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#1
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![]() "Richard J." wrote in message .uk... BBC news report at http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/london/4031397.stm "A plan to run London Underground services for an extra hour on Friday and Saturday nights will be put to Londoners, the Mayor has said. Oh yeah are they going to put the idea to the Train Ops as well? |
#2
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redtube wrote:
"A plan to run London Underground services for an extra hour on Friday and Saturday nights will be put to Londoners, the Mayor has said. Oh yeah are they going to put the idea to the Train Ops as well? So a change to rosters, perhaps. What's wrong with that? Most staff who finish work late in the day will still have to rely upon getting home by car or night bus with the existing arrangements, I can't see what extra difficulties will be met with finishing say an hour or two later two nights a week. It seems the case is clear. You can have a later closed close down time at Weekends at the expense of a later start up time the following mornings? Perhaps we ought to be questioning whether or not the maintenance work can be fitted around slightly longer operational hours by retaining existing start up times and for two nights a week just loosing an hour or two at the end of the day. -- Phil Richards Strod Green, London Home page: http://www.philrichards1.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk |
#3
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Phil Richards wrote in message ET...
redtube wrote: "A plan to run London Underground services for an extra hour on Friday and Saturday nights will be put to Londoners, the Mayor has said. Oh yeah are they going to put the idea to the Train Ops as well? So a change to rosters, perhaps. What's wrong with that? Most staff who finish work late in the day will still have to rely upon getting home by car or night bus with the existing arrangements, I can't see what extra difficulties will be met with finishing say an hour or two later two nights a week. It seems the case is clear. You can have a later closed close down time at Weekends at the expense of a later start up time the following mornings? Perhaps we ought to be questioning whether or not the maintenance work can be fitted around slightly longer operational hours by retaining existing start up times and for two nights a week just loosing an hour or two at the end of the day. I really don't see this coming off. A few late over running engineering works and you wont see the first underground trains until after 8am. I can see London businesses tolerating that just so a few party goers on a Friday night don't need to get a taxi home. But typical of this country to treat the symptom and not the cause. |
#4
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On 23 Nov 2004, Kevin wrote:
typical of this country to treat the symptom and not the cause. Which is what? I'm not sure what you're getting at. tom -- REMOVE AND DESTROY |
#5
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Tom Anderson wrote in message ...
On 23 Nov 2004, Kevin wrote: typical of this country to treat the symptom and not the cause. Which is what? I'm not sure what you're getting at. tom The problem is with the fact that you can't get a taxi after 9pm let alone midnight unless it is an illegal minicab and if you are a woman you stand a good chence of getting attacked by the minicab driver. With taxi drivers (legal) making more than enough money working 9 to 5 they wont work during the night. And Ken Livinstone has done what to help this situation. Kevin |
#6
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On 24 Nov 2004, Kevin wrote:
Tom Anderson wrote in message ... On 23 Nov 2004, Kevin wrote: typical of this country to treat the symptom and not the cause. Which is what? I'm not sure what you're getting at. The problem is with the fact that you can't get a taxi after 9pm let alone midnight unless it is an illegal minicab and if you are a woman you stand a good chence of getting attacked by the minicab driver. With taxi drivers (legal) making more than enough money working 9 to 5 they wont work during the night. And Ken Livinstone has done what to help this situation. I think we have another problem here, which is that YOU ARE INSANE. The real problem is most definitely *not* that i can't get a taxi home. I don't want to get a taxi home! I want cheap, simple public transport home! I don't want to stick a tenner in some fat, racist, cyclist-murdering arsehole's pocket just so i can sleep in my own bed! The real cause is that our tube system requires far too much maintenance; the solution is to replace or renew the entire thing, with good-quality, well-designed tracks, trains and signals, and with enough redundancy that parts can be taken out of service without shutting the whole thing down (either New-York-style quadruple tubes, triple tubes, or some way of closing one of the pair of tubes and wrong-railing the trains past it). Sadly, this would cost about 2 to 2.5 hojillion pounds, so we can't do it. Therefore, we resort to palliative care, viz later tube opening. tom ps No offence, Mr Hughes! -- Understand the world we're living in |
#7
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Kevin wrote:
I really don't see this coming off. A few late over running engineering works and you wont see the first underground trains until after 8am. I can see London businesses tolerating that just so a few party goers on a Friday night don't need to get a taxi home. A "few" party goers? According to the figures on the BBC site 140,000 would use a later running tube service. 55,000 use the tube on during the first hour of the weekend. But typical of this country to treat the symptom and not the cause. So your solution would be? -- Phil Richards Strod Green, London Home page: http://www.philrichards1.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk |
#8
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Phil Richards wrote in message ET...
