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United councils spend £400k fighting High Speed 2

Carl Shillito Carl Shillito

NEARLY £400,000 has been pumped into the fight against High Speed 2 by a united group of 18 councils, including five from Bucks.

Freedom of Information figures reveal £388,803 was spent by the 51m group up until the end of July.

Last week, reader Carl Shillito, from Denham, called the contribution from Buckinghamshire County Council "an unacceptable drain on the county's depleted finances".

But BCC Leader and Chairman of 51m Cllr Martin Tett robustly defended the council's actions.

Mr Shillito, who obtained the figures, said they reinforce his views.

About £102,000 were spent on legal costs.

Mr Shillito, an HS2 supporter, despite the fact the line would run about half a mile from his house, claimed this figure could have been reduced by keeping services 'in house'.

He also objected to the 51m web site, when councils have their own.

The website costs ran to £3,395, with the overall communications figure at over £15,000.

Mr Shillito works in the railway industry but stressed his company has not been involved in any way in the consultancy process.

He has argued that, with the Government already spending money on the £33bn scheme carrying out the consultation and other work, it makes no sense for Local Government bodies to be spending taxes doing the opposite.

He said: “It is no use claiming that this expenditure is insignificant at the side of what the Government has spent on HS2.

“What the Government spends is out of its transport budget as approved by Parliament.

“What BCC and the other local authorities are spending is money that is supposed to be for local services, services that are under pressure and subject to cuts, and I believe this is quite wrong.”

Cllr Martin Tett said: “Mr Shilito is wrong in stating that expenditure on advising residents on HS2 has led to cuts in services.

“Expenditure on opposing HS2 has been drawn from reserves, rather than day to day revenue expenditure, specifically so that it does not impact negatively on day to day services.

“It is also very appropriate to note the vast amount of hard pressed taxpayers' money that both Central Government (£750m) and pro HS2 organisations are spending on consultants and public relations firms in order to promote HS2. Our expenditure is tiny by comparison.

“It is understandable that someone so enthusiastic for HS2 should be concerned at the excellent job being done in exposing the poor value for money that HS2 represents to the UK taxpayer and the far better alternatives which exist.”

He added the complexity of HS2 meant it was essential to get external professional legal advice, rather than using internal officers.

Comments(120)

JOHNHEALY says...
12:44pm Sat 11 Feb 12

Councillor Tett and his 51m group are a disgrace having spent £383,803 on the fight against HS2 when they have got precisely nowhere. What would have been better would have been to have used the money for a different and more realistic strategy where the end result is that we all get what we want at the best price.

wayneo says...
1:30pm Sat 11 Feb 12

JOHNHEALY wrote:
Councillor Tett and his 51m group are a disgrace having spent £383,803 on the fight against HS2 when they have got precisely nowhere. What would have been better would have been to have used the money for a different and more realistic strategy where the end result is that we all get what we want at the best price.
So what you are trying to say is accept it but try and influence it from the inside? Isn't that the same argument the Government used in order to prevent a vote on the referendum regarding Europe? The decisions have to be challenged early and decisively, your suggestion allows the Government to say, "ok we'll listen" proceed to do absolutely nothing then turn around and say "ok, we ignored your suggestion but we did listen". Legal action is as decisive as it is expensive, it's unfortunate that one has to take it in the first place but there's no other alternative if the Government is hell-bent on pursuing this folly.

Windsorian says...
1:33pm Sat 11 Feb 12

The difference is that the government has an electoral mandate to proceed, whilst the anti-HS2 brigade are looting Council tax tax-payers funds to oppose a project deemed to be in the national interest.

yog says...
3:43pm Sat 11 Feb 12

Criminal waste of money. Services are being cut by the Tories to fund this pointless campaign.

piran says...
7:09pm Sat 11 Feb 12

What a waste of my council taxes. On one hand Bucks CC reduces services yet can find thousands of pounds (Tett states it is from reserves - so what) to fund a political Anti HS2 campaign. It's shameful. If Bucks CC wants to fight then get voluntary monies not stealing my hard earned cash that I pay for services NOT Anti HS2 legal fees etc

miccles says...
8:27pm Sat 11 Feb 12

Absolulutely Disgusting,

Tett you should resign, because one day you will have no option but to go.

Even though you are spending "reserves", that money is intended for what it is called "RESERVES", not money to put against a project, that at the end of the day you are more than likely to lose, you have the nerve to cut vital services in the county, and people are going to suffer just because of you, just so that you can plough hundreds of thousands of pounds into this project, next year, the councils including BCC will probably raise the council tax, that will be more money for you to waste, you are a disgrace to the county.

RESIGN.

wayneo says...
8:48pm Sat 11 Feb 12

piran wrote:
What a waste of my council taxes. On one hand Bucks CC reduces services yet can find thousands of pounds (Tett states it is from reserves - so what) to fund a political Anti HS2 campaign. It's shameful. If Bucks CC wants to fight then get voluntary monies not stealing my hard earned cash that I pay for services NOT Anti HS2 legal fees etc
Planning is a service, challenging breaches of planning regulations therefore is something that has to be paid for or are you suggesting that he Council cherry pick which breaches it challenges?

wayneo says...
8:49pm Sat 11 Feb 12

yog wrote:
Criminal waste of money. Services are being cut by the Tories to fund this pointless campaign.
Are you telling voters that the LibDems wouldn't challenge it then Yog?

wayneo says...
8:51pm Sat 11 Feb 12

miccles wrote:
Absolulutely Disgusting,

Tett you should resign, because one day you will have no option but to go.

Even though you are spending "reserves", that money is intended for what it is called "RESERVES", not money to put against a project, that at the end of the day you are more than likely to lose, you have the nerve to cut vital services in the county, and people are going to suffer just because of you, just so that you can plough hundreds of thousands of pounds into this project, next year, the councils including BCC will probably raise the council tax, that will be more money for you to waste, you are a disgrace to the county.

RESIGN.
The government have lost many Court cases, might is not always right, I don't see, if there's a strong legal argument, why the Council would lose or subsequently why it would be a waste of money.

demoness the second says...
10:37pm Sat 11 Feb 12

wayneo wrote:
yog wrote:
Criminal waste of money. Services are being cut by the Tories to fund this pointless campaign.
Are you telling voters that the LibDems wouldn't challenge it then Yog?
They would see what would make them look good and then decide accordingly ;)

wayneo says...
11:02pm Sat 11 Feb 12

demoness the second wrote:
wayneo wrote:
yog wrote:
Criminal waste of money. Services are being cut by the Tories to fund this pointless campaign.
Are you telling voters that the LibDems wouldn't challenge it then Yog?
They would see what would make them look good and then decide accordingly ;)
My thoughts exactly DM :-) In others words, rather than having the courage of any conviction, like a windsock they react to the way they think the wind blows. I guess you can tell many LibDem supporters from the way they walk, having splinters in the @rse from sitting on fences must be painful.

IanBartlett says...
6:48am Sun 12 Feb 12

If Tett is so opposed to HS2, why doesn't he quit the Tory party? Trying to influence from the inside perhaps..? Why do I suspect he is more interested in his own political career. He is wasting OUR money...typical local politician with a small-minded view on the world and a voracious appetite for spending.

miccles says...
9:10am Sun 12 Feb 12

I hope the same people who think Tett is doing a good job, and is right in doing this, have some disabled/slow learning/mentally handicapped friends and relatives who will suffer under the cuts of Tett, and then you can just tell them "we don't want a train line, sorry, but you are going to have to suffer".

TETT SHOULD RESIGN BEFORE THE DAY COMES HE IS PUSHED.

wayneo says...
10:56am Sun 12 Feb 12

miccles wrote:
I hope the same people who think Tett is doing a good job, and is right in doing this, have some disabled/slow learning/mentally handicapped friends and relatives who will suffer under the cuts of Tett, and then you can just tell them "we don't want a train line, sorry, but you are going to have to suffer".

TETT SHOULD RESIGN BEFORE THE DAY COMES HE IS PUSHED.
You could of course apply the same logic to the Government couldn't you? They want to spend (at present) 32 Billion on a train line that will shave a few minutes off of train journeys, yet they have already cut the MOD's budget by 8 billion, Councils have had grant freezes for the second year running, cuts cuts cuts are the order of the day but we are going to borrow Billions to build a railway that not all of the Nation will be able to use. BONKERS.

Chiltonian says...
10:59am Sun 12 Feb 12

Bucks County Council have already spent over £200k fighting HS2- this doesnt include staff salaries and expenses. They will continue to do so. Yet on 55,000 people from the whole UK replied to HS2 consultation - a fraction came from Bucks! Why are the vast majority of people in Bucks not being represented here? The vast majority do not care a smaller number want to make sure that reasonable mitigation is put in place if the scheme proceeds. This is our tax money and this isn't how our money should be wasted! Where is the democracy in this stupid Marin Tett? He must go!

wayneo says...
11:09am Sun 12 Feb 12

IanBartlett wrote:
If Tett is so opposed to HS2, why doesn't he quit the Tory party? Trying to influence from the inside perhaps..? Why do I suspect he is more interested in his own political career. He is wasting OUR money...typical local politician with a small-minded view on the world and a voracious appetite for spending.
I expect he supports their core values, the problem is that the leader of the Conservatives isn't a Conservative.Besides
, other than him already being leader of one of the largest Councils in England, what makes you think that he would be carving out a Political career by taking the Government (one ruling party of which he is a member) to Court? It seems obvious to me, as it was with Robert Woollard and the Stadium, that there are Councillor's and Politicians who will put those that elected then first.

Chiltonian says...
11:11am Sun 12 Feb 12

This needs to be answered:

Did the candidates/party machinery of elected candidates currently leading the 51M Group of local councils include a clear commitment within respective manifestos, prior to the last set of elections, to pursue such policies?

If not, there are clear grounds to legally challenge their actions, through a Judicial Review of their decision to launch a Judicial Review.

I will sending an FOI to Bucks County Council on this basis and will report back.

Chiltonian says...
11:38am Sun 12 Feb 12

When are Bucks Free Press going to start providing some balance in their reporting on HS2? You are reporting to a very noisy minority in a way that you think they want to hear. I've listened to almost two years of your biased local spin - often verging on utter rubbish - most of it not even checked back to HS2 Ltd for their comment. There are VERY clear issues about the approach and stance of local authorities to date but no reporting into these matters from this paper. Isn't it time you local journalists started to raise your own bar and start acting like professionals?

Windsorian says...
11:42am Sun 12 Feb 12

Chiltonian wrote:
This needs to be answered: Did the candidates/party machinery of elected candidates currently leading the 51M Group of local councils include a clear commitment within respective manifestos, prior to the last set of elections, to pursue such policies? If not, there are clear grounds to legally challenge their actions, through a Judicial Review of their decision to launch a Judicial Review. I will sending an FOI to Bucks County Council on this basis and will report back.
Well said Chiltonian, a man after my own heart !

piran says...
12:14pm Sun 12 Feb 12

Chiltonian wrote:
Bucks County Council have already spent over £200k fighting HS2- this doesnt include staff salaries and expenses. They will continue to do so. Yet on 55,000 people from the whole UK replied to HS2 consultation - a fraction came from Bucks! Why are the vast majority of people in Bucks not being represented here? The vast majority do not care a smaller number want to make sure that reasonable mitigation is put in place if the scheme proceeds. This is our tax money and this isn't how our money should be wasted! Where is the democracy in this stupid Marin Tett? He must go!
Totally agree

Chiltonian says...
1:34pm Sun 12 Feb 12

piran wrote:
What a waste of my council taxes. On one hand Bucks CC reduces services yet can find thousands of pounds (Tett states it is from reserves - so what) to fund a political Anti HS2 campaign. It's shameful. If Bucks CC wants to fight then get voluntary monies not stealing my hard earned cash that I pay for services NOT Anti HS2 legal fees etc
From what reserves ...the one they lost to the Icelandic Bank?

moonshot says...
4:17pm Sun 12 Feb 12

I have to admit that from where i am ( Manchester ) , Mr Tett does the voters of Bucks CC absolutely no favours whatsoever......this guy clearly has his own agenda and self interest at heart. The sooner you vote the idiot out the better ......

wayneo says...
4:21pm Sun 12 Feb 12

Chiltonian wrote:
When are Bucks Free Press going to start providing some balance in their reporting on HS2? You are reporting to a very noisy minority in a way that you think they want to hear. I've listened to almost two years of your biased local spin - often verging on utter rubbish - most of it not even checked back to HS2 Ltd for their comment. There are VERY clear issues about the approach and stance of local authorities to date but no reporting into these matters from this paper. Isn't it time you local journalists started to raise your own bar and start acting like professionals?
Isn't providing Mr Carr with column inches balanced then?

wayneo says...
4:22pm Sun 12 Feb 12

moonshot wrote:
I have to admit that from where i am ( Manchester ) , Mr Tett does the voters of Bucks CC absolutely no favours whatsoever......this guy clearly has his own agenda and self interest at heart. The sooner you vote the idiot out the better ......
If it is so clear, perhaps you could explain to the rest of us what that agenda and self interest is?

miccles says...
5:28pm Sun 12 Feb 12

wayneo wrote:
moonshot wrote:
I have to admit that from where i am ( Manchester ) , Mr Tett does the voters of Bucks CC absolutely no favours whatsoever......this guy clearly has his own agenda and self interest at heart. The sooner you vote the idiot out the better ......
If it is so clear, perhaps you could explain to the rest of us what that agenda and self interest is?
Well if you cannot work out by now what the "self interest" is by now, then that is a very poor state to be in, don't you think?

