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#21
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On 31 May, 11:58, D DB 90001 wrote:
On 31 May, 09:03, "Richardr" wrote: "D DB 90001" wrote However, I still think that local suburban services that *do* terminate inside of Z1-6 or at stations such as Sevenoaks or Dartford just outside Z6 should be managed by TfL, just like all bus routes, even those which run outside of London but are mainly inside Z1-6, are managed and run by TfL. Frankly because TfL are more likely to get better results than other local authorities or DfT. But the capacity on the roads isn't constrained in the same way as that on the railways. I believe that a lot of London commuter routes run at pretty much capacity at peak times. Allowing one part of the route to determine what happens there fixes what happens elsewhere. Take Thameslink, for example, which stops and potentially stops at a lot of London stations. If the Mayor of London had sole rights to determine stopping patterns in London, then he would, quite rightly for him and his electors, choose patterns wanted by his constituents, which I would imagine would mean stopping all trains at all stops in Greater London. Thus those passengers from outside London, e.g. Brighton and Bedford, would get a massive deterioration in service. I can't see why letting London alone decide the Thameslink timetable in its own interests is such the bonus you think to Brighton or Bedford people? Isn't it the same for most south-east routes - nearly all of which are designed mainly for non-Londoners to get to and from London, or share tracks with such a route? OK, yes, TfL controlling Thameslink probably wouldn't be a good idea, but then I was suggesting that Thameslink would be included because I would have classified thameslink as an outer London service, because the main core services on thameslink only call at the major London termini at STP, Farringdon, Blackfriars and London Bridge, and then East Croydon only, not calling at the intermediate stations, and a fair proportion of the route is outside Z1-6, so it would be classified as a local London suburban service. The problem is that this problem in differentiating the services between London Suburban and outer-London services that happen to call at some, but not a lot of London stations is not always obvious. Oops, terrible typo there, I meant to say: OK, yes, TfL controlling Thameslink probably wouldn't be a good idea, but then I **wasn't** suggesting that Thameslink would be included because I would have classified thameslink as an outer London service, because the main core services on thameslink only call at the major London termini at STP, Farringdon, Blackfriars and London Bridge, and then East Croydon only, not calling at the intermediate stations, and a fair proportion of the route is outside Z1-6, so it would be classified as a local London suburban service. |
#22
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Take Thameslink, for example, which stops and potentially stops at a lot
of London stations. If the Mayor of London had sole rights to determine stopping patterns in London, then he would, quite rightly for him and his electors, choose patterns wanted by his constituents, which I would imagine would mean stopping all trains at all stops in Greater London. Thus those passengers from outside London, e.g. Brighton and Bedford, would get a massive deterioration in service. Thameslink already has two quite separate services, the metro (via the Sutton Loop), and the Bedford to Brighton. It would make perfect sense for LOROL to control the metro service, but not the long distance. LOROL would then take a chair at the timetabling meetings and negotiate paths liek everyone else. LOROL can share lines with other services just like the other TOCs do. -- Andrew http://www.kwoted.com/ "If A is success in life, then A = x + y + z. Work is x; y is play; and z is keeping your mouth shut." ~ Albert Einstein |
#23
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On 31 May, 13:02, "Andrew Heenan" wrote:
Thameslink already has two quite separate services, the metro (via the Sutton Loop), and the Bedford to Brighton. It would make perfect sense for LOROL to control the metro service, but not the long distance. Except late at night when the trains run all stops Bedford - St P, and during the peaks when the service patterns get complicated. They also share stock and depots and drivers. It would take a major reorganisation to try to run the metro service as a separate operation. The FCC GN side has a much clearer separation between inner and outer services, with separate stock and termini, and to a large extent, separate tracks. Few if any inner trains run north of Welwyn/Stevenage (via Hertford), for example. U |
#24
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D DB 90001 writes:
On 31 May, 10:33, Graham Murray wrote: D DB 90001 writes: Would it not be possible to adopt a system whereby once the cap is reached, each operator gets the proportion of the capped fair according to usage. So if (for simplicity of illustration) all single fares were £1 and the cap £5 and someone makes 2 journeys on operator A and 1 on operator B, operator A would get £2 and operator B £1. If the cap is reached and the person makes 4 journey on operator A and 2 on operator B, then operator A would get £5 x 4/6 = £3.33 and operator B £5 x 2/6 = £1.67. Potentially that could work, but would operator A get more than operator B if the journey was twice as long (and would it be in terms of distance or time?). That is a result of the simplification. In practice I would expect the sharing to done on ratio of the cost of uncapped fares for journeys made on each operator. So, in my examples, if each journey on operator A still cost £1 but those on operator B cost £2, then in the capped case each operator would have received £2.50 as the total 'uncapped' fare would have been £4 for each operator. |
