Good news for fans of secretive and exclusive societies!
According to the Daily Telegraph:
The annual gathering of royalty, statesmen and business
leaders, will this week take place at the Grove Hotel, a golf resort in
Watford, Hertfordshire.
Older hands will of course remember that this venue was once BR's Management and Training Centre, where Organising for Quality courses were offered to all railway managers.
Perhaps there is a message in this for this for iDave and Gideot?
OfQ? Indeed.
Monday, 3 June 2013
The Bilderberg Group meets at The Grove!
Friday, 31 May 2013
London Bridge to Aberystwyth? Sort of...
Good to see that all this modernisation malarkey doesn't necessarily mean that our history gets scrapped.
This from the Beeb...
Part of London's oldest railway station is set to be rebuilt in Aberystwyth as part of a £10m plan
for a narrow gauge railway museum.
London Bridge station, which opened in 1836 and is used by 55 million people, is undergoing a £6bn redevelopment.
Network Rail has saved 16 columns, 14 beams and other elements of the roof.
Good effort NR. And well done Vale of Rheidol Railway for offering a home.
Somnambulism aboard the Civil Service Express
This from Battersea Bertie...
The 87 bus that runs from Westminster to SW London is not called the "civil service express" for nothing.
Last night I espied a young female "bureaucrat" falling asleep in front of her very own copy of the TSC "Lessons from the Intercity West Coast rail franchise competition" report!
At least this shows a degree of consistency.
Officials asleep both before and after the event.
NRMM - bypass Whitehall, head to Bruxelles!
This from Sue La Manche...
Ne pas jeter le bébé avec l'eau du bain!
As the rhetoric over our relationship with Europe grow ever louder, some of the more enlightened (!) ministers are seizing the opportunity to stand tough and demand greater concessions from Brussels in support of the UK economy and UK businesses.
They would have you believe this is something new, yet the UK has historically been rather successful at securing such amendments.
Take, for example, Directive 2011/88/EU, the so called Flexibility package of the Non Road Mobile Machinery (NRMM) Directive which allows UK businesses to order a limited number of new diesel locomotives, and to re-engine old locomotives at the previous IIIa emissions limit instead of the otherwise mandatory IIIb standard.
After much negotiation, the Directive was passed into European law in November 2011, triggering a three year period for orders to be placed.
Yet, rather that shout about the great concession we have secured, UK Government has just sat on its hands.
Halfway through the extension period, the Directive is still not transposed into UK law, to the intense frustration of those businesses looking to invest in new or modified equipment, yet who cannot, in the UK, gain the necessary clearance for their plans.
And, whilst they wait, what is the best advice that Government can offer to industry?
To get approval from the Belgian Safety Authority!
Thursday, 30 May 2013
EMT Automated Comedy Gold
This from Derby Anoraknophobic...
Those boarding the 06:04 to St Pancras at Derby this morning were greeted by an announcement asking all passengers and staff to immediately vacate the train!
From the platform it was clear to confused passengers, from the excessive smoke around the power car, that there was a small engine fire.
As staff dealt efficiently with the incident and evacuated the platform an automated station announcement bellowed out reminding passengers that smoking was prohibited anywhere on the station premises!
There's a lesson in this somewhere...
Wednesday, 29 May 2013
Maria the Eagle blusters on bonuses
Another belly flop from Maria the Eagle...
Labour's beleaguered Transport shadow opined...
“Commuters
facing inflation-busting fare rises will be outraged at the scale of
the bonus packages being enjoyed by a few at the top of the rail
industry. This comes on top of the Tory-led Government cutting taxes for
the most well off while millions pay more.
“Ministers must
now act and make clear that bonuses on this scale are simply not
appropriate in a company that receives nearly four billion pounds of
taxpayers’ money every year."
Eye supposes it is just too much to ask for Maria to actually understand the industry that she mouths on about?
It is ORR that requires Network Rail to have a 'management incentive plan' (bonuses in Maria speak) not government!
And it will be remembered that ORR is not part of government - the clue is its role as an 'independent economic regulator'.
No matter.
Of course if we are looking round for someone to blame for NR's bonus culture perhaps we might focus on the party in government when the company was actually set up?
Not much from Maria on that one, eh!
Tuesday, 28 May 2013
TPE introduces PEDs!
Exciting news for fans of Platform Edge Doors! (shurely Platform Edge Designs? Ed)
This from 'Northern Spirit'...
Obviously the standard yellow line with white platform
edge is not sufficient at Dewsbury (this is the slow line with fast
trains in this direction using the through line).
Good to see that in these times of austerity First TPE has discovered a cheap way to keep passengers away from platform edges, or an expensive way to waste paint...
Railway Garden Competition - Birmingham New Street
This from JT19...
Although these are some weeks old it appears that there has been a good start to the new growing season at Birmingham New Street..
Good to see the LNW Route is able to maintain the very best traditions of a centralised NR.
Pointless signs - Brundall
This from Anonymous Please...
I thought Eye readers might enjoy this sign seen at Brundall Station in Norfolk last week.
It seems that the Dutch have moved the international dateline to somewhere around the Wash!
Thursday, 23 May 2013
Pointless signs - Euston
This from Joseph-Michel Montgolfier...
Not really a pointless sign...
More a statement of ride quality South of Rugby.
Brompton on manouveres
This from The Man in Room 205...
Given recent snaps of industry Brompton bikes, I thought you’d appreciate a picture of my SWT Brompton decidedly off region in my office at London Marylebone (Class 67’s & MK III’s sadly out of shot, as I know this blog appeals to those with a ‘professional interest’).
A great innovation, that is sadly under review. I hope the review concludes the scheme is worthwhile and should continue beyond the rumoured 3 month deadline.