By the way you side tracked my earlier question above

Would you like to explain to a close relative/friend who is either a slow learner, or who is mentally handicapped, or is severley disabled that their care/services are being cut dramatically because a train line is more important that their day to day needs?

miccles says...
5:55pm Sun 12 Feb 12

moonshot wrote:
I have to admit that from where i am ( Manchester ) , Mr Tett does the voters of Bucks CC absolutely no favours whatsoever......this guy clearly has his own agenda and self interest at heart. The sooner you vote the idiot out the better ......
I couldn't agree with you more.

IanBartlett says...
7:14pm Sun 12 Feb 12

This will be the last political job Martin Tett ever has. As his arguments unravel, his temporary support will melt away and he'll be left isolated. I thought it was pretty much only me in the Chilterns who felt this way about Stop HS2 and its vocal supporters, but it seems not...

wayneo says...
7:35pm Sun 12 Feb 12

miccles wrote:
wayneo wrote:
moonshot wrote:
I have to admit that from where i am ( Manchester ) , Mr Tett does the voters of Bucks CC absolutely no favours whatsoever......this guy clearly has his own agenda and self interest at heart. The sooner you vote the idiot out the better ......
If it is so clear, perhaps you could explain to the rest of us what that agenda and self interest is?
Well if you cannot work out by now what the "self interest" is by now, then that is a very poor state to be in, don't you think?

By the way you side tracked my earlier question above

Would you like to explain to a close relative/friend who is either a slow learner, or who is mentally handicapped, or is severley disabled that their care/services are being cut dramatically because a train line is more important that their day to day needs?
It's not that I "can't work it out", it's that I don't know of any self-interest, I'd therefore be eternally grateful if it is so clear, as to what this self interest is.
!
As for your friend who is having care "dramatically cut", I'm not side-stepping the question, I don't know the answer to it and as you are relying on hearsay rather than solid facts, it doesn't appear that you do either; maybe you could provide the details so that we can make a proper assessment rather than what your mate claims. Anyway, as a result, I stated that you could apply the same question to HS2 on a national scale.

Carl@Denham says...
9:49pm Sun 12 Feb 12

Just a brief word in support of BFP journalists. The BFP has been steadfastly anti-HS2 like all the other local media and circulation has probably benefitted from sales to anti-HS2 types chuffed at seeing their photo in the paper. However the BFP has covered my campaign to put Mr Tett on the spot and even published an editorial coming out against using taxpayers' money to fight HS2. And they put my photo in the paper 2 weeks running much to my eternal embarassment. So a bit of welcome balance in the HS2 debate at last, good for BFP. I only hope that our councillors take on board the arguments and abandon their ludicrous, expensive and doomed plan to mount a legal challenge.

Carl@Denham says...
9:49pm Sun 12 Feb 12

Just a brief word in support of BFP journalists. The BFP has been steadfastly anti-HS2 like all the other local media and circulation has probably benefitted from sales to anti-HS2 types chuffed at seeing their photo in the paper. However the BFP has covered my campaign to put Mr Tett on the spot and even published an editorial coming out against using taxpayers' money to fight HS2. And they put my photo in the paper 2 weeks running much to my eternal embarassment. So a bit of welcome balance in the HS2 debate at last, good for BFP. I only hope that our councillors take on board the arguments and abandon their ludicrous, expensive and doomed plan to mount a legal challenge.

piran says...
10:07pm Sun 12 Feb 12

IanBartlett wrote:
This will be the last political job Martin Tett ever has. As his arguments unravel, his temporary support will melt away and he'll be left isolated. I thought it was pretty much only me in the Chilterns who felt this way about Stop HS2 and its vocal supporters, but it seems not...
Martin Tett, in a letter to my MP (he would not reply to my emails only when my MP wrote on my behalf - shows what sort of person Tett is!!) told me that I and only 1 other person were for HS2 in Buckinghamshire and he had lots of emails, letters and phone calls supporting his misuse of council tax money to fight HS2. Glad to see that there are more than 2 of us objecting to him!

Chiltonian says...
10:17pm Sun 12 Feb 12

Carl. Well done for at least getting some balance with a story. Perhaps I am being a bit too hard on BFP. However, what does annoy me is that they will often run a silly story without getting a quote from HS2 themselves - that seems unfair.

piran says...
10:22pm Sun 12 Feb 12

Carl@Denham wrote:
Just a brief word in support of BFP journalists. The BFP has been steadfastly anti-HS2 like all the other local media and circulation has probably benefitted from sales to anti-HS2 types chuffed at seeing their photo in the paper. However the BFP has covered my campaign to put Mr Tett on the spot and even published an editorial coming out against using taxpayers' money to fight HS2. And they put my photo in the paper 2 weeks running much to my eternal embarassment. So a bit of welcome balance in the HS2 debate at last, good for BFP. I only hope that our councillors take on board the arguments and abandon their ludicrous, expensive and doomed plan to mount a legal challenge.
Carl I doubt it. Like you am fed up with the Anti HS2 bias. I wrote to Cllr Tett about wasting of council taxes in a legal battle. He could no be bothered to reply. Then I wrote, via my MP and surprise surprise I got a reply and Tett said money was from reserves (so did not affect services!!) and only 2 people, myself being one had objected to his misuse of tax payers money but he had much support by email, letter and phone calls! I hope those who object to his blatantly political misuses of council taxes will email or write to him to tell him thare are more than 2 of us in Buckinghamshire that do object!!

Chiltonian says...
10:23pm Sun 12 Feb 12

piran wrote:
IanBartlett wrote:
This will be the last political job Martin Tett ever has. As his arguments unravel, his temporary support will melt away and he'll be left isolated. I thought it was pretty much only me in the Chilterns who felt this way about Stop HS2 and its vocal supporters, but it seems not...
Martin Tett, in a letter to my MP (he would not reply to my emails only when my MP wrote on my behalf - shows what sort of person Tett is!!) told me that I and only 1 other person were for HS2 in Buckinghamshire and he had lots of emails, letters and phone calls supporting his misuse of council tax money to fight HS2. Glad to see that there are more than 2 of us objecting to him!
Read the HS2 Consultation Report and see how many people from Bucks bothered to reply. Then compare this to the number of people in Bucks. Tett is supporting a small load minority - and enjoying the sily limelight. Most in Bucks dont care. Ive spoken to loads of people in Bucks who barely know what HS2 is.

Carl@Denham says...
10:34pm Sun 12 Feb 12

Sorry about the duplicated entry by the way, must stop trying to do things on my stupid phone!

miccles says...
10:43pm Sun 12 Feb 12

wayneo wrote:
miccles wrote:
wayneo wrote:
moonshot wrote:
I have to admit that from where i am ( Manchester ) , Mr Tett does the voters of Bucks CC absolutely no favours whatsoever......this guy clearly has his own agenda and self interest at heart. The sooner you vote the idiot out the better ......
If it is so clear, perhaps you could explain to the rest of us what that agenda and self interest is?
Well if you cannot work out by now what the "self interest" is by now, then that is a very poor state to be in, don't you think?

By the way you side tracked my earlier question above

Would you like to explain to a close relative/friend who is either a slow learner, or who is mentally handicapped, or is severley disabled that their care/services are being cut dramatically because a train line is more important that their day to day needs?
It's not that I "can't work it out", it's that I don't know of any self-interest, I'd therefore be eternally grateful if it is so clear, as to what this self interest is.
!
As for your friend who is having care "dramatically cut", I'm not side-stepping the question, I don't know the answer to it and as you are relying on hearsay rather than solid facts, it doesn't appear that you do either; maybe you could provide the details so that we can make a proper assessment rather than what your mate claims. Anyway, as a result, I stated that you could apply the same question to HS2 on a national scale.
"Would you explain to a close relative/friend who is either a slow learner, or who is mentally handicapped, or is severley disabled that their care/services are being cut dramatically because a train line is more important than their day to day needs?"

This is just a simple question YES or NO??????

If you can't answer this time, then i will take it that you don't care about these people's needs at all.

wayneo says...
12:41am Mon 13 Feb 12

miccles wrote:
wayneo wrote:
miccles wrote:
wayneo wrote:
moonshot wrote:
I have to admit that from where i am ( Manchester ) , Mr Tett does the voters of Bucks CC absolutely no favours whatsoever......this guy clearly has his own agenda and self interest at heart. The sooner you vote the idiot out the better ......
If it is so clear, perhaps you could explain to the rest of us what that agenda and self interest is?
Well if you cannot work out by now what the "self interest" is by now, then that is a very poor state to be in, don't you think?

By the way you side tracked my earlier question above

Would you like to explain to a close relative/friend who is either a slow learner, or who is mentally handicapped, or is severley disabled that their care/services are being cut dramatically because a train line is more important that their day to day needs?
It's not that I "can't work it out", it's that I don't know of any self-interest, I'd therefore be eternally grateful if it is so clear, as to what this self interest is.
!
As for your friend who is having care "dramatically cut", I'm not side-stepping the question, I don't know the answer to it and as you are relying on hearsay rather than solid facts, it doesn't appear that you do either; maybe you could provide the details so that we can make a proper assessment rather than what your mate claims. Anyway, as a result, I stated that you could apply the same question to HS2 on a national scale.
"Would you explain to a close relative/friend who is either a slow learner, or who is mentally handicapped, or is severley disabled that their care/services are being cut dramatically because a train line is more important than their day to day needs?"

This is just a simple question YES or NO??????

If you can't answer this time, then i will take it that you don't care about these people's needs at all.
So what is your friend, a slow learner, mentally handicapped,severely disabled or all three? Did you just make this up in a misguided attempt at an appeal to emotion? I'm not saying is not true but you haven't provided me with and I'm not aware of any evidence that supports your little story. Secondly, having ignored my request for you to provide proof as the onus probanti is on you having made the claim, your appeal to emotion and the insinuation that I "don't care about these people's needs at all", can be attributed to a fallacy known as false attrition; it's a shame that you have insinuated that I don't care about disabled persons because I happen to agree with the Council mounting a legal challenge against a project that in my opinion is foolhardy, unwanted and wrong, for the most part I agree with what you have to say on many topics but I don't recall you stooping to such a level before which is a shame.

miccles says...
7:45am Mon 13 Feb 12

wayneo wrote:
miccles wrote:
wayneo wrote:
miccles wrote:
wayneo wrote:
moonshot wrote:
I have to admit that from where i am ( Manchester ) , Mr Tett does the voters of Bucks CC absolutely no favours whatsoever......this guy clearly has his own agenda and self interest at heart. The sooner you vote the idiot out the better ......
If it is so clear, perhaps you could explain to the rest of us what that agenda and self interest is?
Well if you cannot work out by now what the "self interest" is by now, then that is a very poor state to be in, don't you think?

By the way you side tracked my earlier question above

Would you like to explain to a close relative/friend who is either a slow learner, or who is mentally handicapped, or is severley disabled that their care/services are being cut dramatically because a train line is more important that their day to day needs?
It's not that I "can't work it out", it's that I don't know of any self-interest, I'd therefore be eternally grateful if it is so clear, as to what this self interest is.
!
As for your friend who is having care "dramatically cut", I'm not side-stepping the question, I don't know the answer to it and as you are relying on hearsay rather than solid facts, it doesn't appear that you do either; maybe you could provide the details so that we can make a proper assessment rather than what your mate claims. Anyway, as a result, I stated that you could apply the same question to HS2 on a national scale.
"Would you explain to a close relative/friend who is either a slow learner, or who is mentally handicapped, or is severley disabled that their care/services are being cut dramatically because a train line is more important than their day to day needs?"

