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#1 |
Chairman/Publicity
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: The Home of Hurling
Posts: 2,708
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![]() I heard Barry Kenny on radio IE, sorry, Newstalk 106 breakfast show today. He was speaking about pay parking.
Now this is something we have touched upon before and indeed we have a position on it: http://www.railusers.ie/passenger_issues/parking.php But Barry Kenny came up with a couple of reasons to justify this policy and I regret that I didnt have a chance to take him to task on it (will one day though, Barry). 1. The charge reduces the usage of the car park facilities by those who dont use the train. 2. It encourages those who can otherwise walk or cycle to abandon their cars. 3. There was a reference to overcrowding on trains 4. The charge is €2 per day €5 per week. 5. The revenue is needed to pay for the upgrades This is why those reasons dont stack up: 1. If you want just the rail users to use your car park then you operate a system whereby a token is issued to you by the station staff on showing your ticket which you use on exit or a system whereby you can use your ticket. If you have a season ticket you are given a ticket that the entry/exit barriers can read to allow you to exit at all times. At the same time you have a look at what the local parking charges are and you charge double so that anyone who really does want to park in the IE car park during their shopping will go elsewhere. 2. If you live within a killometer of a station you will walk. Some stations are not very assessabile to the vast majority of the local population- eg, Hazelhatch, Maynooth, Salins. There can be little option for many many people but to drive. Leaving aside the nanny-state element of this, why bother expand a car park (the rationalle given for the charging) if at the same time you are trying to discourage people from driving? Ergo, the principle will achieve 100% success when the car park is empty. This is despite the fact that the princely sum of €2 is not going to discourage anyone from driving in the first place, although it is noteworthy to point out that it is just about the price of a packet of Tayto on an intercity train. 3. This I found odd, and indeed I may have mishead it but a lot fo texters did mention the fact that this will do nothing to ease such overcrowding. Let's hope that we're not seeing a dim little bulb appearing above Barry's head entitled "rush hour surcharge" 4. The price is too small to discourage anyone from parking. I'd throw €2 at a cat to get it off my grounds so paying €2 means nothing to anyone, not even €5 a week. It is too small to act as a disencentive, therefoe it is a revenue generating device. Think about this: Luas introduced a similar small charge to stop casual customers using the rush hour service? Do you know anyone that stopped using it? Have you? Do you even notice that it costs more? Nope. The only thing that has changed on Luas is the balance sheet. Same will happen here. 5. It is amazing that a company, wholly owned by a major property developer, who has licenced the building of apartments and commercial developement on its lands for millions of euro, hasnt ringfenced that money for works such as this. Also, can we please have the exact bill for each station car park redevelopment? Perhaps then we can ring fence each car park revenue to that development cost so we know that in some future date the costs will be eliminated. And, erm, if that is the reason, how come not every car park being redeveloped is seeing pay parking being introduced. Anyway, Claire Byrne thinks you're all getting great value for money at €2, as its cheaper than any other parking in the area. Considering IE use this to deter parking, that hardly makes sence. If something is free today and €2 tomorrow I'd hardly call that value for money but if you want to tell her that it'll cost you .30C. Last year it was free, but I'm sure that its great value for money nonetheless. |
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#2 |
Technical Officer
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Coach C, Seat 33
Posts: 12,669
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![]() Irish Rail have refused to back down on the planned charges at the proposed Pace and Dunboyne stations. Its not even up for discussion. Irish Rail refuse to accept that for the charge a physical security presence is then warranted
The good folks in Newbridge where told that they could either have an extended car park with a charge or nothing. We are aware that these new car parks infact may not be costing Irish Rail any money since they is a huge massively undersubscribed fund held by the DoT to fund Park and Ride schemes Like it says on our website, its not sustainable anyway to keep providing bigger car parks since its not addressing the actual issue, local area transport
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#3 | |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Clonsilla
Posts: 2,812
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![]() From The Irish Times
http://www.ireland.com/newspaper/mot...713281438.html Quote:
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#4 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Clonsilla
Posts: 2,812
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![]() Quick question re. coolmine station.
Heard a rumour that the Carpark will close for eighteen months when they are making the carpark into a double storey and they may be even closing the station down for some time. any truth to any of that? |
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#5 |
Really Regular Poster
Join Date: Dec 2005
Posts: 873
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![]() the existing pay parking council owned car parks in Arklow allow only 4 hours max. so IE will let non train users pay for the week for a fiver. sweet!