Kevin wrote: I really don't see this coming off. A few late over running engineering works and you wont see the first underground trains until after 8am. I can see London businesses tolerating that just so a few party goers on a Friday night don't need to get a taxi home. A "few" party goers? According to the figures on the BBC site 140,000 would use a later running tube service. 55,000 use the tube on during the first hour of the weekend. But typical of this country to treat the symptom and not the cause. So your solution would be? And what about the second hour. My comment was for late running engineering work, not the fact that between 5.30 and 6.30 the tube is hardly used. My solution is that people go home earlier. I can see this idea causing considerable problems for workers getting into work for Saturday morning, and travellers with early departures. It will will boil down to has more clout. The retail industry having problems getting workers in on Saturday morning and the hospitality industry because it can't stay open until some unearthly hour. Kevin |
#9
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Kevin wrote:
So your solution would be? And what about the second hour. My comment was for late running engineering work, not the fact that between 5.30 and 6.30 the tube is hardly used. Late running engineering work would have to be tackled the same way as it is at present. What we are effectively looking at is having the same length of time in which to let the engineers do their work as they have present. In a nutshell it's unacceptable that possessions overrun in the first place and I would guess as with the TOCs and Network Rail there is some sort of financial penalty. For the passenger it means they are delayed in getting to work, just the same as when the system screws itself up at 8am on a weekday morning for example. My solution is that people go home earlier. As long as the bars and clubs are open, people will stay there. They will find a way home. I can see this idea causing considerable problems for workers getting into work for Saturday morning, and travellers with early departures. It will will boil down to has more clout. Those with early departures? OK for flights, early long distance trains coaches etc. then they will have to take in to account these details when arranging their journey. I've caught Eurostar from Waterloo from where I live in North London well before the tube opens up. Easy answer, it's called a Night Bus. The retail industry having problems getting workers in on Saturday morning Of course shops have different opening hours. Most don't open until 9, many in Central London (including where I work) don't open until 10. Sundays it's either 10 or 11. You're really trying to say by postponing the tube start up from 05:30-ish to 06:30-ish will prevent people from getting to work on time? What I keep stressing is not gain an hour at the end of the day at the expense of an hour the next morning twice per week simply because the engineers need access to the line for every hour of every night. Why can't we close the system down an hour at the weekend or two later then re-open the times they currently do the next morning? The engineers etc. need to adapt, make their operations fit around the service pattern, not vice-versa. -- Phil Richards Strod Green, London Home page: http://www.philrichards1.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk |
#10
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Phil Richards wrote in message ET...
Kevin wrote: So your solution would be? And what about the second hour. My comment was for late running engineering work, not the fact that between 5.30 and 6.30 the tube is hardly used. Late running engineering work would have to be tackled the same way as it is at present. What we are effectively looking at is having the same length of time in which to let the engineers do their work as they have present. In a nutshell it's unacceptable that possessions overrun in the first place and I would guess as with the TOCs and Network Rail there is some sort of financial penalty. For the passenger it means they are delayed in getting to work, just the same as when the system screws itself up at 8am on a weekday morning for example. Lets face it, they wont be able to prevent overruns. At least at present, if the service starts an hour late the service does start before the main peak. If the start is now an hour later and there is an hour overun it will be a complete f**kup Those with early departures? OK for flights, early long distance trains coaches etc. then they will have to take in to account these details when arranging their journey. I've caught Eurostar from Waterloo from where I live in North London well before the tube opens up. Easy answer, it's called a Night Bus. If I need to get into London for 8am even now it is touch and go if I will trust the tube. Absolutely zero chance if this comes in. Look out for far more car usage. Of course shops have different opening hours. Most don't open until 9, many in Central London (including where I work) don't open until 10. Sundays it's either 10 or 11. You're really trying to say by postponing the tube start up from 05:30-ish to 06:30-ish will prevent people from getting to work on time? And shelf stackers, warehouse people. I bet there aren't many shop workers arrive 5 minutes before opening time. What I keep stressing is not gain an hour at the end of the day at the expense of an hour the next morning twice per week simply because the engineers need access to the line for every hour of every night. Why can't we close the system down an hour at the weekend or two later then re-open the times they currently do the next morning? The engineers etc. need to adapt, make their operations fit around the service pattern, not vice-versa. This is all interesting but I will lay odds that the London retail industry won't put up with it. Kevin |
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