This is just a simple question YES or NO??????

If you can't answer this time, then i will take it that you don't care about these people's needs at all.
So what is your friend, a slow learner, mentally handicapped,severely disabled or all three? Did you just make this up in a misguided attempt at an appeal to emotion? I'm not saying is not true but you haven't provided me with and I'm not aware of any evidence that supports your little story. Secondly, having ignored my request for you to provide proof as the onus probanti is on you having made the claim, your appeal to emotion and the insinuation that I "don't care about these people's needs at all", can be attributed to a fallacy known as false attrition; it's a shame that you have insinuated that I don't care about disabled persons because I happen to agree with the Council mounting a legal challenge against a project that in my opinion is foolhardy, unwanted and wrong, for the most part I agree with what you have to say on many topics but I don't recall you stooping to such a level before which is a shame.
Again, you failed to answer, a simple question, i cannot put it in more simple english, who said anything about being a friend of mine??, its just a simple question, to which you have to answer "Yes i would explain" or "No i wouldn't explain", and this time if you side step the answer, then i will take the answer as NO.

I can't put it any more straight forward than this.



"Would you explain to a close relative/friend who is either a slow learner, or who is mentally handicapped, or is severley disabled that their care/services are being cut dramatically because a train line is more important than their day to day needs?"

This is just a simple question YES or NO??????

If you can't answer this time, then i will take it that you don't care about these people's needs at all.

Windsorian says...
9:06am Mon 13 Feb 12

I see the barrack room lawyer has been at it again, this time with his "onus probanti" claim.

Going back to an earlier post, perhaps he (or she!) could tell us which council(s) were not informed of the HS2 Route 3 proposal - so we can check the council minutes and whether they ever made a submission to the HS2 Consultation?

GloPen says...
10:40am Mon 13 Feb 12

If HS2 goes ahead there will be ongoing costs to be paid for out of our taxes for at least sixty years, probably much longer; unless the debt is written off as an investment, as with HS1. In which case why can’t our £1,004bn national debt be written off as investments and be done with it? That would save the country around £2.3 billion a week in interest incurrence, some of which could be spent on technically advancing our great Victorian railway network, developing new clean modes of transport and promoting Business Boarders and Walk for Work schemes.

If a fraction of our local taxes is spent now, to prevent HS2 from being constructed to destruct, then in the long term there will be more of our hard earned taxes to spend to everyone’s practical advantage - rich and poor, young and old, able bodied and disabled, north and south alike.

You are not happy contributing to the £400,000 to be spent to defend our country’s future wellbeing, when you are happy to pay towards the increasing £2,300,000,000 weekly interest payments on our national debt, which will get even worse by building HS2? That’s where the money needed to support our welfare programme is going!

If HS2 can guarantee the national profit it promises, guarantee its ability to prevent rather than cause an increase in carbon emissions into the atmosphere, and prove that they have majority national support for this project I may eat my words. But I really don’t think they can.

wayneo says...
12:05pm Mon 13 Feb 12

miccles wrote:
wayneo wrote:
miccles wrote:
wayneo wrote:
miccles wrote:
wayneo wrote:
moonshot wrote: I have to admit that from where i am ( Manchester ) , Mr Tett does the voters of Bucks CC absolutely no favours whatsoever......this guy clearly has his own agenda and self interest at heart. The sooner you vote the idiot out the better ......
If it is so clear, perhaps you could explain to the rest of us what that agenda and self interest is?
Well if you cannot work out by now what the "self interest" is by now, then that is a very poor state to be in, don't you think? By the way you side tracked my earlier question above Would you like to explain to a close relative/friend who is either a slow learner, or who is mentally handicapped, or is severley disabled that their care/services are being cut dramatically because a train line is more important that their day to day needs?
It's not that I "can't work it out", it's that I don't know of any self-interest, I'd therefore be eternally grateful if it is so clear, as to what this self interest is. ! As for your friend who is having care "dramatically cut", I'm not side-stepping the question, I don't know the answer to it and as you are relying on hearsay rather than solid facts, it doesn't appear that you do either; maybe you could provide the details so that we can make a proper assessment rather than what your mate claims. Anyway, as a result, I stated that you could apply the same question to HS2 on a national scale.
"Would you explain to a close relative/friend who is either a slow learner, or who is mentally handicapped, or is severley disabled that their care/services are being cut dramatically because a train line is more important than their day to day needs?" This is just a simple question YES or NO?????? If you can't answer this time, then i will take it that you don't care about these people's needs at all.
So what is your friend, a slow learner, mentally handicapped,severely disabled or all three? Did you just make this up in a misguided attempt at an appeal to emotion? I'm not saying is not true but you haven't provided me with and I'm not aware of any evidence that supports your little story. Secondly, having ignored my request for you to provide proof as the onus probanti is on you having made the claim, your appeal to emotion and the insinuation that I "don't care about these people's needs at all", can be attributed to a fallacy known as false attrition; it's a shame that you have insinuated that I don't care about disabled persons because I happen to agree with the Council mounting a legal challenge against a project that in my opinion is foolhardy, unwanted and wrong, for the most part I agree with what you have to say on many topics but I don't recall you stooping to such a level before which is a shame.
Again, you failed to answer, a simple question, i cannot put it in more simple english, who said anything about being a friend of mine??, its just a simple question, to which you have to answer "Yes i would explain" or "No i wouldn't explain", and this time if you side step the answer, then i will take the answer as NO. I can't put it any more straight forward than this. "Would you explain to a close relative/friend who is either a slow learner, or who is mentally handicapped, or is severley disabled that their care/services are being cut dramatically because a train line is more important than their day to day needs?" This is just a simple question YES or NO?????? If you can't answer this time, then i will take it that you don't care about these people's needs at all.
Your question is no only erroneous it is also fallacious, your assertion that it is a matter of a simple "YES or NO" is not correct; unless you can provide evidence of any so called cuts then they remain but a figment of your imagination, secondly, if you were to provide any evidence of cuts, then you you would also have to identify where one is incidental to the other, in other words are services being cut as you say because money is being made available to HS2? Is the Council legally bound from using monies attributed to one budget for another? The COuncil spends a considerable amount of monies on challenges to planning etc and it is for the Council to justify how any money is spent but there would be no need to spend any money in the first place if the Government had conducted itself properly in the first place.

wayneo says...
12:32pm Mon 13 Feb 12

GloPen wrote:
If HS2 goes ahead there will be ongoing costs to be paid for out of our taxes for at least sixty years, probably much longer; unless the debt is written off as an investment, as with HS1. In which case why can’t our £1,004bn national debt be written off as investments and be done with it? That would save the country around £2.3 billion a week in interest incurrence, some of which could be spent on technically advancing our great Victorian railway network, developing new clean modes of transport and promoting Business Boarders and Walk for Work schemes. If a fraction of our local taxes is spent now, to prevent HS2 from being constructed to destruct, then in the long term there will be more of our hard earned taxes to spend to everyone’s practical advantage - rich and poor, young and old, able bodied and disabled, north and south alike. You are not happy contributing to the £400,000 to be spent to defend our country’s future wellbeing, when you are happy to pay towards the increasing £2,300,000,000 weekly interest payments on our national debt, which will get even worse by building HS2? That’s where the money needed to support our welfare programme is going! If HS2 can guarantee the national profit it promises, guarantee its ability to prevent rather than cause an increase in carbon emissions into the atmosphere, and prove that they have majority national support for this project I may eat my words. But I really don’t think they can.
Very good points, I can't quite understand how we can even conceive, let alone commit to such infrastructure projects such as this while still borrowing merely to service the debt we currently have. The 32,000,000,000 estimate is likely to to an under estimate rather when one takes into consideration interest, overuns etc.

Edwina Lee says...
3:36pm Mon 13 Feb 12

Our quantitative easing programme amounts to 100s of billion of pounds (e.g. £325 billion dec 2010 to purchase assets in QE2). These did not create assets for the future world.

We are coming up to QE3, and this should be applied to create assets of higher value than the QE.

Hence, renewable energy projects, high speed rail projects, . . . should be the objectives of QE3.

We need higher asset ratio in UK and to transition to a green sustainable economy through these infrastructures in order to adapt to a more crowded and resource scarcity world.

wayneo says...
4:27pm Mon 13 Feb 12

Edwina Lee wrote:
Our quantitative easing programme amounts to 100s of billion of pounds (e.g. £325 billion dec 2010 to purchase assets in QE2). These did not create assets for the future world. We are coming up to QE3, and this should be applied to create assets of higher value than the QE. Hence, renewable energy projects, high speed rail projects, . . . should be the objectives of QE3. We need higher asset ratio in UK and to transition to a green sustainable economy through these infrastructures in order to adapt to a more crowded and resource scarcity world.
The effects from quantitive easing won't be felt for some time and i'm afraid it's inevitable that higher inflation will follow, despite that, even with QE, banks aren't lending and people aren't spending so with growth at 0.2% we are stagnant.Your thoughts on promoting growth with the likes of High Speed rail or other infrastructure projects is puzzling, If you are going to use public funds as a means of stimulating growth, you might as well not have bothered with cuts in the first place, fiscal stimulae didn't work with the last Government it won't work with future Government, the way you promote more revenue is to make it cheaper to do business, lower taxes, lower rates and less interference from the state is a good start. Building a railway is not going to fix an economy neither is blighting the country with windfarms.

GloPen says...
5:23pm Mon 13 Feb 12

Edwina Lee wrote:
Our quantitative easing programme amounts to 100s of billion of pounds (e.g. £325 billion dec 2010 to purchase assets in QE2). These did not create assets for the future world.

We are coming up to QE3, and this should be applied to create assets of higher value than the QE.

Hence, renewable energy projects, high speed rail projects, . . . should be the objectives of QE3.

We need higher asset ratio in UK and to transition to a green sustainable economy through these infrastructures in order to adapt to a more crowded and resource scarcity world.
Doesn't QE just pass the problem on for the next generation to sort out?
I would say pass the buck, but pass the negative pound is more apt.

For assets to be assets, don't they have to be paid for?

If we want a green sustainable economy then we have to stop people from depending on power so much and from creating urban sprawl under relaxed planning laws.

HS2 is being built to encourage crowds to travel, and the people in these crowds will need more resources, so I can't see how this particular infrastructure is going to help us to become green or to have a sustainable economy.

GloPen says...
5:59pm Mon 13 Feb 12

GloPen wrote:
Edwina Lee wrote:
Our quantitative easing programme amounts to 100s of billion of pounds (e.g. £325 billion dec 2010 to purchase assets in QE2). These did not create assets for the future world.

We are coming up to QE3, and this should be applied to create assets of higher value than the QE.

Hence, renewable energy projects, high speed rail projects, . . . should be the objectives of QE3.

We need higher asset ratio in UK and to transition to a green sustainable economy through these infrastructures in order to adapt to a more crowded and resource scarcity world.
Doesn't QE just pass the problem on for the next generation to sort out?
I would say pass the buck, but pass the negative pound is more apt.

For assets to be assets, don't they have to be paid for?

If we want a green sustainable economy then we have to stop people from depending on power so much and from creating urban sprawl under relaxed planning laws.

HS2 is being built to encourage crowds to travel, and the people in these crowds will need more resources, so I can't see how this particular infrastructure is going to help us to become green or to have a sustainable economy.
p.s. The assets you speak of must be the 'useful things' kind rather than the 'owned by' kind.

Edwina Lee says...
7:41pm Mon 13 Feb 12

The internet is the biggest relationship creator in history. I postulate that in future, people will want to travel to meet all over the world more than ever, and production of stuff will decline dramatically.

Therefore, it makes tremendous sense to make travelling as efficient as possible.

Hence, I see railways as a key component of future infrastructure.

GloPen says...
9:55pm Mon 13 Feb 12

Edwina Lee wrote:
The internet is the biggest relationship creator in history. I postulate that in future, people will want to travel to meet all over the world more than ever, and production of stuff will decline dramatically.

Therefore, it makes tremendous sense to make travelling as efficient as possible.

