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New Year fare rises
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/7597062.stm
Bus and Underground fares in London are to increase by an overall figure of 6% from the New Year, London Mayor Boris Johnson has announced. Some fares will be cut, including a new off-peak rate aimed at encouraging people to travel after 0930. Mr Johnson blamed the rises on the "largesse" of previous mayor, Labour's Ken Livingstone, accusing him of creating an £80m financial hole. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/7364637.stm suggests Ken would have made similar changes... Paul S |
New Year fare rises
On Sep 4, 11:36*am, "Paul Scott"
wrote: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/7597062.stm Bus and Underground fares in London are to increase by an overall figure of 6% from the New Year, London Mayor Boris Johnson has announced. Some fares will be cut, including a new off-peak rate aimed at encouraging people to travel after 0930. The press release at http://www.london.gov.uk/view_press_...eleaseid=18677 has some detail of the new fares, in an incredibly badly formatted table. It mentions a new 0930-1600 off-peak period. I'm guessing that off- peak picks up again after 1900, but there's no mention of this. Another question is whether your off-peak day Travelcard will be valid after 1600 - or will there be two markedly different off-peak periods, depending on how you're paying? While I'd imagine tourists arriving at Heathrow in the middle of the day will be happy about being able to save £1.60, I suspect everyone else will be totally baffled. - martin |
New Year fare rises
"Paul Scott" wrote in message ... http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/7597062.stm Bus and Underground fares in London are to increase by an overall figure of 6% from the New Year, London Mayor Boris Johnson has announced. Some fares will be cut, including a new off-peak rate aimed at encouraging people to travel after 0930. Mr Johnson blamed the rises on the "largesse" of previous mayor, Labour's Ken Livingstone, accusing him of creating an £80m financial hole. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/7364637.stm suggests Ken would have made similar changes... PS The TfL press release including the figures is he http://www.london.gov.uk/view_press_...eleaseid=18677 There have been a number of discussions here in the past about PAYG capping rules, especially concerning peak/off-peak, or standard/discount. The terms used seem to be changing, with an off peak period 0930-1600, so I'm presuming within the existing 'standard' period of 0700-1900 peak PAYG fares will be charged between 0700-0900, and 1600-1900. Might this also be part of the process of aligning Tube and NR charging policies, with a view to next years NR PAYG rollout in the zones? Paul S |
New Year fare rises
On Sep 4, 12:08*pm, martin wrote:
On Sep 4, 11:36*am, "Paul Scott" wrote: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/7597062.stm Bus and Underground fares in London are to increase by an overall figure of 6% from the New Year, London Mayor Boris Johnson has announced. Some fares will be cut, including a new off-peak rate aimed at encouraging people to travel after 0930. The press release athttp://www.london.gov.uk/view_press_release.jsp?releaseid=18677 has some detail of the new fares, in an incredibly badly formatted table. It mentions a new 0930-1600 off-peak period. I'm guessing that off- peak picks up again after 1900, but there's no mention of this. Another question is whether your off-peak day Travelcard will be valid after 1600 - or will there be two markedly different off-peak periods, depending on how you're paying? While I'd imagine tourists arriving at Heathrow in the middle of the day will be happy about being able to save £1.60, I suspect everyone else will be totally baffled. It also doesn't say if it's the start time of the journey or the end time of the journey or both that determine the fare charged. |
New Year fare rises
MIG wrote:
On Sep 4, 12:08 pm, martin wrote: It mentions a new 0930-1600 off-peak period. I'm guessing that off- peak picks up again after 1900, but there's no mention of this. Another question is whether your off-peak day Travelcard will be valid after 1600 - or will there be two markedly different off-peak periods, depending on how you're paying? Depends if 'off peak' paper travelcards are affected at all doesn't it? I suspect this is a PAYG feature only, otherwise there would have to be an 'off peak minimum cash fare' but they say it is frozen at £4.00 - though you'd have to say the press release isn't explicit enough... While I'd imagine tourists arriving at Heathrow in the middle of the day will be happy about being able to save £1.60, I suspect everyone else will be totally baffled. This is what PAYG does already - does it baffle people now that higher fares are charged between 0700 and 1900? It also doesn't say if it's the start time of the journey or the end time of the journey or both that determine the fare charged. I'm sure it's been established before that on PAYG it is the start time that defines the fare charged. Paul S |
New Year fare rises
On Sep 4, 7:52*pm, "Paul Scott"
wrote: MIG wrote: On Sep 4, 12:08 pm, martin wrote: It mentions a new 0930-1600 off-peak period. I'm guessing that off- peak picks up again after 1900, but there's no mention of this. Another question is whether your off-peak day Travelcard will be valid after 1600 - or will there be two markedly different off-peak periods, depending on how you're paying? Depends if 'off peak' paper travelcards are affected at all doesn't it? I suspect this is a PAYG feature only, otherwise there would have to be an 'off peak minimum cash fare' but they say it is frozen at £4.00 - though you'd have to say the press release isn't explicit enough... While I'd imagine tourists arriving at Heathrow in the middle of the day will be happy about being able to save £1.60, I suspect everyone else will be totally baffled. This is what PAYG does already - does it baffle people now that higher fares are charged between 0700 and 1900? It also doesn't say if it's the start time of the journey or the end time of the journey or both that determine the fare charged. I'm sure it's been established before that on PAYG it is the start time that defines the fare charged. That's what I'd put my money on, but it doesn't say. For readers of the press release not familiar with forums like this, it ought to. |