#25
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![]() "Andrew Heenan" wrote in message ... Divvying up fares between operators has been done without problems for 150 years; the issue that's different is the fact that TfL's customers have been paying lower fares (with the zonal system) than National Rail customers (except in SE London, where TfLs fares have often been higher). So the fighting has been about resolving that without rioting TfL passengers - or rioting NR passengers - or TOCs lowering their fares as they face bankruptcy. It's not the zonal system that has made TfL's prices lower that NR's it is the substantial Oyster discount. I suspect Ken's desire to bring in lower fares was a significant driver for Oyster as it allowed him to do so under the cover of encouraging Oyster. Even now there are mid-week off-peak return journeys within the zonal system that are cheaper on NR than TfL/Oyster; there were a lot more before the introduction of off-peak Oyster fares in the middle of the day. Comparing single fares on TfL and NR ignores the substantial discount that NR gives on off-peak day return tickets which are unavailable on TfL. Dave. |
#26
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![]() "Andrew Heenan" wrote Thameslink already has two quite separate services, the metro (via the Sutton Loop), and the Bedford to Brighton. It would make perfect sense for LOROL to control the metro service, but not the long distance. LOROL would then take a chair at the timetabling meetings and negotiate paths liek everyone else. LOROL can share lines with other services just like the other TOCs do. But then that doesn't solve the revenue allocation question, which is what this discussion is about, it just moves it. You have even more shared journeys between the privately owned and run Bedford to Brighton service and the TfL service. What's more, it is then in the interests of the privately run Bedford trains to stop at, say, Mill Hill, Hendon, West Hampstead, and Kentish Town, for example, purely to share in the revenue from those stations, even though that pattern isn't optimal for anyone outside of Greater London. |
#27
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"Richardr" wrote ...
"Andrew Heenan" wrote Thameslink already has two quite separate services, the metro (via the Sutton Loop), and the Bedford to Brighton. It would make perfect sense for LOROL to control the metro service, but not the long distance. LOROL would then take a chair at the timetabling meetings and negotiate paths liek everyone else. LOROL can share lines with other services just like the other TOCs do. But then that doesn't solve the revenue allocation question, which is what this discussion is about, it just moves it. You have even more shared journeys between the privately owned and run Bedford to Brighton service and the TfL service. What's more, it is then in the interests of the privately run Bedford trains to stop at, say, Mill Hill, Hendon, West Hampstead, and Kentish Town, for example, purely to share in the revenue from those stations, even though that pattern isn't optimal for anyone outside of Greater London. The post I responded to widened the discussion (as have others and your post), to cover the effects on service. The divvying of fares is currently an issue because TfL and NR have historically assesed fares in very different ways; Oyster with zones, NR with cheap day returns, etc., etc., It's an issue because the different stakeholders unsurprisingly want the best outcome. But it really isn't a make or break for London's railways; eventually they'll come up with a formula (sadly much more complex than those proposed in this thread), and life will go on, with Oysters for all. The eventual outcome will almost certainly be that all fares totally within the zones will be based on the TfL system, and at a common price; journeys reaching outside the zones will continue as now - and, either way, the Railway_Clearing_House's successors will continue to divide the spondulux successfully they have continuously since 1842 on the national network. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Railway_Clearing_House Whether TfL takes on more metro services is quite separate, and will (almost inevitably) happen at some point. The only really interesting thing about the squabble is that it has highlighted the variation in NR fares around London, and this has been used as an excuse (for example) to further raise Southeastern's fares, conveniently forgetting that the main reason that they're historically low, is that they've generally provided a relatively poor, very slow service. What's more, it is then in the interests of the privately run Bedford trains to stop at, say, Mill Hill, Hendon, West Hampstead, and Kentish Town, for example, purely to share in the revenue from those stations, even though that pattern isn't optimal for anyone outside of Greater London. Not so; filling their trains with local passengers for a few bob will deny the space to long distance travellers, and lose them pounds. Longer distance operators generally hate short distance passengers, and it's only anomolies in the system (eg Virgins protection against competition on the WCML) that leads to stupid stopping patterns. -- Andrew |
#28
