Wednesday, 1 December 2010

Network Rail misplaces new chief exec?

Exciting news from Transport Times Events!

TTE is led by the well connected transport guru Professor David Begg, a man with his fingers firmly on the industry's pulse !


So an event in January asking "Is the North missing out on Transport?" should be packed to the rafters with heavy weights.

According to a TTE email and their website the following are 'Confirmed Speakers'

  • Rt Hon Philip Hammond, Secretary of State for Transport
  • Cllr Richard Leese, Leader, Manchester City Council
  • Richard Eccles, Chief Executive, Network Rail
  • Julie Mills, Director, Greengauge 21
  • Adam Marshall, Director of Policy, British Chamber of Commerce
  • Prof Michael Parkinson, Director, European Institute of Urban Affairs, Liverpool John Moores University
  • Alexandra Jones, Chief Executive, Centre for Cities
Let Eye be the first to congratulate Richard Eccles on his promotion.

Presumably David Higgins has been told?

NR lays it on with a trowel...

Oh dear!

The new, improved, caring, sharing and feminised Network Rail is starting to emerge from under the Coucher shadow.

This 'icky making nonsense in an email sent to NR's Safety Central subscribers...

Click on the image to see it in all it's ghastliness!

"Check out the list of David-friendly improvements"

And the pièce de résistance...

"It’s more stylish, like you David"

Has NR recruited the former editor of Just 17 to run Safety Central?

WCML Upgrade suffers whiteout

Our man on the Pendolino reports...

Conductors on WCML Glasgow to London route have been told to announce over the intercom that:

"trains are not allowed to travel at over 100mph because of adverse weather conditions."

Why?

If this is an engineering or design problem, we should know.

Or is it just another 'wrong kind of snow' excuse for general slackness and lateness?

My 13.53 from Preston is over an hour late yet barely a flake has fallen on entire journey...

UPDATE: This from a Mr Tony Miles...

Ice thrown up is breaking outer skin of windows.

I gather 100mph avoids it being thrown up as much in the first place.

I think all 125mph trains are restricted to 100mph when this happens & 'tilt mode' is deactivated on Pendos.


Sensible really.

UPDATE: This from Sunny South...

You will find that NR have written into the rule book that speed restrictions apply in any case where disc-braked stock and drifting snow are concerned, so VWC are merely being good boys & girls and looking after both rules & regs and keeping Joe Public informed.

Yours watching
South Eastern self-destruct with growing concern...

MacPorkies?

This from the The Herald...

Thomas Docherty, a former head of media relations for major projects at Network Rail between 2006 and 2007 and, since May, the Labour MP for Dunfermline and West Fife, said:

“My recollection from my time at Network Rail is that both Network Rail and Transport Scotland knew that a 24-hour operation would be required. My understanding is that Transport Scotland did not share that knowledge with Clackmannanshire Council,”

“The way that the Scottish Government behaved is bordering on the criminal. Even when there were FoI documents that showed its involvement in planning a 24-hour railway, it still won’t admit the truth.

Good to see that the Jockanese Transport Monkeys are rivaling our beloved Marsham Street for transparency.

Tuesday, 30 November 2010

FREE POSTER for every Eye reader!

Please feel free to download, print and display prominently...


Why not involve the whole family?

Ask the the kids to print off a version so you can send it to your MP as a postcard.


Ask Granny to lick the stamps.

This is an Eye gift that just keeps on giving!

Readers in the following constituencies are particularly encouraged to adopt this approach:

  • Aylesbury - David Lidington MP
  • Beaconsfield - Dominic Grieve MP
  • Buckingham - John Bercow MP
  • Chesham and Amersham - Cheryl Gillan MP
  • Kenilworth - Jeremy Wright MP
  • Lichfield - Michael Fabricant MP
Usual address: House of Commons, Westminster, London SW1W 0AA

Remember, vote early, vote often!

UPDATE: This from Biggles...

This one spotted in Warwickshire...


Good effort!

UPDATE: This from Poster Boy...

And here a version of the poster for those in the northern home counties concerned about defenestration...



Apparently Nimbys have no sense of humour.