New Year fare rises
On 4 Sep, 20:17, MIG wrote:
On Sep 4, 7:52*pm, "Paul Scott" wrote: MIG wrote: On Sep 4, 12:08 pm, martin wrote: It mentions a new 0930-1600 off-peak period. I'm guessing that off- peak picks up again after 1900, but there's no mention of this. Another question is whether your off-peak day Travelcard will be valid after 1600 - or will there be two markedly different off-peak periods, depending on how you're paying? Depends if 'off peak' paper travelcards are affected at all doesn't it? I suspect this is a PAYG feature only, otherwise there would have to be an 'off peak minimum cash fare' but they say it is frozen at £4.00 - though you'd have to say the press release isn't explicit enough... While I'd imagine tourists arriving at Heathrow in the middle of the day will be happy about being able to save £1.60, I suspect everyone else will be totally baffled. This is what PAYG does already - does it baffle people now that higher fares are charged between 0700 and 1900? It also doesn't say if it's the start time of the journey or the end time of the journey or both that determine the fare charged. I'm sure it's been established before that on PAYG it is the start time that defines the fare charged. That's what I'd put my money on, but it doesn't say. *For readers of the press release not familiar with forums like this, it ought to.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Does an evening peak on the underground now suggest that in time TOCs can apply a similar peak level of fares on national rail services inside the zones in the afternoon. We could then see an afternoon restriction on tubes and trains for off-peak travelcards. This would then remove the anomalies of off-peak tickets being valid in the evening peak to zone 6 stations but not beyond from Liverpool Street, Kings Cross etc. However, it doesn't simplify matters at all. If an afternoon peak applied to the off-peak one day travelcard, it would also have to apply to passengers travelling in from outside zone 6 (as people arriving in London between 4pm and 7pm wouldn't be able to travel beyond their terminal station). This would all but kill off any chance of anyone having a evening out in London if they are not already there. Jonathan |
New Year fare rises
wrote in message ... However, it doesn't simplify matters at all. If an afternoon peak applied to the off-peak one day travelcard, it would also have to apply to passengers travelling in from outside zone 6 (as people arriving in London between 4pm and 7pm wouldn't be able to travel beyond their terminal station). This would all but kill off any chance of anyone having a evening out in London if they are not already there. I suspect existing paper travelcard conditions will remain largely unchanged, unless individual operators take the FCC policy. I don't think there is an equivalent (other than via PAYG capping) of the one day travelcard on Oyster, so the issue won't arise there. Isn't there a precedent for this with oyster peak charging on London Overground between Euston and Watford? I know that for Clapham Junction to Watford there are times when it's cheaper to buy a paper ticket from Southern (with a gold card discount) than use PAYG. D A Stocks |
New Year fare rises
On 4 Sep, 11:36, "Paul Scott" wrote:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/7597062.stm Bus and Underground fares in London are to increase by an overall figure of 6% from the New Year, London Mayor Boris Johnson has announced. Some fares will be cut, including a new off-peak rate aimed at encouraging people to travel after 0930. Which of course is excellent news, for both 9-5ers and (typically lower paid) shift workers. Less congestion in the rush hour as people are encouraged to travel later in the day, and a welcome reduction in cost for the poorest, hardest working members of society already hit unfairly be congestion charges, petrol tax, and other government led charges aimed at the non city community. Thankfully we have Boris, mayor for the average hard working joe on the street. |
New Year fare rises
Paul Weaver wrote:
On 4 Sep, 11:36, "Paul Scott" wrote: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/7597062.stm Bus and Underground fares in London are to increase by an overall figure of 6% from the New Year, London Mayor Boris Johnson has announced. Some fares will be cut, including a new off-peak rate aimed at encouraging people to travel after 0930. Which of course is excellent news, for both 9-5ers and (typically lower paid) shift workers. Less congestion in the rush hour as people are encouraged to travel later in the day, and a welcome reduction in cost for the poorest, hardest working members of society already hit unfairly be congestion charges, petrol tax, and other government led charges aimed at the non city community. Thankfully we have Boris, mayor for the average hard working joe on the street. Why are poor people who travel into London to work by public transport after 9:30am on weekdays hit by the congestion charge and fuel tax? Car ownership is not a common badge of poverty in London. Why, for that matter, are they suddenly expected to be able to turn up at work considerably after 9:30am* (given that they have to touch in at the start of their journey after that time) without their employer minding? Why, for that matter, does scrapping public transport improvements like the Cross River Tram (and previously the West London Tram, the wasted funding for which is being partly blamed for the rise) which were squarely aimed at providing better access to the poorer areas of the capital mean Boris is 'mayor for the average hard working joe on the street'? *puzzled* (it's not 6%, either, most rises are well over that - lazy journalists). Tom |
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