Hence, I see railways as a key component of future infrastructure.
Yes I agree the internet brings people into contact, and that may lead to travel. But the internet will also enable people to work without the need to travel, and work during travel.

However, people cannot live by internet alone - they will always need many things to be produced and recycled.

For future clean efficient travel, my fare goes to the hybrid airship.

Edwina Lee says...
11:37pm Mon 13 Feb 12

GloPen wrote:
Edwina Lee wrote:
The internet is the biggest relationship creator in history. I postulate that in future, people will want to travel to meet all over the world more than ever, and production of stuff will decline dramatically.

Therefore, it makes tremendous sense to make travelling as efficient as possible.

Hence, I see railways as a key component of future infrastructure.
Yes I agree the internet brings people into contact, and that may lead to travel. But the internet will also enable people to work without the need to travel, and work during travel.

However, people cannot live by internet alone - they will always need many things to be produced and recycled.

For future clean efficient travel, my fare goes to the hybrid airship.
Airship would be my favourite tourism vehicle, but its size will limit the number of people who can be in air at any time. Tremendous potential!

Stuff are getting lighter, smaller. Books will be electronic. TV screens & computers will be paper thin. So housing needs to be much smaller & less energy is required to run them.

Passive enjoyment of film, music will get less & less revenue because the world accumulated so much.

Active participation will be the future of the economy in music, entertainment, games, sports, travel, learning. etc.

Won't need many manufacturig workers after countries become developed.

Windsorian says...
9:34am Tue 14 Feb 12

For airship, read "Wind Bags".

GloPen says...
2:44pm Tue 14 Feb 12

Windsorian wrote:
For airship, read "Wind Bags".
If wind bags are good enough for the Royal Navy they are good enough for me!

markskoyles says...
6:26pm Tue 14 Feb 12

Waste of public money!

I wonder how far Cllr Tetts house is from the proposed line...?

Chiltonian says...
10:28pm Tue 14 Feb 12

markskoyles wrote:
Waste of public money!

I wonder how far Cllr Tetts house is from the proposed line...?
Easy = on BucksCC website:
Amersham Way Little Chalfont Amersham HP6 6SG

Nick1042 says...
11:19am Wed 15 Feb 12

Chiltonian wrote:
markskoyles wrote:
Waste of public money!

I wonder how far Cllr Tetts house is from the proposed line...?
Easy = on BucksCC website:
Amersham Way Little Chalfont Amersham HP6 6SG
I wonder how far your's and markskoyles' houses are from the proposed line?

piran says...
11:31am Wed 15 Feb 12

Nick1042 wrote:
Chiltonian wrote:
markskoyles wrote:
Waste of public money!

I wonder how far Cllr Tetts house is from the proposed line...?
Easy = on BucksCC website:
Amersham Way Little Chalfont Amersham HP6 6SG
I wonder how far your's and markskoyles' houses are from the proposed line?
Totally irrelevant or are you a NIMBY?

Nick1042 says...
2:59pm Wed 15 Feb 12

Why is is relevant where Cllr Tett lives? and once again I am not a Nimby, getting bored of you calling me that.

piran says...
3:46pm Wed 15 Feb 12

If you cannot undestand why someone wanted to know where Cllr Tett lives you are on a different planet. Interestingly the vocal minority of NIMBYs in Buckinghamshire are close to the HS2 route so do not want their comfortable lives changed by this vital NATIONAL project. Are you close to the route or do you live in Wales??

miccles says...
4:10pm Wed 15 Feb 12

piran wrote:
If you cannot undestand why someone wanted to know where Cllr Tett lives you are on a different planet. Interestingly the vocal minority of NIMBYs in Buckinghamshire are close to the HS2 route so do not want their comfortable lives changed by this vital NATIONAL project. Are you close to the route or do you live in Wales??
The pieces of the jigsaw are coming together now, if Tett lived in Marlow, or even High Wycombe, he wouldn't give a hoot about his beloved train line.

TETT should still resign, along with his glove puppett Liddington aswell.

piran says...
4:20pm Wed 15 Feb 12

Cllr Tett in a letter to my MP said that only 2 people (me plus 1) have object to his Anti HS2 camapaign and misuse of our council tax reserves. I think he is in a fanstasy world! How dare he misappropriate council tax reserves to fight a political campaign (that he knows will fail) of behalf of a vocal minority in Buckinghamshire and on the HS2 route.

Nick1042 says...
4:56pm Wed 15 Feb 12

piran wrote:
If you cannot undestand why someone wanted to know where Cllr Tett lives you are on a different planet. Interestingly the vocal minority of NIMBYs in Buckinghamshire are close to the HS2 route so do not want their comfortable lives changed by this vital NATIONAL project. Are you close to the route or do you live in Wales??
If somebody wants to know where Cllr Tett lives then why can't we know where the people are asking from? Because it is very easy to throw the name calling NIMBY thing around when you will not be effected at all.

I think you have a problem because I have commented against many of your posts and say several times that I live in Bucks but am not a NIMBY as I do not live anywhere near the proposed route. Also (you may not believe this as you keep saying it is only people in Bucks against HS2) but I was near Shrewsbury at the weekend visiting family and in a local pub there we got speaking to a group of people who were disgusted at the idea of HS2. And once again there are groups in Warwickshire, Leciestershire, Northamptonshire, Oxfordshire and London against HS2 so please stop the whole minority against HS2 are Bucks Nimbys name calling.

Nick1042 says...
4:58pm Wed 15 Feb 12

The only minority are the ones in favour of HS2!

piran says...
5:27pm Wed 15 Feb 12

Nick1042 wrote:
piran wrote:
If you cannot undestand why someone wanted to know where Cllr Tett lives you are on a different planet. Interestingly the vocal minority of NIMBYs in Buckinghamshire are close to the HS2 route so do not want their comfortable lives changed by this vital NATIONAL project. Are you close to the route or do you live in Wales??
If somebody wants to know where Cllr Tett lives then why can't we know where the people are asking from? Because it is very easy to throw the name calling NIMBY thing around when you will not be effected at all.

I think you have a problem because I have commented against many of your posts and say several times that I live in Bucks but am not a NIMBY as I do not live anywhere near the proposed route. Also (you may not believe this as you keep saying it is only people in Bucks against HS2) but I was near Shrewsbury at the weekend visiting family and in a local pub there we got speaking to a group of people who were disgusted at the idea of HS2. And once again there are groups in Warwickshire, Leciestershire, Northamptonshire, Oxfordshire and London against HS2 so please stop the whole minority against HS2 are Bucks Nimbys name calling.
We will all be affected in some way, not just a few on the actual HS2 route; be it in our taxes or disruption as the project is built. The big difference is that many of us who support HS2 have vision for the future and realise the need to invest for 2026+ when integrated transport capacity is needed to grow our economy. Or do you want a miserable future for our children and grandchildren with more motorways built, or constant re-building/disrupti
on as current railways are modified, or more canals are dug? Or is your plan to condemn the UK in 2050 to become a vast heritage site with huge numbers of unemployed?

Windsorian says...
5:38pm Wed 15 Feb 12

Nick1042 wrote:
The only minority are the ones in favour of HS2!
Like the 26 million people who voted for the 3 main political parties who had included support for High Speed Rail in their 2010 General Election manifestos ??

Nick1042 says...
6:06pm Wed 15 Feb 12

Windsorian wrote:
Nick1042 wrote:
The only minority are the ones in favour of HS2!
Like the 26 million people who voted for the 3 main political parties who had included support for High Speed Rail in their 2010 General Election manifestos ??
Yea thats right because everybody votes for just one pledge in a party's manifesto. This has been stated before but will say again, it would be impossible for a somebody to agree 100% with all the political parties pledges, as a voter you review what the parties are saying and you vote for the least worst option. Not to mention not all the parties put their pledges into action once elected, I think that many voters only voted for Lib Dems because they promised to scrap tution fees,and we know unhappy they were.

piran says...
6:16pm Wed 15 Feb 12

HS2 will deliver benefits all over the country

A Y-shaped national network with links onto the East Coast and West Coast main lines will enable high speed services to link London, Birmingham, Manchester, the East Midlands, South Yorkshire and Leeds directly. Many of the trains running on HS2 will also be compatible with the existing railway and therefore able to run off the HS2 lines to serve a range of other towns and cities including Liverpool, Preston, York, Newcastle, Glasgow and Edinburgh. They will run at high speed on HS2 and at conventional speeds on the existing network.
Nine out of the UK’s ten largest conurbations will be connected in this way, providing significant enhancements to inter-city rail capacity and connectivity between the vast majority of the country’s major urban economies

Carl@Denham says...
6:20pm Wed 15 Feb 12

You may have a point, but you would at least have expected local Tories and Lib Dems to have raised HS2 during the General Election campaign. If they did I didn't hear about it. So they should accept HS2 in principle was a manifesto committment and stand by it.

piran says...
6:23pm Wed 15 Feb 12

HS2 will cut journey times between our major cities

To ensure that travellers will be able to benefit from the most up-to-date train technology over the long-term, the line will be built to accommodate speeds of up to 250mph, similar to lines being designed elsewhere in Europe, although the expected maximum line speed at opening will be 225mph.
This will see journey times from London to Birmingham reduced to just 45 minutes – less time than it takes to make a journey across London from Hackney to Wimbledon. Journey times to Leeds and Manchester will also fall significantly to around 88 and 68 minutes, respectively.

Windsorian says...
6:26pm Wed 15 Feb 12

@Nick1042
There was a time when the Greens supported HSR, but then they flip-flopped. Meanwhile UKIP remain a joke party which most people will never vote for, even if they oppose HS2.

Which just leaves you with the 3 main parties who all support HS2.

Have you ever thought about emigrating as there must be somewhere in the world that is not proposing to build HSR lines ?

piran says...
6:29pm Wed 15 Feb 12

HS2 makes rail travel more attractive for passengers

By enhancing inter-city rail capacity and connectivity HS2 could prompt significant modal shift from air and road to our railways. HS2 would encourage modal shift by making rail increasingly attractive for some journeys that would otherwise be made by plane or car.
For aviation this is particularly true for the London to Scotland. HS2 is forecast to carry up to 4.5 million passengers every year who might otherwise have travelled by air, as well as seeing up to 9 million passengers transfer from the national road network.

wayneo says...
7:19pm Wed 15 Feb 12

Nick1042 wrote:
The only minority are the ones in favour of HS2!
How do you qualify such a statement?

wayneo says...
7:22pm Wed 15 Feb 12

Carl@Denham wrote:
You may have a point, but you would at least have expected local Tories and Lib Dems to have raised HS2 during the General Election campaign. If they did I didn't hear about it. So they should accept HS2 in principle was a manifesto committment and stand by it.
Odd thing, for the General election, when the Parties were on the doorsteps seeking our vote, not one of them even mentioned HS2, as for election manifestos, they don't mean a thing as we know with the LibDems and their tutition fees.

piran says...
7:23pm Wed 15 Feb 12

Few responses during HS2 consultation argued for prioritising increased road or air capacity (over rail) between major urban centres.

Doing nothing damages smaller towns and cities. Growing demand for rail travel presents opportunities and challenges. As demand grows over the coming years and capacity becomes more stretched, train operators are increasingly likely to focus on serving the main rail markets of Britain’s major urban centres. The expense of new infrastructure, as well as the operating costs, to enable smaller towns and cities to retain current service standards will in many instances be unjustifiable. As a result, smaller towns and cities are likely to see their rail services become less frequent and slower. This trade-off is already playing out on the busiest main lines, and, in particular, the recent timetable introduced following the West Coast Route Modernisation programme has seen a diminished service for a number of stations along the route.
By contrast, with the majority of long distance north-south journeys expected to transfer to HS2, there is potential to use the capacity released on the existing network for new and better services, catering for a wider variety of markets which would improve the connectivity to places that could otherwise see a diminishing rail service.

wayneo says...
7:27pm Wed 15 Feb 12

piran wrote:
HS2 will cut journey times between our major cities

To ensure that travellers will be able to benefit from the most up-to-date train technology over the long-term, the line will be built to accommodate speeds of up to 250mph, similar to lines being designed elsewhere in Europe, although the expected maximum line speed at opening will be 225mph.
This will see journey times from London to Birmingham reduced to just 45 minutes – less time than it takes to make a journey across London from Hackney to Wimbledon. Journey times to Leeds and Manchester will also fall significantly to around 88 and 68 minutes, respectively.
You know all that yet not one HS2 supporter can tell us how much it will cost to use or how much this project will cost. Incidentally, the anticipated time might well on paper, state that it would take less tome than a journey across London from hackey to Wimbledon, but when you consider how long it will take to get from Wimbledon to a transfer exchange, wait for a train then boarding times, the journey time between London and Birmingham is largely irrevelent.