Notwithstanding the health and environmental benefits of cycling, it is actually cheaper than my equivalent Oyster fares.
Wednesday, 22 May 2013
Railway Garden Competition - Belper
A welcome return for that Eye hardy perennial - the Railway Garden Competition!
This from the Wicked Weaver...
Perhaps, in the 'Spirit of Partnership', NR's Route is helping EMT save on carriage cleaning costs?
The railway and the rise and rise of Ukip
The Fact Compiler's latest column in Passenger Transport published on the 10th May...
Monday, 20 May 2013
McNulty strikes again!
This from the Evening Standard...
The Gatwick Express “at times veers towards Third World conditions” giving some business executives and tourists flying to London a poor first impression of Britain, an airport boss warned today.
Sir Roy McNulty, the new chairman of Gatwick Airport, stressed it was vital to improve the rail service to the Sussex airport.
How's that Value for Money stuff going for you Roy?
Friday, 17 May 2013
Pointless signs - Pendolino
This from Pendolino Warrior...
Does anyone actually read the safety notices?
Let's work through the Virgin Pendolino window smashing guidance.
- Locate window hammer and strike cover with fist.
- Strike emergency window repeatedly in one area to form a small hole.
- Tear out a large hole in the inner window pane.
Thursday, 16 May 2013
PWC appointed to advise on IEP
This from Our Man at 222 Marylebone Road...
I understand that DfT has just appointed Price WaterhouseCoopers as financial advisers for IEP.
The announcement says that:
'DfT is looking to secure excellent value for money and the appointed firm will be required to provide proposals that offer cost reduction, efficiency and improvement opportunities throughout the contract term'.
Presumably it would be too much to expect PWC to say 'bin it'?
(Unlikely as PWC has form with the "biggest privately financed passenger rolling stock deal in history, anywhere in the world". Ed)
Eye gives you Christian Farage!
The leader of UKIP had better look to his laurels!
This from Mayoral candidate Christian Wolmar, reflecting on the impact of EU policy on Croatia's railways:
So the net result of EU interference is precisely the opposite to what
it was supposed to be set up to do, improve international relations and
cross border trade and passenger flow.
I have always been against the
Euro but in favour of the European Union. However, this type of
imposition of a neo-liberal agenda on the railways does make me hesitate
about what we should do about the EU.
Clearly, the Eurocrats still have
a naive federalist agenda that they are trying to impose and they need
to be stopped.
There is more joy in heaven over one sinner who repents...
Wednesday, 15 May 2013
May slams 'ugly' bridges
This from GetWokingham...
Theresa May disappointed with "ugly" Woodley railway bridge
Disappointment surrounding an ‘ugly’ new railway bridge has been forwarded to rail officials by Theresa May MP...
The Home Secretary met senior Network Rail officials to discuss
improvements to the Great Western route when she raised people’s
concerns that new bridges appearing in the ongoing work are “ugly”.
Eye wonders whether 'kitten heels' might improve the overall effect?
Burns Lite - RMT unspins the big man
This from the Brothers...
RMT research and answers to parliamentary questions have revealed that in an effort to justify the government’s decision to privatise the successful publicly owned East Coast Mainline the Rail Minister Simon Burns has recently deliberately mislead Parliament about the performance of East Coast Mainline in the public sector.
The Minister wrongly told the Transport Select Committee on 24th April that the West Coast Mainline operated by Virgin pays more in premium payments than the publicly owned East Coast Mainline. The Minister then repeated the misinformation the following day at Transport Questions.
Yet Parliamentary answers and official figures recorded by the Office of Rail Regulation show that, Publicly owned East Coast Mainline through Directly Operated Railways has paid the taxpayer significantly higher premium payments than Richard Branson’s Virgin on the West Coast Mainline.
- Publicly owned East Coast paid the Treasury £411 million between 2009 and 2012 whilst Virgin’s West Coast paid £282 million during the same period. A difference of £129m.
- Publicly owned East Coast through Directly Operated railways also paid almost twice as more (£602m) than its predecessor National Express (£370m) over a four year period.
Eye awaits with interest to see whether Mr Toad is required to apologise for misleading the House...
UPDATE: This from the Editorial Team at Rail Business Intelligence
Simon Burns is also convinced that returning East Coast to “the private sector” will bring about improved punctuality.
According to the details of an interview on BBC Two's Daily Politics contained on the Minister's own website:
[Mr Burns] said there have been improvements on the East Coast Mainline since it was taken into public ownership into 2009, but said there had now been a "plateau".
He said now was the time to return it to the private sector "for a number of reasons".
"...Firstly, because the improvements have now plateaued and we believe that passengers should get even better service from it, better punctuality..."
"We now believe it is the right time to move forward so we can get a new franchise holder coming in, providing the service, using their innovative skills to improve the service for passengers."
Readers of tomorrow’s Rail Business Intelligence will no doubt find the following table of interest.
RBI readers will of course draw their own conclusions about how much better the private sector is at delivering a more punctual railway.
UPDATE: This from Alecto...
Here is some ORR Data which tells us a lot about the Department for Transport's commitment to 'transparency':
So when Mr Burns says that West Coast pays more in premium he is clearly right.
BUT under Cap & Collar Virgin gets revenue support because the fare revenue coming in is less than forecast.
So the Treasury got £209.7 million, but paid back £44 million, thus vindicating the RMT claim and showing that Mr Burns either can't do difficult sums or is a political weasel (Shurely: political colossus! Ed)
And here are the comparative net payment figures for the three years (premia shown positive)
Of course the real issue is not about the Minister, but whether the Permanent Secretary is party to this dissimulation.