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#1
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....during his visit to Canary Wharf station site.
Hammond said: "The Government is committed to this project." He added: "We have no plans to reduce its scope. We want this project to be delivered in its entirety," he said. But he added that the Government wanted to ensure that Crossrail was delivered "with maximum value for the taxpayer". Worth watching the whole of the BBC video included on the webpage, the interviewer seems to cover most of the obvious questions ... http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/10323035.stm Paul S |
#2
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On Jun 15, 11:10*am, "Paul Scott"
wrote: ...during his visit to Canary Wharf station site. Hammond said: "The Government is committed to this project." He added: "We have no plans to reduce its scope. We want this project to be delivered in its entirety," he said. But he added that the Government wanted to ensure that Crossrail was delivered "with maximum value for the taxpayer". Worth watching the whole of the BBC video included on the webpage, the interviewer seems to cover most of the obvious questions ... http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/10323035.stm Thank you for posting. This pronouncement has me completely confused as to the likely scope of Crossrail. |
#3
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![]() "E27002" wrote in message ... On Jun 15, 11:10 am, "Paul Scott" wrote: ...during his visit to Canary Wharf station site. Hammond said: "The Government is committed to this project." He added: "We have no plans to reduce its scope. We want this project to be delivered in its entirety," he said. But he added that the Government wanted to ensure that Crossrail was delivered "with maximum value for the taxpayer". Worth watching the whole of the BBC video included on the webpage, the interviewer seems to cover most of the obvious questions ... http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/10323035.stm Thank you for posting. This pronouncement has me completely confused as to the likely scope of Crossrail. Maidenhead and Heathrow to Shenfield and Abbeywood, as per the enabling Act, I'd have thought. Anywhere else, such as Reading, is just froth... Paul S |
#4
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On Jun 15, 7:10*pm, "Paul Scott"
wrote: ...during his visit to Canary Wharf station site. Hammond said: "The Government is committed to this project." He added: "We have no plans to reduce its scope. We want this project to be delivered in its entirety," he said. But he added that the Government wanted to ensure that Crossrail was delivered "with maximum value for the taxpayer". Which I suppose could be interpreted as 'we want the full scheme but we want to pay less for it' - likewise, it could also be interpreted as 'we want the full scheme but we definitely don't want any cost overruns on it'. Worth watching the whole of the BBC video included on the webpage, the interviewer seems to cover most of the obvious questions ... http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/10323035.stm Yes, a good interview - UIVMM the (unseen) questioner is Tom Edwards, BBC London's transport correspondent, who seems pretty on the ball - he also has a blog on transport issues in London called 'Mind the Gap' he http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/mindthegap/ |
#5
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![]() On Jun 15, 8:01*pm, Paul Corfield wrote: On Tue, 15 Jun 2010 19:10:36 +0100, "Paul Scott" wrote: ...during his visit to Canary Wharf station site. Hammond said: "The Government is committed to this project." He added: "We have no plans to reduce its scope. We want this project to be delivered in its entirety," he said. But he added that the Government wanted to ensure that Crossrail was delivered "with maximum value for the taxpayer". Worth watching the whole of the BBC video included on the webpage, the interviewer seems to cover most of the obvious questions ... http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/10323035.stm Thanks for posting that. On the face of it it is fairly positive and completely at odds with some scandalous rumour I heard today (and no I'm not sharing it). [...] Bozza has been digging his pencils and protractor out, in a bid to 'assist' the Crossrail team? [...] However there is the nasty politicians' phrase of "we have no plans". This can, of course, change at the drop of a hat and the sudden presentation of a plan that changes everything! Given the 'emergency' budget is coming up next Tuesday, it does seem unlikely that the SoS would be mouthing off about Crossrail without being fairly certain that the project was still on. I'm minded to think that some of the earlier chit chat about de-scoping / cutting back Crossrail may have emanated from the Crossrail team themselves, or those close to them - present the new team at the DfT (and indeed the Treasury) with a whole menu of possible substantive cuts to the project, then gently explain the consequences of said cuts, the inference being that actually opting for any such cut would seriously curtail significant benefits derived from the project and hence would be a daft thing to do. Plus of course there's the whole complex funding structure which is now in place which is based on the full project (rather than a cut back version which isn't what was agreed to). I wonder if Hammond's reticence about the timetable might possibly point to something that 'Bruce' suggested recently as a potential money saver - that of slower tunnelling and fewer TBMs ((or indeed just one of them)... |