Edwina Lee says...
7:46pm Wed 15 Feb 12

The success of London is suckng the life blood from the rest of the nation. Previous governments used investment incentives & relocation of civil service jobs to counter the people & capital flow towards the capital. It is now clear that they were not enough. High Speed Rail would be an additional mechanism to counter the London magnet.

As London gets more & more expensive & congested because of its concentration of talents & opportunities, it will reach a point when high speed rail can counter balance those advantageous for cities north of London.

Windsorian says...
8:24pm Wed 15 Feb 12

I'm beginning to wonder whether Cllr Martin Tett should be expelled from the Conservative party, and told his services are no longer required.

The more I read about this man, the more I am sure that he would be happier in UKIP, along with the rest of the anti-HS2 brigade.

gpn01 says...
10:19pm Wed 15 Feb 12

piran wrote:
HS2 will cut journey times between our major cities

To ensure that travellers will be able to benefit from the most up-to-date train technology over the long-term, the line will be built to accommodate speeds of up to 250mph, similar to lines being designed elsewhere in Europe, although the expected maximum line speed at opening will be 225mph.
This will see journey times from London to Birmingham reduced to just 45 minutes – less time than it takes to make a journey across London from Hackney to Wimbledon. Journey times to Leeds and Manchester will also fall significantly to around 88 and 68 minutes, respectively.
The Journey time from exactly where in London to exactly where in Birmingham will be cut to 45 minutes? And how long does it take currently?

piran says...
12:39am Thu 16 Feb 12

Major transport projects have been delivered on budget recently.

Anti HS2 responses suggested that HS2 would be beset by cost overruns.
In line with HM Treasury requirements, the costings prepared for HS2 include allowances of up to 64 per cent for cost overruns. HS1, the only current high speed line in Britain, was delivered on time and on budget. More recently, the £371 million Hindhead Tunnel on the A3 was opened in July 2011 on time and on budget, and the major construction programme for the London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games is similarly on target.
The Government will continue to work with HS2 Ltd and Infrastructure UK and its range of private sector advisers to ensure that the costs of HS2 continue to be properly developed, managed and reviewed

wayneo says...
9:47am Thu 16 Feb 12

piran wrote:
Major transport projects have been delivered on budget recently.

Anti HS2 responses suggested that HS2 would be beset by cost overruns.
In line with HM Treasury requirements, the costings prepared for HS2 include allowances of up to 64 per cent for cost overruns. HS1, the only current high speed line in Britain, was delivered on time and on budget. More recently, the £371 million Hindhead Tunnel on the A3 was opened in July 2011 on time and on budget, and the major construction programme for the London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games is similarly on target.
The Government will continue to work with HS2 Ltd and Infrastructure UK and its range of private sector advisers to ensure that the costs of HS2 continue to be properly developed, managed and reviewed
Err,The Olympic and paralympic games "on target", are you sure about that?

The Walker says...
10:52am Thu 16 Feb 12

Had yet another weekend of having to drive a 360 mile round trip because the trains/tubes were so erratic or not running at all.
Finish fixing the lines we've got, put on extra carriages and save several million quid.

piran says...
11:27am Thu 16 Feb 12

wayneo wrote:
piran wrote:
Major transport projects have been delivered on budget recently.

Anti HS2 responses suggested that HS2 would be beset by cost overruns.
In line with HM Treasury requirements, the costings prepared for HS2 include allowances of up to 64 per cent for cost overruns. HS1, the only current high speed line in Britain, was delivered on time and on budget. More recently, the £371 million Hindhead Tunnel on the A3 was opened in July 2011 on time and on budget, and the major construction programme for the London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games is similarly on target.
The Government will continue to work with HS2 Ltd and Infrastructure UK and its range of private sector advisers to ensure that the costs of HS2 continue to be properly developed, managed and reviewed
Err,The Olympic and paralympic games "on target", are you sure about that?
Yes despite the whingers the infrastructure is all on time and budget. Many of the venues have already been tested and used. I know it doesn't suit the popular press because good news doses not sell papers.

piran says...
11:29am Thu 16 Feb 12

HS2 supports regeneration and growth

The Government recognises the complexity of these issues and notes the strongly contrasting attitudes adopted in consultation responses. In the light of these consultation responses, the Department for Transport has reviewed the evidence in respect of the impacts of transport infrastructure projects on economic growth. This has confirmed that major transport investments can have a significant stimulus on economic growth at the local, regional and national levels, and, where they form part of an effective overall strategy can support local regeneration

gpn01 says...
11:48am Thu 16 Feb 12

piran wrote:
wayneo wrote:
piran wrote: Major transport projects have been delivered on budget recently. Anti HS2 responses suggested that HS2 would be beset by cost overruns. In line with HM Treasury requirements, the costings prepared for HS2 include allowances of up to 64 per cent for cost overruns. HS1, the only current high speed line in Britain, was delivered on time and on budget. More recently, the £371 million Hindhead Tunnel on the A3 was opened in July 2011 on time and on budget, and the major construction programme for the London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games is similarly on target. The Government will continue to work with HS2 Ltd and Infrastructure UK and its range of private sector advisers to ensure that the costs of HS2 continue to be properly developed, managed and reviewed
Err,The Olympic and paralympic games "on target", are you sure about that?
Yes despite the whingers the infrastructure is all on time and budget. Many of the venues have already been tested and used. I know it doesn't suit the popular press because good news doses not sell papers.
http://news.sky.com/
home/london-olympics
/article/16156780 suggests otherwise:
.

"The true cost of staging the 2012 Olympics is five times the figure given when London won the bid in 2005.
A Sky investigation has revealed the final cost for the Games will be more than £12bn.
.
However, associated costs could make the bill as high as £24bn - a staggering 10 times the original estimate.".
.
TEN TIMES original budget doesn't quite sound the same as "on budget". Except where you keep revising the budgets of course!

piran says...
11:49am Thu 16 Feb 12

HS2 will help to close the north south divide

There is strong and widespread support from the Midlands and the North for HS2. Business and political leaders have identified the clear benefits of the project for their regions. They are particularly keen to have more rapid access to the major markets of London and the South East but also to see improved connectivity within and between their regions. Whilst the Government recognises that a proportion of the benefits of HS2 would be felt in the South, this does not alter the importance of HS2 for the rest of the country. Research previously undertaken by the Northern Way suggests that, given the relative size of their respective economies, there is potential for the benefits to the Midlands and the North to have a much larger proportionate impact. Evidence presented to the Government as part of the consultation also demonstrates the sizeable benefits from HS2 anticipated in the Midlands and the North.

JOHNHEALY says...
12:26pm Thu 16 Feb 12

Yes Wayneo indeed I am saying that we should accept HS2 but I am not saying that we should try to influence the decision from the inside nor that we should have a referendum on the subject.

The best way to deal with the HS2 as I have said many times is not to act in an "I don't want it NIMBY fashion" but for all the protestors to unite and not only promote a different route but also put pressure on Justine Greening to resign. Incidentally I have put forward a possible alternative route to the Bucks Free Press but this sadly has not been published yet

piran says...
12:28pm Thu 16 Feb 12

HS2 has been adapted via the consultation to address concerns

Changes to the line of the HS2 route following consultation mean that out of a total length of just under 140 miles, around 22.5 miles (not including the HS1 link) will be in tunnel or green tunnel. This is an increase of more than 50 per cent from the route consulted on. In addition, around 56.5 miles will be partially or totally hidden in cutting. Around 40 miles will be on viaduct or embankment – this is around 10 miles less than the consultation route. This means that around 79 miles (more than half of the route) will be mitigated by tunnel or cutting.

Thus nailing the anti HS2 myth of no consultation

wayneo says...
2:03pm Thu 16 Feb 12

JOHNHEALY wrote:
Yes Wayneo indeed I am saying that we should accept HS2 but I am not saying that we should try to influence the decision from the inside nor that we should have a referendum on the subject.

The best way to deal with the HS2 as I have said many times is not to act in an "I don't want it NIMBY fashion" but for all the protestors to unite and not only promote a different route but also put pressure on Justine Greening to resign. Incidentally I have put forward a possible alternative route to the Bucks Free Press but this sadly has not been published yet
I would certainly like to see that alternative route John so I hope it gets published, I don't agree with the term Nimby, but the culture you mention is is of people trying to protect their quality of life, homes etc and from having their backs against a wall from not being listened to. I don't see anything wrong in people protecting themselves.

Chiltonian says...
10:35pm Thu 16 Feb 12

wayneo wrote:
Nick1042 wrote:
The only minority are the ones in favour of HS2!
How do you qualify such a statement?
The HS2 consultation report makes it explicitly clear that only a tiny minority of the UK's population - including ` tiny representation from even Buckinghamshire - responded to this proposal.

The only concluson to be made to this is:

1. People simply do not care unless they live next to it.
2. People simply support HS2 so didn't respond.

gpn01 says...
10:39pm Thu 16 Feb 12

Chiltonian wrote:
wayneo wrote:
Nick1042 wrote:
The only minority are the ones in favour of HS2!
How do you qualify such a statement?
The HS2 consultation report makes it explicitly clear that only a tiny minority of the UK's population - including ` tiny representation from even Buckinghamshire - responded to this proposal.

The only concluson to be made to this is:

1. People simply do not care unless they live next to it.
2. People simply support HS2 so didn't respond.
Oh dear, dear, dear. It's observations like that that show why we really should teach logic and reasoning at school.
.
No, there are MANY other conclusions that you could reach from the comment about the tiny response. A far more likely scenario is that most people in the UK simply didn't know about the consultation proposal.

gpn01 says...
10:39pm Thu 16 Feb 12

Chiltonian wrote:
wayneo wrote:
Nick1042 wrote:
The only minority are the ones in favour of HS2!
How do you qualify such a statement?
The HS2 consultation report makes it explicitly clear that only a tiny minority of the UK's population - including ` tiny representation from even Buckinghamshire - responded to this proposal.

The only concluson to be made to this is:

1. People simply do not care unless they live next to it.
2. People simply support HS2 so didn't respond.
Oh dear, dear, dear. It's observations like that that show why we really should teach logic and reasoning at school.
.
No, there are MANY other conclusions that you could reach from the comment about the tiny response. A far more likely scenario is that most people in the UK simply didn't know about the consultation proposal.

wayneo says...
10:52pm Thu 16 Feb 12

Chiltonian wrote:
wayneo wrote:
Nick1042 wrote:
The only minority are the ones in favour of HS2!
How do you qualify such a statement?
The HS2 consultation report makes it explicitly clear that only a tiny minority of the UK's population - including ` tiny representation from even Buckinghamshire - responded to this proposal.

The only concluson to be made to this is:

1. People simply do not care unless they live next to it.
2. People simply support HS2 so didn't respond.
Where? I think you're writing cobblers

wayneo says...
10:54pm Thu 16 Feb 12

gpn01 wrote:
Chiltonian wrote:
wayneo wrote:
Nick1042 wrote:
The only minority are the ones in favour of HS2!
How do you qualify such a statement?
The HS2 consultation report makes it explicitly clear that only a tiny minority of the UK's population - including ` tiny representation from even Buckinghamshire - responded to this proposal.

The only concluson to be made to this is:

1. People simply do not care unless they live next to it.
2. People simply support HS2 so didn't respond.
Oh dear, dear, dear. It's observations like that that show why we really should teach logic and reasoning at school.
.
No, there are MANY other conclusions that you could reach from the comment about the tiny response. A far more likely scenario is that most people in the UK simply didn't know about the consultation proposal.
EXACTLY!!!

Nick1042 says...
11:19pm Thu 16 Feb 12

Chiltonian wrote:
wayneo wrote:
Nick1042 wrote: The only minority are the ones in favour of HS2!
How do you qualify such a statement?
The HS2 consultation report makes it explicitly clear that only a tiny minority of the UK's population - including ` tiny representation from even Buckinghamshire - responded to this proposal. The only concluson to be made to this is: 1. People simply do not care unless they live next to it. 2. People simply support HS2 so didn't respond.
Are you a politican??