Wolmarballs on new rolling stock

Telegrammed by Our Man at 222 Marylebone Road
Britain's self styled greatest living transport expert, quoting from the Grauniad's Peter Preston, says in his latest blogpost:

Peter Preston, a normally utterly impenetrable Guardian columnist, for once makes a good point in today's paper. Writing about the £8bn worth of rolling stock investment promised by the government last week - forget whether the actual figures add up - he asked the DfT how many of the new 2,100 carriages would be first or second class.

Those who can divide £8billion by 2,100 will know that the numbers definitely don't add up.

Perhaps the prolific Wolmar, surely the O.S. Nock de nos jours, should have consulted the soi disant 'veteran observer' whose expertise is currently being 'rested' by the FT?

UPDATE: This from a Mr Robert Wright...

I was intrigued by the idea of Wolmar as an 'OS Nock de nos jours' and checked the great man's Wikipedia entry for parallels.

Sadly, it summarises his career thus:

"Nock authored more than 140 books and 1000 magazine articles, which are often considered to be less than authoritative because of his voluminous output. He tended to re-use data, text and anecdotes in different books, including paragraphs culled in their entirety."

Perhaps Wolmar should get himself a canal boat and make a pitch to be the modern era's LTC Rolt instead.

Christmas Railway Garden - Durham

With a bowler tip to Ricdea, via Twitter...


Very festive!

Monday, 29 November 2010

Lesser spotted Eagle threatended with extinction?

Looks like Ed Milibean is not alone in having his leadership skills questioned.

Maria the Eagle may also want to watch her back.

This from the North West Evening Mail...

A RAIL lobby group is backing Furness MP and Shadow Transport Secretary John Woodcock’s call for Barrow not to lose its direct train services to Manchester Airport.

Down boy!

Vox populi, vox Eye!

This from John...

According to this Cabinet report from Kent County Council...

Applications to classify new highways or to alter the classification of existing highways require approval from the Department for Transport (Daft).

and it goes one better:

Applications must be sent to the Government Office for the North East (GONE) which acts on behalf of the Daft and The Secretary of State for Transport.

See paragraph 1.2

DafT GONE does have a certain optimistic ring to it...

Cross Country still in breach of franchise commitment

A pretty map has arrived in The Fact Compiler's inbox from retailing website mytrainticket.co.uk

But what's this.

Something is strangely missing from the list of TOC's providing on-board WiFi.

Eye wonders what it could be...


Perhaps time for DafT to stop pussy footing around and actually take meaningful action against DB owned Arriva Cross Country for breaching its franchise commitment.

Eye has something like this in mind...


Presumably swapping one nationalised operator for another won't be a problem?

First million pound fare - Shocker!

Exciting news from the National Rail Enquiries website!

Regular Eye readers will recollect that ATOC was less than transparent when it announced the scale of fare increases last week.

A Mr Fergy-Lee has discovered the reason why...

And here in close-up...

Good to see the railway doing its bit to address the national debt.

Friday, 26 November 2010

Telegraph backs HS2 - Shocker

There will be purple faces over Chiltern breakfasts tomorrow!

The Torygraph has come out in favour of HS2.

This from David Millward...

But every generation should do something to leave its mark and perhaps the new age of the train will be our contribution to posterity.

Read it!

Good effort.

Lookalike - Whyter than Wight

This from Lazarus...

I cannot help but notice the striking similarity between Modern Railway's diagram of Glasgow - Edinburgh routes (December 2010 issue, page 38) and the outline of the Isle of Wight.



Are they perhaps related?

Villiers Vignettes - The sound of silence

This from The Banker...

Cruella was in Leeds this lunchtime on what I think is called a 'whistlestop'.

Sadly no whistle in evidence nor indeed any announcement.

Nothing!

Nothing at all!

Not even a re-announcement!

There might be 100 additional coaches (sorry, carriages!) for Yorkshire, then again there might not.

Who knows?

The Hammond Organs of course refused to say in advance what the visit was all about.

So, predictably, local media ignored it, with just a crowd of three forlornly gathered...

