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#131
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On Tue, 18 Jan 2005 13:41:58 +0000, Michael Bell
wrote: There is a great deal of favouratism for London and holding the North back. London has unitary control of its local transport. Provincial cities are not allowed to. Wow! I'm sure that'll come as a surprise to, say, the West Yorkshire Passenger Transport Executive. In many respects, like a mini London Transport, only without an Underground network, obviously. -- Nick Cooper [Carefully remove the detonators from my e-mail address to reply!] The London Underground at War: http://www.cwgcuser.org.uk/personal/...ra/lu/tuaw.htm 625-Online - classic British television: http://www.625.org.uk 'Things to Come' - An Incomplete Classic: http://www.thingstocome.org.uk |
#133
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#134
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In article , Arthur Figgis
URL:mailto ![]() On Fri, 21 Jan 2005 02:21:17 +1030, (Aidan Stanger) wrote: Michael Bell wrote: Humberside has failed, but it was conceived at a time when the population of this country was foreseen as 90 million by 2000. Now our problem is falling population - and London wants to grab as much of it as possible. (Birth rate dropped to 1.7children/woman in the early 70s, Yet they still built the Humber bridge! Election bribe. People still aren't entirely sure they wanted it, though! "Humbers*de" failed as a concept not because of birth rates, but because the overwhelming majority of residents had zero loyalty to or identification with it. Yorkshiremen and Yellowbellies were happy where they had been for the previous millennium or so, and didn't feel the need for any southern politicians to b*gger about with their identities. :-) As an administrative area it was a totally artificial lumping together of two unrelated areas which each had strong loyalties elsewhere. Even with the bridge there is little communication between the sides of the estuary. Similarly, there might be a business or political case for running eastern Kent from Pas de Calais, or for administering the City of London from Frankfurt, but it's probably not what the people there want either! It certainly is true that the Yorkshire/Lincolnshire created difficulties for Humberside, but if we had to house another 40 million by 2000 (5 years ago!) those difficulties would have been overcome! Michael Bell -- |
#135
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On Sun, 23 Jan 2005 17:32:18 +0000, Michael Bell
wrote: It certainly is true that the Yorkshire/Lincolnshire created difficulties for Humberside, Like, no-one wanted the thing? but if we had to house another 40 million by 2000 (5 years ago!) those difficulties would have been overcome! What difference did it make to housing? The existence of the local authority doesn't affect the amount of land available. Even after the demise of the unloved council it was still mostly the same councillors running things. I suppose the Powers That Were could have swamped the locals' hostility to Humberside with indifference, by shipping in vast numbers of people from well outside the Yorks/Lincs area who would probably be less bothered about it, but I'm not sure what that would really achieve! -- Arthur Figgis Surrey, UK |
#136
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In article , Arthur Figgis
URL:mailto ![]() On Sun, 23 Jan 2005 17:32:18 +0000, Michael Bell wrote: It certainly is true that the Yorkshire/Lincolnshire created difficulties for Humberside, Like, no-one wanted the thing? but if we had to house another 40 million by 2000 (5 years ago!) those difficulties would have been overcome! What difference did it make to housing? The existence of the local authority doesn't affect the amount of land available. Even after the demise of the unloved council it was still mostly the same councillors running things. I suppose the Powers That Were could have swamped the locals' hostility to Humberside with indifference, by shipping in vast numbers of people from well outside the Yorks/Lincs area who would probably be less bothered about it, but I'm not sure what that would really achieve! Certainly very few wanted it. But if living space for 40 Million people has to be created, it would be a huge expansion of existing towns and the government would have to make decisions where they should live. Humberside really is a very empty area. But the need never arose! Michael Bell -- |
#137
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On Sun, 23 Jan 2005 23:28:58 +0000, Michael Bell
wrote: Certainly very few wanted it. But if living space for 40 Million people has to be created, it would be a huge expansion of existing towns and the government would have to make decisions where they should live. Humberside really is a very empty area. But the need never arose! Humberside /was/ ~. It was done away with in the 1990s. The area still is pretty empty, of course. I don't see how more people could live in the area when it was known as Humberside than could live in the same places when they were, and now they are again, recognised as parts of Yorkshire and Lincolnshire. If for some reason the government had wanted to put millions of people into the area it wouldn't have needed to change the local government to do it, instead it would have needed to get lots of houses built for those people to live in. Maybe they could have devised a plan to build a whole new town somewhere, but it wouldn't have made someone in Bridlington feel closer to Immingham than to Yorkshire, even if the same council emptied the dustbins at the other side of the Humber Bridge. "...can you imagine Len Hutton walking out to bat for Humberside?", John Major, 1992 -- Arthur Figgis Surrey, UK |
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