The reason I ask is that this is the sort of response that I would expect from a politican. If nobody bothers to tell us their views then OBVIOUSLY they agree with us and we carry on doing whatever we want.

There could be so many reasons why so few of the UK's residents did not respond to the consultation. For example: they did not care about the project to take the time to complete it, did not know about the consultation, meant to complete it but forgot about it or maybe just felt that it is a waste of time as the government would not listen and just press on through regardless of what the consultation results showed.

I ask you whats the point of spending time and money on a consultation process if your not going to take on board the responses?

piran says...
12:15am Fri 17 Feb 12

gpn01 wrote:
Chiltonian wrote:
wayneo wrote:
Nick1042 wrote:
The only minority are the ones in favour of HS2!
How do you qualify such a statement?
The HS2 consultation report makes it explicitly clear that only a tiny minority of the UK's population - including ` tiny representation from even Buckinghamshire - responded to this proposal.

The only concluson to be made to this is:

1. People simply do not care unless they live next to it.
2. People simply support HS2 so didn't respond.
Oh dear, dear, dear. It's observations like that that show why we really should teach logic and reasoning at school.
.
No, there are MANY other conclusions that you could reach from the comment about the tiny response. A far more likely scenario is that most people in the UK simply didn't know about the consultation proposal.
Other conclusions could be they actually don't care because they are not NIMBYs or maybe even support HS2

piran says...
12:17am Fri 17 Feb 12

Nick1042 wrote:
Chiltonian wrote:
wayneo wrote:
Nick1042 wrote: The only minority are the ones in favour of HS2!
How do you qualify such a statement?
The HS2 consultation report makes it explicitly clear that only a tiny minority of the UK's population - including ` tiny representation from even Buckinghamshire - responded to this proposal. The only concluson to be made to this is: 1. People simply do not care unless they live next to it. 2. People simply support HS2 so didn't respond.
Are you a politican??

The reason I ask is that this is the sort of response that I would expect from a politican. If nobody bothers to tell us their views then OBVIOUSLY they agree with us and we carry on doing whatever we want.

There could be so many reasons why so few of the UK's residents did not respond to the consultation. For example: they did not care about the project to take the time to complete it, did not know about the consultation, meant to complete it but forgot about it or maybe just felt that it is a waste of time as the government would not listen and just press on through regardless of what the consultation results showed.

I ask you whats the point of spending time and money on a consultation process if your not going to take on board the responses?
They did listen to consultation and made numerous changes. I notice you forgot this!

piran says...
12:25am Fri 17 Feb 12

Nick1042 wrote:
Chiltonian wrote:
wayneo wrote:
Nick1042 wrote: The only minority are the ones in favour of HS2!
How do you qualify such a statement?
The HS2 consultation report makes it explicitly clear that only a tiny minority of the UK's population - including ` tiny representation from even Buckinghamshire - responded to this proposal. The only concluson to be made to this is: 1. People simply do not care unless they live next to it. 2. People simply support HS2 so didn't respond.
Are you a politican??

The reason I ask is that this is the sort of response that I would expect from a politican. If nobody bothers to tell us their views then OBVIOUSLY they agree with us and we carry on doing whatever we want.

There could be so many reasons why so few of the UK's residents did not respond to the consultation. For example: they did not care about the project to take the time to complete it, did not know about the consultation, meant to complete it but forgot about it or maybe just felt that it is a waste of time as the government would not listen and just press on through regardless of what the consultation results showed.

I ask you whats the point of spending time and money on a consultation process if your not going to take on board the responses?
Consultation for the Anti HS2 lobby seems to be "they did not stop a national project because a few of us objected so the consulation was a sham". It is time you started to live in the real and not fantasy world. HS2 is supported by all 3 major political parties and a few NIMBYs or objectors along the route will not prevent a NATIONAL transport investment for 2050 and 60+ million people. Ten years after HS is built people will not even remember the anti HS2 lobby. Do you remember the anti-M40 objectors??

piran says...
12:34am Fri 17 Feb 12

Chiltonian wrote:
wayneo wrote:
Nick1042 wrote:
The only minority are the ones in favour of HS2!
How do you qualify such a statement?
The HS2 consultation report makes it explicitly clear that only a tiny minority of the UK's population - including ` tiny representation from even Buckinghamshire - responded to this proposal.

The only concluson to be made to this is:

1. People simply do not care unless they live next to it.
2. People simply support HS2 so didn't respond.
Chiltonian point well made but wasted on the Anti HS2 brigade. They want it always. Because so few objected they think it was a sham but conveniently have not bothered to read the consultation documents and note that many changes were made - that actually put up many project costs.
For the Antis they have no vision - it is so much easier to do nothing and ruin our economy from 2050 - being selfish it won't affect them only their children and grandchildren

Nick1042 says...
8:58am Fri 17 Feb 12

piran wrote:
Chiltonian wrote:
wayneo wrote:
Nick1042 wrote:
The only minority are the ones in favour of HS2!
How do you qualify such a statement?
The HS2 consultation report makes it explicitly clear that only a tiny minority of the UK's population - including ` tiny representation from even Buckinghamshire - responded to this proposal.

The only concluson to be made to this is:

1. People simply do not care unless they live next to it.
2. People simply support HS2 so didn't respond.
Chiltonian point well made but wasted on the Anti HS2 brigade. They want it always. Because so few objected they think it was a sham but conveniently have not bothered to read the consultation documents and note that many changes were made - that actually put up many project costs.
For the Antis they have no vision - it is so much easier to do nothing and ruin our economy from 2050 - being selfish it won't affect them only their children and grandchildren
Who says people against HS2 have no vision? There are alternatives and I find it so laughable that you believe that HS2 will somehow be the saviour to the UK, when it won't even be built until 2026, by then one hopes our economy will be booming again! Please enough with the guilt trip thing about children and grandchildren, if you really cared you would want to concentrate on reducing the £trillon of debt the UK is in because this what our children will be having to pay off in the future.

piran says...
10:51am Fri 17 Feb 12

Nick1042 wrote:
piran wrote:
Chiltonian wrote:
wayneo wrote:
Nick1042 wrote:
The only minority are the ones in favour of HS2!
How do you qualify such a statement?
The HS2 consultation report makes it explicitly clear that only a tiny minority of the UK's population - including ` tiny representation from even Buckinghamshire - responded to this proposal.

The only concluson to be made to this is:

1. People simply do not care unless they live next to it.
2. People simply support HS2 so didn't respond.
Chiltonian point well made but wasted on the Anti HS2 brigade. They want it always. Because so few objected they think it was a sham but conveniently have not bothered to read the consultation documents and note that many changes were made - that actually put up many project costs.
For the Antis they have no vision - it is so much easier to do nothing and ruin our economy from 2050 - being selfish it won't affect them only their children and grandchildren
Who says people against HS2 have no vision? There are alternatives and I find it so laughable that you believe that HS2 will somehow be the saviour to the UK, when it won't even be built until 2026, by then one hopes our economy will be booming again! Please enough with the guilt trip thing about children and grandchildren, if you really cared you would want to concentrate on reducing the £trillon of debt the UK is in because this what our children will be having to pay off in the future.
OK Mr Transport Expert please share with us all your detailed transport infrastructure plans and how you will create capacity and investement. Let us judge your wonderful plans to develop Britain post AD 2026.

Nick1042 says...
12:03pm Fri 17 Feb 12

piran wrote:
Nick1042 wrote:
piran wrote:
Chiltonian wrote:
wayneo wrote:
Nick1042 wrote:
The only minority are the ones in favour of HS2!
How do you qualify such a statement?
The HS2 consultation report makes it explicitly clear that only a tiny minority of the UK's population - including ` tiny representation from even Buckinghamshire - responded to this proposal.

The only concluson to be made to this is:

1. People simply do not care unless they live next to it.
2. People simply support HS2 so didn't respond.
Chiltonian point well made but wasted on the Anti HS2 brigade. They want it always. Because so few objected they think it was a sham but conveniently have not bothered to read the consultation documents and note that many changes were made - that actually put up many project costs.
For the Antis they have no vision - it is so much easier to do nothing and ruin our economy from 2050 - being selfish it won't affect them only their children and grandchildren
Who says people against HS2 have no vision? There are alternatives and I find it so laughable that you believe that HS2 will somehow be the saviour to the UK, when it won't even be built until 2026, by then one hopes our economy will be booming again! Please enough with the guilt trip thing about children and grandchildren, if you really cared you would want to concentrate on reducing the £trillon of debt the UK is in because this what our children will be having to pay off in the future.
OK Mr Transport Expert please share with us all your detailed transport infrastructure plans and how you will create capacity and investement. Let us judge your wonderful plans to develop Britain post AD 2026.
You get quite defensive if somebody does not agree with you or has a difference of opinion don't you.

I have already said before that you can increase capacity on the existing lines by removing first class seats, adding extra carriages and increase frequencies of the trains and this could be straight away and at a fraction of the cost of HS2. Then old existing lines could be reopened if necessary.
Investement should be in technology as this is truly the way forward, especially as we have emissions targets so in the future we will all have to travel less, whether we like it or not. I am not a travel expert at all but there are experts, Christian Wolmar for example that state that HS2 is not the way forward for our transport infrastructure.

gpn01 says...
12:34pm Fri 17 Feb 12

piran wrote:
Nick1042 wrote:
piran wrote:
Chiltonian wrote:
wayneo wrote:
Nick1042 wrote: The only minority are the ones in favour of HS2!
How do you qualify such a statement?
The HS2 consultation report makes it explicitly clear that only a tiny minority of the UK's population - including ` tiny representation from even Buckinghamshire - responded to this proposal. The only concluson to be made to this is: 1. People simply do not care unless they live next to it. 2. People simply support HS2 so didn't respond.
Chiltonian point well made but wasted on the Anti HS2 brigade. They want it always. Because so few objected they think it was a sham but conveniently have not bothered to read the consultation documents and note that many changes were made - that actually put up many project costs. For the Antis they have no vision - it is so much easier to do nothing and ruin our economy from 2050 - being selfish it won't affect them only their children and grandchildren
Who says people against HS2 have no vision? There are alternatives and I find it so laughable that you believe that HS2 will somehow be the saviour to the UK, when it won't even be built until 2026, by then one hopes our economy will be booming again! Please enough with the guilt trip thing about children and grandchildren, if you really cared you would want to concentrate on reducing the £trillon of debt the UK is in because this what our children will be having to pay off in the future.
OK Mr Transport Expert please share with us all your detailed transport infrastructure plans and how you will create capacity and investement. Let us judge your wonderful plans to develop Britain post AD 2026.
In order to provide a solution we need to first understand what the problem is you're trying to solve. It seems that HS2 is being cited as the answer (in fact the only answer) without being clear on what the question is. Many people on this forum are expressing concerns which are entirely valid. That doesn't make them NIMBY's or luddites. It just means they don't "get" what HS2 is seeking to address and why it's the only option.

Windsorian says...
12:55pm Fri 17 Feb 12

@Nick1042
Three new 11 car Pendolinos + another to replace the one destroyed in the Grayrigg disaster have already been ordered, as have 62 extra carriages to extend 31 Pendolinos to 11 car; these were ordered in October 2010 and their introduction should start in April this year.

As for converting at least one of the existing 1st Class carriages to Standard Class, this is a matter for the (new) WCML franchise operation due to start in December this year. I've no doubt that every franchisee is monitoring existing 1st Class usage and everyone knows a 49 seat 1st Class motor carriage could be transformed into a 65 or 75 seat Standard Class motor carriage.