How unlike those euphoric days when cheering crowds thronged the streets to salute the Saviour of the Jammy Dodger!

UPDATE: This from a Mr Mitchell....

Perhaps the reason for the low turnout in Leeds was due to confusion amongst the Tykes about who is actually responsible for today's railways.

This from local rag the Wakefield Express...



Theresa who?

Turkeys vote against Christmas - Shocker!

This gem from Local Transport Today...

The Association for Consultancy and Engineering (ACE) has hit out at the Government’s approach to cutting costs of infrastructure projects.

Industry wants to deliver high-quality, good value services to its clients, but simply asking suppliers to reduce their prices is no magic bullet,” ACE chief executive Nelson Ogunshakin said.

Just fancy that!

Hitachi resorts to type in IEP negotiations

This from the Northern Echo...

TRAIN builder Hitachi yesterday hinted it could walk away from plans to create thousands of jobs in the North East amid Government delays to a key contract.

Good to see that the spirit of 'Manchurian diplomacy' is alive and well in Tokyo.

Mr Kipling and co may also wish to watch their backs on the 7th December...

Thursday, 25 November 2010

602 days without a new train order

For the avoidance of doubt...

Despite all today's fine words and column inches it remains 602 days since the last order for new trains was placed.

And tomorrow it will be 603 days, and on Saturday 604 days, and on Sunday 605 days, and on Monday 606 days, etc...

So Secretary of State, when will the first of the 2,100 new vehicles that you have promised actually be ordered?

Hammond - Ministerial Statement on Rail Investment

This from the DfT...

The Secretary of State for Transport (Mr Philip Hammond):

This statement sets out the Government’s plans for investment in rail infrastructure and rolling stock. It builds on the announcement by the Chancellor of the Exchequer of the outcome of the Spending Review.

Over the next four years, we will provide £14 billion of funding to Network Rail to support capital maintenance and infrastructure investment; and £750 million for high speed rail. We will also fund the Crossrail project, the Tube upgrade programme, light rail projects in Birmingham, Tyneside, Nottingham and Sheffield; and provide additional funding to franchisees for extra rolling stock.

Today, I can confirm we will fund and deliver the Thameslink programme in its entirety, virtually doubling the number of north-south trains running through central London at peak times. But the original programme for the rebuilding of London Bridge was always ambitious, with substantial risks around delivery, and operation of existing services, during construction. To reduce these risks, we have re-profiled the delivery of the programme to achieve completion in 2018. This will enable Network Rail to make further efficiencies to their design and delivery programme.

As part of the Thameslink programme, we will procure a new fleet of trains – up to 1,200 new carriages. This is in addition to around 600 new carriages which will be provided for the Crossrail project. The new Thameslink and Crossrail rolling stock will enable the redeployment of hundreds of serviceable electric carriages currently used on Thameslink services. These carriages belong to rolling-stock leasing companies, but we expect they will be available at competitive leasing prices for re-use elsewhere, thus justifying further electrification of our network.

As a first step, Network Rail will electrify the commuter services on the Great Western Main Line from London to Didcot, Oxford and Newbury over the next six years. Electric trains will speed up journeys, improve reliability and reduce the impact on the environment. Network Rail will also electrify the lines between Liverpool, Manchester, Preston and Blackpool - an investment of up to £300 million. Work is expected to begin next year and to be finished in 2016. As with Thameslink, we expect Network Rail to keep a tight rein on costs.

The redeployment of electric rolling stock to these routes will, in turn, free up hundreds of diesel units which will be available to Train Operators to lease as they become available in the period after 2015.

I can also today confirm that an additional 650 carriages will have been delivered to the network between 6 May 2010 and March 2014. This is in addition to the Thameslink and Crossrail carriages I have already mentioned.

We have funding confirmed for developments at Reading, Birmingham, London Kings Cross and Gatwick Airport. In addition, investments on the East Coast Main Line and Midland Main Line and improvements in Yorkshire, on trans pennine routes, around Manchester and in South Wales will improve line speed, reliability and capacity of services.