#6
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On Jun 15, 12:26*pm, Mizter T wrote:
On Jun 15, 8:01*pm, Paul Corfield wrote: On Tue, 15 Jun 2010 19:10:36 +0100, "Paul Scott" wrote: ...during his visit to Canary Wharf station site. Hammond said: "The Government is committed to this project." He added: "We have no plans to reduce its scope. We want this project to be delivered in its entirety," he said. But he added that the Government wanted to ensure that Crossrail was delivered "with maximum value for the taxpayer". Worth watching the whole of the BBC video included on the webpage, the interviewer seems to cover most of the obvious questions ... http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/10323035.stm Thanks for posting that. On the face of it it is fairly positive and completely at odds with some scandalous rumour I heard today (and no I'm not sharing it). [...] Bozza has been digging his pencils and protractor out, in a bid to 'assist' the Crossrail team? [...] However there is the nasty politicians' phrase of "we have no plans". This can, of course, change at the drop of a hat and the sudden presentation of a plan that changes everything! Given the 'emergency' budget is coming up next Tuesday, it does seem unlikely that the SoS would be mouthing off about Crossrail without being fairly certain that the project was still on. This is starting to sound like good news for Crossrail. This is the correct thing to do. Crossrail and Thameslink n000 are the two projects that should survive IMHO. I'm minded to think that some of the earlier chit chat about de-scoping / cutting back Crossrail may have emanated from the Crossrail team themselves, or those close to them - present the new team at the DfT (and indeed the Treasury) with a whole menu of possible substantive cuts to the project, then gently explain the consequences of said cuts, the inference being that actually opting for any such cut would seriously curtail significant benefits derived from the project and hence would be a daft thing to do. Plus of course there's the whole complex funding structure which is now in place which is based on the full project (rather than a cut back version which isn't what was agreed to). I wonder if Hammond's reticence about the timetable might possibly point to something that 'Bruce' suggested recently as a potential money saver - that of slower tunnelling and fewer TBMs ((or indeed just one of them)... Two might make sense. Crossrail would not come into its own until there is a complete economic recovery. That is likely to be some years away. OTOH using one TBM would just be plain silly. Two is the minimum sensible IMHO. |
#7
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On Jun 15, 12:06*pm, Mizter T wrote:
On Jun 15, 7:10*pm, "Paul Scott" wrote: ...during his visit to Canary Wharf station site. Hammond said: "The Government is committed to this project." He added: "We have no plans to reduce its scope. We want this project to be delivered in its entirety," he said. But he added that the Government wanted to ensure that Crossrail was delivered "with maximum value for the taxpayer". Which I suppose could be interpreted as 'we want the full scheme but we want to pay less for it' - likewise, it could also be interpreted as 'we want the full scheme but we definitely don't want any cost overruns on it'. Worth watching the whole of the BBC video included on the webpage, the interviewer seems to cover most of the obvious questions ... http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/10323035.stm Yes, a good interview - UIVMM the (unseen) questioner is Tom Edwards, BBC London's transport correspondent, who seems pretty on the ball - he also has a blog on transport issues in London called 'Mind the Gap' he http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/mindthegap/ From what I can tell, from afar, BBC London seems to have found itself a worthwhile role these days. I remember the early days of BBC Radio London in the 1970s. It really seemed to struggle. |
#8
