but to do what Grayling wants otherwise he has to give up on CR2 and then he'd be in the firing line - a result Grayling would no doubt be delighted with. whatever the results of this, I doubt very much that Kahn will still be in office by the time that CR2 construction is started Who is 'Kahn'? Whoever he is, Sadiq Khan probably hopes to be PM I suspect that he won't make it that far Well, I bow to your greater knowledge on the subject. But you might want to read this long profile on him in the New Yorker: http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2017/07/31/sadiq-khan-takes-on-brexit-and-terror/amp but he will have to be back on the commons in order to give it a shot Yes, of course. I'm sure you know that both his predecessors combined their roles as MP and mayor for periods. Boris was also a best-selling author and very highly paid newspaper columnist while mayor. |
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