Beyond these investments in the commuter railway, there are far-reaching decisions to be made about intercity services. The Intercity Express Programme, launched by the previous Government, identified the Agility Trains consortium as preferred bidder to build a new fleet of intercity trains. This February, my predecessors invited Sir Andrew Foster, to provide an independent assessment of the programme. Sir Andrew recommended work on the Agility Trains proposal and a detailed study of the alternatives. Following this work, the four options Sir Andrew identified, have been narrowed down to two. I have ruled out the option of requiring passengers to interchange from electric to diesel trains, recognising the value to passengers of preserving through-journeys. I have also ruled out the option of a wholesale refurbishment of the existing diesel “Intercity 125” fleet, some of which dates back to the 1970s.

The remaining options are, on the one hand a revised, lower cost Agility Trains proposal, which envisages a mixed fleet: some all-electric trains, and some electric trains which are also equipped with underfloor diesel engines. And on the other, a fleet of new all-electric trains which could be coupled to new diesel locomotives where the overhead electric power lines end. Both these options would allow us to preserve through-journeys between London and parts of the rail network which are not electrified. Both of them would deliver faster journey times. For example, we expect to see a time saving of at least 15 minutes, for the journey between Cardiff and London bringing it below 2 hours.

This is a major decision which will affect intercity rail travel for decades, and we must get it right. To address outstanding issues on choice of train type and further electrification on the Great Western Main Line, additional work will be required within the Department, with Agility Trains, and with the Welsh Assembly Government on the business case for electrification into Wales. I expect to announce a final decision on IEP, and on further Great Western electrification, in the New Year.

This package I have announced today has only been possible because this government has been prepared to take the tough decisions to protect investment in Britain’s future. I will make a further oral statement to the House on the issues raised in this statement later today.

- ENDS -

UPDATE: This, unbelievably, from an email address within Marsham Street...

May I point out, modestly, that I got the odds right in the Great Petrol-head Handicap?
(Certainly not Philip, but thanks for the tips. Ed)

Hammond cuts Adonis' investment plans

So.

Good news for the South East (Thameslink and Crossrail get 1,800 new passenger vehicles).

Apparently the homes for another 200 vehicles will be announced later today.

Electrification in the North West is re, re, reannounced.

Great Western electrification on hold.

And IEP's future uncertain.

Further details of Petrol-heads plans will emerge during the day.

All in all (and despite the churlish headline) this looks like a good result for the railways.

Hammond has fought his corner hard and The Fact Compiler's happiness index is hovering on Prosecco, but not yet Champagne...

Good effort! But, as ever, the devil will be in the detail.

UPDATE: This from a Mr Tony Miles...

Good to see that despite today's exciting announcement the performance of the DfT's press office remains consistent.

There is still no announcement on the DfT website as at 08:33, a full hour and a half after Hammond started glad-handing the media.

On current performance I expect to see an official announcement on-line by 2017 (that's the year rather than the time).


UPDATE: This, surprisingly, from Prof Unwin...

In responsey Mr Miles slur on famond Hammond Organs of Old Marshy Street.

Each organ finely tune but in deep sleepy mode till Fairy Petrol-head spring surprisy visit into chamber, window throw open light and firework, thumpy, thumpy computer out emergy grand string pronouncebold to laud and magnify master.


Deep joy.

UPDATE: This from the Archer...

I’ve just heard Petrol-head announce on the Beeb that there will be almost 2,000 net additional carriages 'by the end of the decade'.

Hurrah, that’s 400 carriages per week between now and the end of December!

Wednesday, 24 November 2010

Petrol-head Rail Expenditure Handicap - Latest Prices

Eye's Course Correspondent reports the going for tomorrow's big event as 'Rough to dodgy'.

Runners and riders
Cockney Link - 4/7 (Fav)
Western Voltage - 3-1 (may be pulled up short)
Juniper's Revenge 5-1
Northern Capacity 100-1 (outsider)
HLOS Commitment 75-1
Kipling's Folly 3-1
Tutu X 3-1
Permatan Fleet 34-1
Sheffield Juice - Scratched

There may yet be a late showing for Legal Eagle at 1-2 on...