It is quite possible that these changes will be complete in the next 18 months, but all the predictions are they will not cater for anticipated growth after 2026; that is unless you start limiting rail travel through personal rationing or increased fares!

piran says...
2:01pm Fri 17 Feb 12

gpn01 wrote:
piran wrote:
Nick1042 wrote:
piran wrote:
Chiltonian wrote:
wayneo wrote:
Nick1042 wrote: The only minority are the ones in favour of HS2!
How do you qualify such a statement?
The HS2 consultation report makes it explicitly clear that only a tiny minority of the UK's population - including ` tiny representation from even Buckinghamshire - responded to this proposal. The only concluson to be made to this is: 1. People simply do not care unless they live next to it. 2. People simply support HS2 so didn't respond.
Chiltonian point well made but wasted on the Anti HS2 brigade. They want it always. Because so few objected they think it was a sham but conveniently have not bothered to read the consultation documents and note that many changes were made - that actually put up many project costs. For the Antis they have no vision - it is so much easier to do nothing and ruin our economy from 2050 - being selfish it won't affect them only their children and grandchildren
Who says people against HS2 have no vision? There are alternatives and I find it so laughable that you believe that HS2 will somehow be the saviour to the UK, when it won't even be built until 2026, by then one hopes our economy will be booming again! Please enough with the guilt trip thing about children and grandchildren, if you really cared you would want to concentrate on reducing the £trillon of debt the UK is in because this what our children will be having to pay off in the future.
OK Mr Transport Expert please share with us all your detailed transport infrastructure plans and how you will create capacity and investement. Let us judge your wonderful plans to develop Britain post AD 2026.
In order to provide a solution we need to first understand what the problem is you're trying to solve. It seems that HS2 is being cited as the answer (in fact the only answer) without being clear on what the question is. Many people on this forum are expressing concerns which are entirely valid. That doesn't make them NIMBY's or luddites. It just means they don't "get" what HS2 is seeking to address and why it's the only option.
So Transport Expert please share with us all your detailed transport infrastructure plans and how you will create capacity and investement??

Let us judge your wonderful plans to develop Britain post AD 2026. That will help us, both pro and anti HS2.

Or, as I thought, so much easier to be a negative critic than do something positive?

Nick1042 says...
2:33pm Fri 17 Feb 12

piran wrote:
gpn01 wrote:
piran wrote:
Nick1042 wrote:
piran wrote:
Chiltonian wrote:
wayneo wrote:
Nick1042 wrote: The only minority are the ones in favour of HS2!
How do you qualify such a statement?
The HS2 consultation report makes it explicitly clear that only a tiny minority of the UK's population - including ` tiny representation from even Buckinghamshire - responded to this proposal. The only concluson to be made to this is: 1. People simply do not care unless they live next to it. 2. People simply support HS2 so didn't respond.
Chiltonian point well made but wasted on the Anti HS2 brigade. They want it always. Because so few objected they think it was a sham but conveniently have not bothered to read the consultation documents and note that many changes were made - that actually put up many project costs. For the Antis they have no vision - it is so much easier to do nothing and ruin our economy from 2050 - being selfish it won't affect them only their children and grandchildren
Who says people against HS2 have no vision? There are alternatives and I find it so laughable that you believe that HS2 will somehow be the saviour to the UK, when it won't even be built until 2026, by then one hopes our economy will be booming again! Please enough with the guilt trip thing about children and grandchildren, if you really cared you would want to concentrate on reducing the £trillon of debt the UK is in because this what our children will be having to pay off in the future.
OK Mr Transport Expert please share with us all your detailed transport infrastructure plans and how you will create capacity and investement. Let us judge your wonderful plans to develop Britain post AD 2026.
In order to provide a solution we need to first understand what the problem is you're trying to solve. It seems that HS2 is being cited as the answer (in fact the only answer) without being clear on what the question is. Many people on this forum are expressing concerns which are entirely valid. That doesn't make them NIMBY's or luddites. It just means they don't "get" what HS2 is seeking to address and why it's the only option.
So Transport Expert please share with us all your detailed transport infrastructure plans and how you will create capacity and investement??

Let us judge your wonderful plans to develop Britain post AD 2026. That will help us, both pro and anti HS2.

Or, as I thought, so much easier to be a negative critic than do something positive?
Surely increasing capacity on existing lines and looking at more favourable options that both sides can agree on is doing something positive. Name calling (NIMBY's) and accussing people of having 'no vision' because they have a difference of opinion to you is negative.

piran says...
2:37pm Fri 17 Feb 12

Nick1042 wrote:
piran wrote:
gpn01 wrote:
piran wrote:
Nick1042 wrote:
piran wrote:
Chiltonian wrote:
wayneo wrote:
Nick1042 wrote: The only minority are the ones in favour of HS2!
How do you qualify such a statement?
The HS2 consultation report makes it explicitly clear that only a tiny minority of the UK's population - including ` tiny representation from even Buckinghamshire - responded to this proposal. The only concluson to be made to this is: 1. People simply do not care unless they live next to it. 2. People simply support HS2 so didn't respond.
Chiltonian point well made but wasted on the Anti HS2 brigade. They want it always. Because so few objected they think it was a sham but conveniently have not bothered to read the consultation documents and note that many changes were made - that actually put up many project costs. For the Antis they have no vision - it is so much easier to do nothing and ruin our economy from 2050 - being selfish it won't affect them only their children and grandchildren
Who says people against HS2 have no vision? There are alternatives and I find it so laughable that you believe that HS2 will somehow be the saviour to the UK, when it won't even be built until 2026, by then one hopes our economy will be booming again! Please enough with the guilt trip thing about children and grandchildren, if you really cared you would want to concentrate on reducing the £trillon of debt the UK is in because this what our children will be having to pay off in the future.
OK Mr Transport Expert please share with us all your detailed transport infrastructure plans and how you will create capacity and investement. Let us judge your wonderful plans to develop Britain post AD 2026.
In order to provide a solution we need to first understand what the problem is you're trying to solve. It seems that HS2 is being cited as the answer (in fact the only answer) without being clear on what the question is. Many people on this forum are expressing concerns which are entirely valid. That doesn't make them NIMBY's or luddites. It just means they don't "get" what HS2 is seeking to address and why it's the only option.
So Transport Expert please share with us all your detailed transport infrastructure plans and how you will create capacity and investement??

Let us judge your wonderful plans to develop Britain post AD 2026. That will help us, both pro and anti HS2.

Or, as I thought, so much easier to be a negative critic than do something positive?
Surely increasing capacity on existing lines and looking at more favourable options that both sides can agree on is doing something positive. Name calling (NIMBY's) and accussing people of having 'no vision' because they have a difference of opinion to you is negative.
Yes you are right because without vision is a negative thing. No future, no economic growth, rising unemployment. Is that the aim of the Anti HS2?
It is so much easier to be critical than provide a solution, isn't it?

gpn01 says...
2:44pm Fri 17 Feb 12

piran wrote:
Nick1042 wrote:
piran wrote:
gpn01 wrote:
piran wrote:
Nick1042 wrote:
piran wrote:
Chiltonian wrote:
wayneo wrote:
Nick1042 wrote: The only minority are the ones in favour of HS2!
How do you qualify such a statement?
The HS2 consultation report makes it explicitly clear that only a tiny minority of the UK's population - including ` tiny representation from even Buckinghamshire - responded to this proposal. The only concluson to be made to this is: 1. People simply do not care unless they live next to it. 2. People simply support HS2 so didn't respond.
Chiltonian point well made but wasted on the Anti HS2 brigade. They want it always. Because so few objected they think it was a sham but conveniently have not bothered to read the consultation documents and note that many changes were made - that actually put up many project costs. For the Antis they have no vision - it is so much easier to do nothing and ruin our economy from 2050 - being selfish it won't affect them only their children and grandchildren
Who says people against HS2 have no vision? There are alternatives and I find it so laughable that you believe that HS2 will somehow be the saviour to the UK, when it won't even be built until 2026, by then one hopes our economy will be booming again! Please enough with the guilt trip thing about children and grandchildren, if you really cared you would want to concentrate on reducing the £trillon of debt the UK is in because this what our children will be having to pay off in the future.
OK Mr Transport Expert please share with us all your detailed transport infrastructure plans and how you will create capacity and investement. Let us judge your wonderful plans to develop Britain post AD 2026.
In order to provide a solution we need to first understand what the problem is you're trying to solve. It seems that HS2 is being cited as the answer (in fact the only answer) without being clear on what the question is. Many people on this forum are expressing concerns which are entirely valid. That doesn't make them NIMBY's or luddites. It just means they don't "get" what HS2 is seeking to address and why it's the only option.
So Transport Expert please share with us all your detailed transport infrastructure plans and how you will create capacity and investement?? Let us judge your wonderful plans to develop Britain post AD 2026. That will help us, both pro and anti HS2. Or, as I thought, so much easier to be a negative critic than do something positive?
Surely increasing capacity on existing lines and looking at more favourable options that both sides can agree on is doing something positive. Name calling (NIMBY's) and accussing people of having 'no vision' because they have a difference of opinion to you is negative.
Yes you are right because without vision is a negative thing. No future, no economic growth, rising unemployment. Is that the aim of the Anti HS2? It is so much easier to be critical than provide a solution, isn't it?
You're right that it's easy to be critical. It's also easy to propose a solution without first understanding what the problem is.

piran says...
3:00pm Fri 17 Feb 12

Perhaps you should do a little research? CAPACITY IN THE FUTURE ie NOT NOW BUT AD 2026 on.

All the predictions show no alternatives such as developing
current rail etc will NOT cope with anticipated growth after 2026. (In case you haven't realised it, UK population is growing and our economy is becoming more complex!)

Or do you suggest building more motorways? More canals? More A/B roads?

Or take up the suggest from Windsorian to -
"start limiting rail travel through personal rationing or increased fares"

Come on then let us all have the benefit of your superior transport knowledge how to solve this! Much easier to be a critic isnt it?

Nick1042 says...
3:10pm Fri 17 Feb 12

Windsorian wrote:
@Nick1042
Three new 11 car Pendolinos + another to replace the one destroyed in the Grayrigg disaster have already been ordered, as have 62 extra carriages to extend 31 Pendolinos to 11 car; these were ordered in October 2010 and their introduction should start in April this year.

As for converting at least one of the existing 1st Class carriages to Standard Class, this is a matter for the (new) WCML franchise operation due to start in December this year. I've no doubt that every franchisee is monitoring existing 1st Class usage and everyone knows a 49 seat 1st Class motor carriage could be transformed into a 65 or 75 seat Standard Class motor carriage.

It is quite possible that these changes will be complete in the next 18 months, but all the predictions are they will not cater for anticipated growth after 2026; that is unless you start limiting rail travel through personal rationing or increased fares!
So maybe before committing ourselves to spending billions on a new super high speed rail, we could wait and see how these improvements help with the capacity issue. Don't forget, 'predictions' can be very wrong, HS1 has never met the passenger predictions the government quoted. Many believe that the passenger numbers the government are predicating for HS2 are based on old forecasting models and are way above what can be expected.

piran says...
3:22pm Fri 17 Feb 12

Nick1042 wrote:
Windsorian wrote:
@Nick1042
Three new 11 car Pendolinos + another to replace the one destroyed in the Grayrigg disaster have already been ordered, as have 62 extra carriages to extend 31 Pendolinos to 11 car; these were ordered in October 2010 and their introduction should start in April this year.

As for converting at least one of the existing 1st Class carriages to Standard Class, this is a matter for the (new) WCML franchise operation due to start in December this year. I've no doubt that every franchisee is monitoring existing 1st Class usage and everyone knows a 49 seat 1st Class motor carriage could be transformed into a 65 or 75 seat Standard Class motor carriage.

It is quite possible that these changes will be complete in the next 18 months, but all the predictions are they will not cater for anticipated growth after 2026; that is unless you start limiting rail travel through personal rationing or increased fares!
So maybe before committing ourselves to spending billions on a new super high speed rail, we could wait and see how these improvements help with the capacity issue. Don't forget, 'predictions' can be very wrong, HS1 has never met the passenger predictions the government quoted. Many believe that the passenger numbers the government are predicating for HS2 are based on old forecasting models and are way above what can be expected.
End of conversation. You want to do nothing. Fine but all the studies show despite tinkering with current structures, that THERE WILL NOT BE ENOUGH CAPACITY AFTER 2026!!
It takes time to build capacity so we need to start now because it will take 10+ years to build/ Ever heard of PLANING FOR THE FUTURE or you would be better to bury your head in the sand? Luckily the Government and all 3 major political parties do understand the problem so HS2 will be going ahead.

Chiltonian says...
3:57pm Fri 17 Feb 12

i think you will find that the rail industry - not HS2- have completely put to bed any arguments that money could best invested in the current railway system. They all agree that the existing rail network is not future proof and it is simply grinding to a halt.

We are in recession - yet train use continues to rapidly grow each year.

They conclude that this country's main railway line would be at capacity in 15 years regardless of how much money you spend on it.

