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#11
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On Fri, May 16, 2008 at 05:40:02PM +0100, Tom Anderson wrote:
On Fri, 16 May 2008, David Cantrell wrote: On Thu, May 15, 2008 at 07:18:06PM +0000, Neil Williams wrote: While that seems like a rant, taxis stopping in bus lanes are a *real* problem. They're nothing like as much of a problem as delivery vans and lorries parking in them. At least the cab will move off again very shortly, but the lorry might be there for an hour or more. Yes, it'll get a ticket. The driver doesn't care because his employer accepts that as just a cost of doing business and just pays out. The employer doesn't care because his customers are happy to eat the cost. Good, if depressing, point. So, we start issuing points for parking violations by commercial vehicle drivers, then? Or have a sliding scale that makes a single violation, like what normal people might do occasionally, annoyingly expensive but tolerable, but for repeated violations (either on seperate days, or by seperate vehicles with the same owner) something that'll make the delivery companies' customers say "no thanks, you can deliver at 2am instead when you won't **** the buses up". I think it's time London got a Singapore-style "taxi stop" system in place on Red Routes and anywhere else with bus lanes. The whole point of a taxi is that you can pick one up anywhere without having to find a bus stop. Which is great, as long as it doesn't interfere with the huge numbers of people who could be bothered to find a bus stop getting where they want to go. Which is why bus lanes were mentioned. But taxis are nowhere near being the top cause of bus delays anyway. -- David Cantrell | Official London Perl Mongers Bad Influence Immigration: making Britain great since AD43 |
#12
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On Sat, May 17, 2008 at 12:39:00PM +0100, Colin Rosenstiel wrote:
In article , (David Cantrell) wrote: I think it's time London got a Singapore-style "taxi stop" system in place on Red Routes and anywhere else with bus lanes. The whole point of a taxi is that you can pick one up anywhere without having to find a bus stop. That may be the London way but in fact on-street hailing is almost unknown in many provincial cities. I know. It makes travelling around those cities a pain in the arse. -- David Cantrell | Godless Liberal Elitist Planckton: n, the smallest possible living thing |
#13
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On Mon, 19 May 2008, David Cantrell wrote:
On Fri, May 16, 2008 at 05:40:02PM +0100, Tom Anderson wrote: On Fri, 16 May 2008, David Cantrell wrote: On Thu, May 15, 2008 at 07:18:06PM +0000, Neil Williams wrote: While that seems like a rant, taxis stopping in bus lanes are a *real* problem. They're nothing like as much of a problem as delivery vans and lorries parking in them. At least the cab will move off again very shortly, but the lorry might be there for an hour or more. Yes, it'll get a ticket. The driver doesn't care because his employer accepts that as just a cost of doing business and just pays out. The employer doesn't care because his customers are happy to eat the cost. Good, if depressing, point. So, we start issuing points for parking violations by commercial vehicle drivers, then? Or have a sliding scale that makes a single violation, like what normal people might do occasionally, annoyingly expensive but tolerable, but for repeated violations (either on seperate days, or by seperate vehicles with the same owner) something that'll make the delivery companies' customers say "no thanks, you can deliver at 2am instead when you won't **** the buses up". Ah - having it affect the customer, not the company. Now *that* is a *brilliant* idea! I'm not sure quite how you'd do it, but it's applying the leverage to the people who are holding the purse strings. tom -- It is better to create badly than to appreciate well. -- Gareth Jones |
#14
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On Mon, May 19, 2008 at 04:31:43PM +0100, Tom Anderson wrote:
On Mon, 19 May 2008, David Cantrell wrote: Or have a sliding scale that makes a single violation, like what normal people might do occasionally, annoyingly expensive but tolerable, but for repeated violations (either on seperate days, or by seperate vehicles with the same owner) something that'll make the delivery companies' customers say "no thanks, you can deliver at 2am instead when you won't **** the buses up". Ah - having it affect the customer, not the company. Now *that* is a *brilliant* idea! I'm not sure quite how you'd do it, but it's applying the leverage to the people who are holding the purse strings. I meant that the deliveryco would get fined, but to pay them they'd have to put their delivery prices up and *that* will make their customers say no. -- David Cantrell | http://www.cantrell.org.uk/david One person can change the world, but most of the time they shouldn't -- Marge Simpson |
#15
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On May 20, 11:48 am, David Cantrell wrote:
On Mon, May 19, 2008 at 04:31:43PM +0100, Tom Anderson wrote: On Mon, 19 May 2008, David Cantrell wrote: Or have a sliding scale that makes a single violation, like what normal people might do occasionally, annoyingly expensive but tolerable, but for repeated violations (either on seperate days, or by seperate vehicles with the same owner) something that'll make the delivery companies' customers say "no thanks, you can deliver at 2am instead when you won't **** the buses up". Ah - having it affect the customer, not the company. Now *that* is a *brilliant* idea! I'm not sure quite how you'd do it, but it's applying the leverage to the people who are holding the purse strings. I meant that the deliveryco would get fined, but to pay them they'd have to put their delivery prices up and *that* will make their customers say no. So a shop that has been around for decades suddenly finds that TfL have painted a bus lane outside and the delivery van can no longer park there at any reasonable hour so both shop staff and driver have to get up in the small hours, Well thats fair isn't it. If I was running a delvery company I'd just buy all my trucks and vans in france or holland and run them over here on foreign plates parking when and where I pleased. B2003 |