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![]() "Paul Scott" wrote in message ... "E27002" wrote in message ... On Jun 15, 11:10 am, "Paul Scott" wrote: ...during his visit to Canary Wharf station site. Hammond said: "The Government is committed to this project." He added: "We have no plans to reduce its scope. We want this project to be delivered in its entirety," he said. But he added that the Government wanted to ensure that Crossrail was delivered "with maximum value for the taxpayer". Worth watching the whole of the BBC video included on the webpage, the interviewer seems to cover most of the obvious questions ... http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/10323035.stm Thank you for posting. This pronouncement has me completely confused as to the likely scope of Crossrail. Maidenhead and Heathrow to Shenfield and Abbeywood, as per the enabling Act, I'd have thought. Anywhere else, such as Reading, is just froth... Extension to Reading will cost nothing once the station has been rebuilt and GWR electrified tim |
#9
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On Jun 15, 8:50*pm, E27002 wrote:
On Jun 15, 12:26*pm, Mizter T wrote: On Jun 15, 8:01*pm, Paul Corfield wrote: On Tue, 15 Jun 2010 19:10:36 +0100, "Paul Scott" wrote: ...during his visit to Canary Wharf station site. Hammond said: "The Government is committed to this project." He added: "We have no plans to reduce its scope. We want this project to be delivered in its entirety," he said. But he added that the Government wanted to ensure that Crossrail was delivered "with maximum value for the taxpayer". Worth watching the whole of the BBC video included on the webpage, the interviewer seems to cover most of the obvious questions ... http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/10323035.stm Thanks for posting that. On the face of it it is fairly positive and completely at odds with some scandalous rumour I heard today (and no I'm not sharing it). [...] Bozza has been digging his pencils and protractor out, in a bid to 'assist' the Crossrail team? [...] However there is the nasty politicians' phrase of "we have no plans". This can, of course, change at the drop of a hat and the sudden presentation of a plan that changes everything! Given the 'emergency' budget is coming up next Tuesday, it does seem unlikely that the SoS would be mouthing off about Crossrail without being fairly certain that the project was still on. This is starting to sound like good news for Crossrail. *This is the correct thing to do. *Crossrail and Thameslink n000 are the two projects that should survive IMHO. I'm minded to think that some of the earlier chit chat about de-scoping / cutting back Crossrail may have emanated from the Crossrail team themselves, or those close to them - present the new team at the DfT (and indeed the Treasury) with a whole menu of possible substantive cuts to the project, then gently explain the consequences of said cuts, the inference being that actually opting for any such cut would seriously curtail significant benefits derived from the project and hence would be a daft thing to do. Plus of course there's the whole complex funding structure which is now in place which is based on the full project (rather than a cut back version which isn't what was agreed to). I wonder if Hammond's reticence about the timetable might possibly point to something that 'Bruce' suggested recently as a potential money saver - that of slower tunnelling and fewer TBMs ((or indeed just one of them)... Two might make sense. *Crossrail would not come into its own until there is a complete economic recovery. *That is likely to be some years away. *OTOH using one TBM would just be plain silly. *Two is the minimum sensible IMHO. Well, as Crossrail isn't due to open until 2017 even without delays; it's most likely that the economy will have sufficiently recovered to use the capacity that will be provided. |
#10
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On Jun 15, 8:57*pm, "tim...." wrote:
"Paul Scott" wrote in message ... "E27002" wrote in message .... On Jun 15, 11:10 am, "Paul Scott" wrote: ...during his visit to Canary Wharf station site. Hammond said: "The Government is committed to this project." He added: "We have no plans to reduce its scope. We want this project to be delivered in its entirety," he said. But he added that the Government wanted to ensure that Crossrail was delivered "with maximum value for the taxpayer". Worth watching the whole of the BBC video included on the webpage, the interviewer seems to cover most of the obvious questions ... http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/10323035.stm Thank you for posting. *This pronouncement has me completely confused as to the likely scope of Crossrail. Maidenhead and Heathrow to Shenfield and Abbeywood, as per the enabling Act, I'd have thought. *Anywhere else, such as Reading, is just froth.... Extension to Reading will cost nothing once the station has been rebuilt and GWR electrified Except for the extra Crossrail rolling stock needed to run the extra twelve(ish) miles in each direction. |
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