Nick1042 says...
4:06pm Fri 17 Feb 12

piran wrote:
Nick1042 wrote:
piran wrote:
gpn01 wrote:
piran wrote:
Nick1042 wrote:
piran wrote:
Chiltonian wrote:
wayneo wrote:
Nick1042 wrote: The only minority are the ones in favour of HS2!
How do you qualify such a statement?
The HS2 consultation report makes it explicitly clear that only a tiny minority of the UK's population - including ` tiny representation from even Buckinghamshire - responded to this proposal. The only concluson to be made to this is: 1. People simply do not care unless they live next to it. 2. People simply support HS2 so didn't respond.
Chiltonian point well made but wasted on the Anti HS2 brigade. They want it always. Because so few objected they think it was a sham but conveniently have not bothered to read the consultation documents and note that many changes were made - that actually put up many project costs. For the Antis they have no vision - it is so much easier to do nothing and ruin our economy from 2050 - being selfish it won't affect them only their children and grandchildren
Who says people against HS2 have no vision? There are alternatives and I find it so laughable that you believe that HS2 will somehow be the saviour to the UK, when it won't even be built until 2026, by then one hopes our economy will be booming again! Please enough with the guilt trip thing about children and grandchildren, if you really cared you would want to concentrate on reducing the £trillon of debt the UK is in because this what our children will be having to pay off in the future.
OK Mr Transport Expert please share with us all your detailed transport infrastructure plans and how you will create capacity and investement. Let us judge your wonderful plans to develop Britain post AD 2026.
In order to provide a solution we need to first understand what the problem is you're trying to solve. It seems that HS2 is being cited as the answer (in fact the only answer) without being clear on what the question is. Many people on this forum are expressing concerns which are entirely valid. That doesn't make them NIMBY's or luddites. It just means they don't "get" what HS2 is seeking to address and why it's the only option.
So Transport Expert please share with us all your detailed transport infrastructure plans and how you will create capacity and investement??

Let us judge your wonderful plans to develop Britain post AD 2026. That will help us, both pro and anti HS2.

Or, as I thought, so much easier to be a negative critic than do something positive?
Surely increasing capacity on existing lines and looking at more favourable options that both sides can agree on is doing something positive. Name calling (NIMBY's) and accussing people of having 'no vision' because they have a difference of opinion to you is negative.
Yes you are right because without vision is a negative thing. No future, no economic growth, rising unemployment. Is that the aim of the Anti HS2?
It is so much easier to be critical than provide a solution, isn't it?
I think you are confused, I said that calling people NIMBY's and accusing them of ‘no vision’ just because they have a difference of opinion to you is negative.

I have not proposed doing nothing, I propose doing something different to HS2, improve current infrastructure first and spend more money on technology. My vision for the future is more technology and less travel. Now you may not agree with me, but you cannot say I have no vision, its just my vision is different to yours.

Windsorian says...
4:08pm Fri 17 Feb 12

Chiltonian wrote:
i think you will find that the rail industry - not HS2- have completely put to bed any arguments that money could best invested in the current railway system. They all agree that the existing rail network is not future proof and it is simply grinding to a halt. We are in recession - yet train use continues to rapidly grow each year. They conclude that this country's main railway line would be at capacity in 15 years regardless of how much money you spend on it.
I think it is worth remembering that HS2 is not just about projected passenger growth, it is also about freeing up existing infrastructure for a massive expansion of rail freight. There is a key objective of getting many more lorries off our roads and also meeting the government's environmental targets.

Nick1042 says...
4:11pm Fri 17 Feb 12

piran wrote:
Nick1042 wrote:
Windsorian wrote:
@Nick1042
Three new 11 car Pendolinos + another to replace the one destroyed in the Grayrigg disaster have already been ordered, as have 62 extra carriages to extend 31 Pendolinos to 11 car; these were ordered in October 2010 and their introduction should start in April this year.

As for converting at least one of the existing 1st Class carriages to Standard Class, this is a matter for the (new) WCML franchise operation due to start in December this year. I've no doubt that every franchisee is monitoring existing 1st Class usage and everyone knows a 49 seat 1st Class motor carriage could be transformed into a 65 or 75 seat Standard Class motor carriage.

It is quite possible that these changes will be complete in the next 18 months, but all the predictions are they will not cater for anticipated growth after 2026; that is unless you start limiting rail travel through personal rationing or increased fares!
So maybe before committing ourselves to spending billions on a new super high speed rail, we could wait and see how these improvements help with the capacity issue. Don't forget, 'predictions' can be very wrong, HS1 has never met the passenger predictions the government quoted. Many believe that the passenger numbers the government are predicating for HS2 are based on old forecasting models and are way above what can be expected.
End of conversation. You want to do nothing. Fine but all the studies show despite tinkering with current structures, that THERE WILL NOT BE ENOUGH CAPACITY AFTER 2026!!
It takes time to build capacity so we need to start now because it will take 10+ years to build/ Ever heard of PLANING FOR THE FUTURE or you would be better to bury your head in the sand? Luckily the Government and all 3 major political parties do understand the problem so HS2 will be going ahead.
So what studies exactly have been done? Where I can look these up to see what you are saying that all our railways will be full in 15 years?

Nick1042 says...
4:15pm Fri 17 Feb 12

Windsorian wrote:
Chiltonian wrote:
i think you will find that the rail industry - not HS2- have completely put to bed any arguments that money could best invested in the current railway system. They all agree that the existing rail network is not future proof and it is simply grinding to a halt. We are in recession - yet train use continues to rapidly grow each year. They conclude that this country's main railway line would be at capacity in 15 years regardless of how much money you spend on it.
I think it is worth remembering that HS2 is not just about projected passenger growth, it is also about freeing up existing infrastructure for a massive expansion of rail freight. There is a key objective of getting many more lorries off our roads and also meeting the government's environmental targets.
But this has a problem in itself. Firstly building the darn thing will create more emissons and then high speed rail is not green itself so there will still be emissons when running. Then if you did get lorries off the roads then those drivers will lose their jobs and then the fact that HS2 will create so many jobs will be ofset against the numbers of jobs lost.

piran says...
4:21pm Fri 17 Feb 12

Nick1042 wrote:
Windsorian wrote:
Chiltonian wrote:
i think you will find that the rail industry - not HS2- have completely put to bed any arguments that money could best invested in the current railway system. They all agree that the existing rail network is not future proof and it is simply grinding to a halt. We are in recession - yet train use continues to rapidly grow each year. They conclude that this country's main railway line would be at capacity in 15 years regardless of how much money you spend on it.
I think it is worth remembering that HS2 is not just about projected passenger growth, it is also about freeing up existing infrastructure for a massive expansion of rail freight. There is a key objective of getting many more lorries off our roads and also meeting the government's environmental targets.
But this has a problem in itself. Firstly building the darn thing will create more emissons and then high speed rail is not green itself so there will still be emissons when running. Then if you did get lorries off the roads then those drivers will lose their jobs and then the fact that HS2 will create so many jobs will be ofset against the numbers of jobs lost.
I don't know why you bother commenting because everything you put is basically negative to HS2 and down to you not wanting HS2! Everything else is just distractions and side arguments. Nothing will convince a person like you, despite the evidence. I am not wasting any more of my time reading your comments because they are so totally predictable!

Nick1042 says...
4:51pm Fri 17 Feb 12

piran wrote:
Nick1042 wrote:
Windsorian wrote:
Chiltonian wrote:
i think you will find that the rail industry - not HS2- have completely put to bed any arguments that money could best invested in the current railway system. They all agree that the existing rail network is not future proof and it is simply grinding to a halt. We are in recession - yet train use continues to rapidly grow each year. They conclude that this country's main railway line would be at capacity in 15 years regardless of how much money you spend on it.
I think it is worth remembering that HS2 is not just about projected passenger growth, it is also about freeing up existing infrastructure for a massive expansion of rail freight. There is a key objective of getting many more lorries off our roads and also meeting the government's environmental targets.
But this has a problem in itself. Firstly building the darn thing will create more emissons and then high speed rail is not green itself so there will still be emissons when running. Then if you did get lorries off the roads then those drivers will lose their jobs and then the fact that HS2 will create so many jobs will be ofset against the numbers of jobs lost.
I don't know why you bother commenting because everything you put is basically negative to HS2 and down to you not wanting HS2! Everything else is just distractions and side arguments. Nothing will convince a person like you, despite the evidence. I am not wasting any more of my time reading your comments because they are so totally predictable!
Why can't you handle somebody having a difference of opinion to you? Its a debate, you think HS2 is a good idea, and I think its not the best way forward based on what I have said before, the bad business case, the over estimate on passenger numbers and the fact that HS1 has not worked out as well as we were told it was and other countries high speed rail failures like Netherlands.

I ask you again where can I read all the studies and forecast for our railways being full in the next 15 years?

Windsorian says...
6:04pm Fri 17 Feb 12

@Nick1042
The CO2 emmissions during HS2 construction should be spread over the 100+ year lift expectancy of the infrastructure, as per the classic lines we are still using today.

Electric trains produce virtually no CO2 at point of use and decarbonisation of the electric supply is the responsibility of the DECC not the DfT. Don't bother looking at todays electricity generation emmisssions; the figure to look at is those projected for 15 years time when HS2 starts work.

Only today our Prime Minister has been in France sorting out our next generation of nuclear power stations that will provide a base load of low CO2 electricity.

I think by now most people are pretty fed up with the high cost of electricity from Green sources, and are reasonably content with nuclear.

Chiltonian says...
10:45pm Tue 28 Feb 12

Internal contacts at the Council indicate that the figures released by 51M are hiding the real spend to date which includes the full salary of at least two dedicated HS2 County Council Officers and a large expenses bill.

gpn01 says...
11:01pm Tue 28 Feb 12

I think it's time that the Luddites came into the 21st Century and accepted that we need extensive investment in modern capabilities.
.
We need investment in 21st Century infrastructure that enables us to compete in a globalized environment against other modernized countries. That's what will help employment and improve our economy.
.
As a quick reminder, trains have been in operation in the UK since the early 1800's. In comparison, the Internet came into being in the 1980's.
.
So,
.
trains = 210 year-old
.
Internet = 30 year-old
.
Funny when you think about it in these terms, the HS2's lobbyists who're saying that those who're against HS2 would probably prefer us stuck in the 19th century with canals instead of motorways are actually advocating spending money on a 200 year old infrastructure!

piran says...
12:39am Wed 29 Feb 12

gpn01 wrote:
I think it's time that the Luddites came into the 21st Century and accepted that we need extensive investment in modern capabilities.
.
We need investment in 21st Century infrastructure that enables us to compete in a globalized environment against other modernized countries. That's what will help employment and improve our economy.
.
As a quick reminder, trains have been in operation in the UK since the early 1800's. In comparison, the Internet came into being in the 1980's.
.
So,
.
trains = 210 year-old
.
Internet = 30 year-old
.
Funny when you think about it in these terms, the HS2's lobbyists who're saying that those who're against HS2 would probably prefer us stuck in the 19th century with canals instead of motorways are actually advocating spending money on a 200 year old infrastructure!
So do please explain how I can see/visit family and friends in the Midlands by transporting myself by the internet or is this by Star Trek magic - "Beam me Up Scottie"?

gpn01 says...
9:18am Wed 29 Feb 12

piran wrote:
gpn01 wrote: I think it's time that the Luddites came into the 21st Century and accepted that we need extensive investment in modern capabilities. . We need investment in 21st Century infrastructure that enables us to compete in a globalized environment against other modernized countries. That's what will help employment and improve our economy. . As a quick reminder, trains have been in operation in the UK since the early 1800's. In comparison, the Internet came into being in the 1980's. . So, . trains = 210 year-old . Internet = 30 year-old . Funny when you think about it in these terms, the HS2's lobbyists who're saying that those who're against HS2 would probably prefer us stuck in the 19th century with canals instead of motorways are actually advocating spending money on a 200 year old infrastructure!
So do please explain how I can see/visit family and friends in the Midlands by transporting myself by the internet or is this by Star Trek magic - "Beam me Up Scottie"?
Are you currently unable to visit family and friends in the Midlands then? There's another piece of 19th Century technology that you could use...called the car.
.
Now would you care to explain to me how I could hold a multi-way video conference between team members in China, India, Singapore, New York and High Wycombe? I'm currently unable to do that because the broadband connectivity in Buckinghamshire isn't sufficient. If I were able to do that I could run a company locally with global reach to internationally dispersed teams. How would HS2 enable that?
.
Between the two scenarios (invest in a train service that allows you to see your friends a bit quicker or provide a broadband capacity enabling increasing multinational commerce) which do you think offers the better potential return and benefit to the UK and local economy?

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