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Oyster to Ebbsfleet?
In article , (Roland Perry)
wrote: In message , at 06:39:25 on Mon, 11 Aug 2014, remarked: From the context, and the fact they've been awarded a temporary extension while the DfT gets its act together for new tendering, I suggest it means "Short Term Agreement". See also: http://www.railwaygazette.com/news/p.../greater-angli a-direct-award-franchise-agreed.html Which does nothing to answer the question. "The short-term agreement features a £20m package of improvements which includes..." Your surmise then. No use of or decoding of the acronym. -- Colin Rosenstiel |
Oyster to Ebbsfleet?
In message , at 09:01:32
on Mon, 11 Aug 2014, remarked: From the context, and the fact they've been awarded a temporary extension while the DfT gets its act together for new tendering, I suggest it means "Short Term Agreement". See also: http://www.railwaygazette.com/news/p.../greater-angli a-direct-award-franchise-agreed.html Which does nothing to answer the question. "The short-term agreement features a £20m package of improvements which includes..." Your surmise then. No use of or decoding of the acronym. It's the only meaning that makes any sense. Especially as Abellio are crowing (in their stunningly inaccessible e-magazine) about how they have several unprecedented things happening in the STA period which map closely to those mentioned in the article. -- Roland Perry |
Oyster to Ebbsfleet?
In message , at 14:32:46 on
Mon, 11 Aug 2014, Paul Corfield remarked: Another possibility is they might use GN temporarily until through-running starts, but that leaves the Kings Lynn-Kings Cross services out on a limb. I understand they're going to call the Kings Lynn service the "Perry Express Rail Link" ;-) Today it's kind-of the "Fen Line" (in whose user-group magazine I've been featured giving a grumpy interview). But "Perry Express Ra*I*l Link" has a certain appeal. -- Roland Perry |
Oyster to Ebbsfleet?
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Oyster to Ebbsfleet?
On Monday, 11 August 2014 15:30:05 UTC+1, Roland Perry wrote:
In message , at 09:01:32 on Mon, 11 Aug 2014, remarked: Another possibility is they might use GN temporarily until through-running starts, but that leaves the Kings Lynn-Kings Cross services out on a limb. Look at the GTR material which makes the planned use of the "Great Northern" brand very clear, For the duration, or just until Thameslink 2018 is finished? Remember, I'm interested in what the PIS will say. Comments like this one (Wikipedia) don't count, because FCC don't call the trains GN (or even Thameslink) currently: "From September 2014 Govia will take over Great Northern and Thameslink routes from First Capital Connect, serving 122 stations and operating a fleet of 226 trains." http://www.govia.info/gtr/our-plans/ 'Thameslink' identity restored for services running through central core; 'Great Northern' for Kings Cross/Moorgate services. which says to me that the brand will be Great Northern for all services until 2018, after which it would be retained for the Kings Cross to Kings Lynn and the Moorgate to Welwyn and Hertford services only. |
Oyster to Ebbsfleet?
In article , (Roland Perry)
wrote: In message , at 09:01:32 on Mon, 11 Aug 2014, remarked: From the context, and the fact they've been awarded a temporary extension while the DfT gets its act together for new tendering, I suggest it means "Short Term Agreement". See also: http://www.railwaygazette.com/news/p...w/greater-angl ia-direct-award-franchise-agreed.html Which does nothing to answer the question. "The short-term agreement features a £20m package of improvements which includes..." Your surmise then. No use of or decoding of the acronym. It's the only meaning that makes any sense. Especially as Abellio are crowing (in their stunningly inaccessible e-magazine) about how they have several unprecedented things happening in the STA period which map closely to those mentioned in the article. I suppose there is that. Hardly transparent though. The inward-facing nature of the publication is also suggested by giving their intranet username and password. I wonder why? -- Colin Rosenstiel |
Oyster to Ebbsfleet?
In article , (Roland Perry)
wrote: In message , at 09:01:32 on Mon, 11 Aug 2014, remarked: Another possibility is they might use GN temporarily until through-running starts, but that leaves the Kings Lynn-Kings Cross services out on a limb. Look at the GTR material which makes the planned use of the "Great Northern" brand very clear, For the duration, or just until Thameslink 2018 is finished? Remember, I'm interested in what the PIS will say. Comments like this one (Wikipedia) don't count, because FCC don't call the trains GN (or even Thameslink) currently: "From September 2014 Govia will take over Great Northern and Thameslink routes from First Capital Connect, serving 122 stations and operating a fleet of 226 trains." It's just the name of the line, not the brand name of the service. I have in front of me "Factsheet 2" issued to stakeholders in Cambridge on 15th July. It has "Great Northern", "GTR" and "Govia" brands at the foot and shows the "Great Northern 'Outer' services" including those from 2018 via SPILL to Blackfriars and beyond. It's on the web at http://assets.goaheadbus.com/media/c...t%202%20-%20Gr eat%20Northern%20outer%20services.pdf It's all at http://www.govia.info/gtr/. even to argumentative Usenet users. Moi? If the cap fits, as we used to say. :-) See you at Tim and Kate's on Saturday? -- Colin Rosenstiel |
Oyster to Ebbsfleet?
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Oyster to Ebbsfleet?
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