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![]() On May 31, 2:54*pm, "Andrew Heenan" wrote: [snip] The eventual outcome will almost certainly be that all fares totally within the zones will be based on the TfL system, and at a common price; journeys reaching outside the zones will continue as now - and, either way, the Railway_Clearing_House's successors *will continue to divide the spondulux successfully they have continuously since 1842 on the national network. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Railway_Clearing_House Wow, Andrew - you do so love bringing a confident sense of certainty when there's no real justification for it, and hence you end up making wrongheaded assumptions or jumping to simplistic conclusions. Re the idea that "all fares within the zones will be based on the TfL system" - in actual fact there's been some evidence to suggest that when Oyster PAYG is accepted across NR in London, the farescale adopted for single fares will be exactly the same as that which currently applies to NR in London (which is now uniform across all TOCs for journeys within the zones) - in other words Oyster PAYG won't offer a straightforward price advantage over buying paper tickets, and it will be more expensive than Tube PAYG fares. In particular this appeared on the Southeastern TOC's website until very recently - it ain't there any more as the website has been redesigned, but that doesn't mean it no longer applies: ---quote--- 27. Do you accept Oyster cards on your network? We do already accept season tickets on Oyster on our network (within the valid zones) but we do not currently accept Oyster pay as you go (PAYG). We are working with Transport for London (TfL) to introduce PAYG which requires significant investment with additional validators needed, automatic ticket gates at some stations, etc. It's envisaged we'll be able to introduce Oyster PAYG sometime in 2010. But it's important to say that Oyster PAYG will not be cheaper than our usual rail fares. ---/quote--- You can still see this via Google's cache of the page (accurate as of 16 May '09): http://209.85.229.132/search?q=cache....co.uk/faq.php We shall see what happens in the end, but I'd be *very* surprised to see the PAYG farescale for LU and NR being the same - it's not really in the interests of the TOCs who would be subject to pressure from the Mayor over fares changes (and the Mayor might well be looking more at the LU situation with regards to fares, given the Mayor's direct control of LU), and also the Mayor wouldn't like it as (s)he'd have less freedom of manoeuvre with regards to LU fares if they also applied to NR as well as the TOCs and DfT would want a say. (Sure, NR fares in London are already set centrally - but by DfT Rail, not TfL - it is done in consultation with TfL, but the TOCs also have an input, and this arrangement is less subject to fares becoming a bit of a political football as they could be under the Mayor.) Re the Railway Clearing House reference - the Rail Settlement Plan (RSP), part of ATOC, currently divides up the money from rail tickets. The division of Travelcard monies is more complicated, involving both RSP and TfL. However the notion that RSP itself will divide up monies from Oyster PAYG use in London doesn't appear to be backed up by anything - sure, perhaps some of the formulas used by RSP will also be used as a basis for divvying up money from the Oyster PAYG pot when it comes to National Rail services, but TfL itself will be (as it already is) the 'clearing house' when it comes to Oyster PAYG. Whether TfL takes on more metro services is quite separate, and will (almost inevitably) happen at some point. Only if London, in the form of the Mayor, pushes for it. Ken was very keen, Boris seems disinterested. The only really interesting thing about the squabble is that it has highlighted the variation in NR fares around London, and this has been used as an excuse (for example) to further raise Southeastern's fares, conveniently forgetting that the main reason that they're historically low, is that they've generally provided a relatively poor, very slow service. There are no variations now - all single and return rail-only fares within London are priced on a zonal basis (though still issued on a point-to-point basis) and have been since January 2007 - meanwhile season ticket rail-only fares have been subject to a more gradual process of alignment that started in January '07 and will be complete at the January 2010 fares change. |
#29
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#30
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On May 31, 1:33*pm, Mr Thant
wrote: On 31 May, 13:02, "Andrew Heenan" wrote: Thameslink already has two quite separate services, the metro (via the Sutton Loop), and the Bedford to Brighton. It would make perfect sense for LOROL to control the metro service, but not the long distance. Except late at night when the trains run all stops Bedford - St P, and during the peaks when the service patterns get complicated. They also share stock and depots and drivers. It would take a major reorganisation to try to run the metro service as a separate operation. But isn't the eventual plan that the suburban services will gain new 8 car trains, whilst the longer distance services will gain 12 car trains. This will lead to a separation in the rolling stock at least. The question is surely whether the service has to be completely separate or whether the suburban section can be specified by TfL as a signatory to the franchise, with a suitable arrangement of fare allocations. The FCC GN side has a much clearer separation between inner and outer services, with separate stock and termini, and to a large extent, separate tracks. Few if any inner trains run north of Welwyn/Stevenage (via Hertford), for example. There are a few inner suburban trains that run to / from Letchworth during the peaks. The situation will be more complex when 'Thameslink' services are expanded onto the ECML at the end of the rebuild schemes. |
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