#16
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On Tue, 20 May 2008, Boltar wrote:
On May 20, 11:48 am, David Cantrell wrote: On Mon, May 19, 2008 at 04:31:43PM +0100, Tom Anderson wrote: On Mon, 19 May 2008, David Cantrell wrote: Or have a sliding scale that makes a single violation, like what normal people might do occasionally, annoyingly expensive but tolerable, but for repeated violations (either on seperate days, or by seperate vehicles with the same owner) something that'll make the delivery companies' customers say "no thanks, you can deliver at 2am instead when you won't **** the buses up". Ah - having it affect the customer, not the company. Now *that* is a *brilliant* idea! I'm not sure quite how you'd do it, but it's applying the leverage to the people who are holding the purse strings. I meant that the deliveryco would get fined, but to pay them they'd have to put their delivery prices up and *that* will make their customers say no. Hmm. The fines would have to be pretty huge to make a difference to the price, once they'd been averaged out over all deliveries. So a shop that has been around for decades suddenly finds that TfL have painted a bus lane outside and the delivery van can no longer park there at any reasonable hour so both shop staff and driver have to get up in the small hours, Well thats fair isn't it. Tough ****. That road's needed for public transport - the shopkeeper doesn't get to hold up hundreds of people using it just so he can take a delivery. tom -- there is never a wrong time to have your bullets passing further into someone's face -- D |
#17
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On Tue, May 20, 2008 at 04:14:50AM -0700, Boltar wrote:
So a shop that has been around for decades suddenly finds that TfL have painted a bus lane outside and the delivery van can no longer park there at any reasonable hour so both shop staff and driver have to get up in the small hours, Well thats fair isn't it. Yes, it is fair, if the benefit of having the bus lane outweighs that of not having it. Do you really think that Fortnum and Mason's desire (they were founded quite a few decades ago) to have delivery lorries stop whenever they damned well feel like is more important than having a bus lane outside the shop? -- David Cantrell | top google result for "topless karaoke murders" Deck of Cards: $1.29. "101 Solitaire Variations" book: $6.59. Cheap replacement for the one thing Windows is good at: priceless -- Shane Lazarus |
#18
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On May 21, 11:46 am, David Cantrell wrote:
Yes, it is fair, if the benefit of having the bus lane outweighs that of not having it. Says who? Do you really think that Fortnum and Mason's desire (they were founded quite a few decades ago) to have delivery lorries stop whenever they damned well feel like is more important than having a bus lane outside the shop? Frankly yes. If its a street with shops that street only exists because of those shops. And why pick on a posh shop like Fortnums? Why not use an example of a small shop owner who's already finding it hard to make ends meet and now can't have deliveries at any sane time of day just so a bus can save 30 seconds and get stuck in a queue 200 metres further down the road anyway? B2003 |
#19
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On May 20, 12:43 pm, Tom Anderson wrote:
On Tue, 20 May 2008, Boltar wrote: On May 20, 11:48 am, David Cantrell wrote: On Mon, May 19, 2008 at 04:31:43PM +0100, Tom Anderson wrote: On Mon, 19 May 2008, David Cantrell wrote: Or have a sliding scale that makes a single violation, like what normal people might do occasionally, annoyingly expensive but tolerable, but for repeated violations (either on seperate days, or by seperate vehicles with the same owner) something that'll make the delivery companies' customers say "no thanks, you can deliver at 2am instead when you won't **** the buses up". Ah - having it affect the customer, not the company. Now *that* is a *brilliant* idea! I'm not sure quite how you'd do it, but it's applying the leverage to the people who are holding the purse strings. I meant that the deliveryco would get fined, but to pay them they'd have to put their delivery prices up and *that* will make their customers say no. Hmm. The fines would have to be pretty huge to make a difference to the price, once they'd been averaged out over all deliveries. So a shop that has been around for decades suddenly finds that TfL have painted a bus lane outside and the delivery van can no longer park there at any reasonable hour so both shop staff and driver have to get up in the small hours, Well thats fair isn't it. Tough ****. That road's needed for public transport - the shopkeeper Newsflash - Roads are needed for many things, public transport is just one amongst them. B2003 |
#20
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In article ,
Boltar wrote: On May 21, 11:46 am, David Cantrell wrote: Yes, it is fair, if the benefit of having the bus lane outweighs that of not having it. Says who? Society as a whole - in a rather roundabout way via the ballot box. Perhaps Boris will make some changes. -- Shenanigans! Shenanigans! Best of 3! -- Flash |
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