I wonder how the system will work for kiss and ride passengers, will passengers now need to be dropped on an unsafe road immediately outside a station car park? Also you'ld have to wonder about the malice in no season tickets being issued to allow customers avail of tax relief. Or instead of providing increased capacity they would try limit the numbers of customers... |
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#6 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2005
Posts: 378
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![]() You are assuming motives where none exist.
Whoever is building these things simply does not think in these terms that we can relate to. |
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#7 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Northern line
Posts: 1,311
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![]() This is a very interesting topic. You would think that someone travelling to the train station from within walking/cycling distance would see the incentive of actually leaving their car at home.
Questions arise though when access to the stations from within its catchment area are poor. No cyclepaths, poor footpaths, poor lighting. Poor ped and cycle crossings and unsecure bike parks etc. Also bus linkups could come into the equation, Portmarnock for example. In an ideal world these improvements would be carried out either before the pay parking comes into effect or as part of the car park upgrading works. Sadly we live in Iarnrod Eireannland. |
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#8 |
Technical Officer
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Coach C, Seat 33
Posts: 12,669
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![]() The position on charging for car parking is quite simple
If you pay you expect something in return, there is a high level of vandalism and theft reported at some station car parks despite CCTV, if there was a visible security presence then I think everyone would be a little more agreeable to a charge, this is the consensus which formed in Newbridge earlier this year, its the compromise position and a reasonable one. Irish Rail have refused on several occasions to provide security if the car park was charged for At the moment you get charged to park where you parked for free last week with nothing extra provided
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#9 | |
Really Really Regluar Poster
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Toronto, Canada
Posts: 1,371
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![]() Quote:
There is no entitlement to parking in any business - it's essentially a function of demand. If service is undersubscribed you make it free to encourage use. If the trains are jammed and you'll get the passengers no matter what why give away what you can charge for? At the least restricting free parking to premium customers (monthly pass holders) is reasonable while charging the occasional user. If IE charge for parking then maybe local authorities will be forced to make local connecting transit a reality. |
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#10 |
Regular Poster
Join Date: Jul 2006
Posts: 132
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![]() The one thing I will say is that the car park which I am most familiar with, Donabate Northbound, has some of the worst parking I have ever seen.
I have seen people drive into other cars twice while trying to manoeuvre out of the gate. The width of the gate is reduced to the size of one car parking space and there is usually someone parked perpendicular to it up the middle of the carpark. The access road has cars parked all along the footpath and the side of the road with no footpath has double yellow lines which are ignored daily. It is not uncommon to see people take up more than one space through careless parking over the white lines. At least if pay and display parking were to be bought in, the fees would pay for the cost of sending clampers out to make sure people park properly. Am I right in thinking that it is wrong to expect resources be put into patrolling car parks for bad parking where there is no revenue coming in from them? |
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#11 |
Technical Officer
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Coach C, Seat 33
Posts: 12,669
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![]() Well Portmarnock got a nice car park in recent years
Its free The clampers visit daily and deal with anyone who parks outside the defined spaces at €65 or more a go it seems to work just fine If you look at the planned Pace car park, 1000 spaces, assuming a average yield of €1.50 per space per weekday thats €7,500 per week and thats not including the clamping fees on anyone who breaks the rules. Its a lot of cars a lot of money will there be a security presence, no Will the car park be used by non rail passengers, no Are Irish Rail paying for it, no
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#12 |
Regular Poster
Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 180
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![]() how can IE justify charging for carparks that they are not paying for themselves?
In Greystones there is a large park and ride, but it was built on council land with DTO money and as a consequence it is free (though it does suffer from some security problems). What's the difference between that and what's planned at (for example) Pace? |
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#13 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Northern line
Posts: 1,311
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#14 |
Really Regular Poster
Join Date: Dec 2005
Posts: 873
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![]() http://historical-debates.oireachtas...511240034.html
bearing in mind Bary Kenny is quoted as saying there is no other way to pay for these improvements at http://www.independent.ie/national-n...s-1239057.html "This is simply about covering the cost. If there is any surplus, it will be reinvested in the service, but we wouldn't anticipate any. The only other way (to pay for these improvements) is to factor in the cost into the rail ticket." Either you the passengers are being screwed by an ignorant Irish Rail who were unaware of the capital funding, or you the passengers are being screwed by an Irish Rail who are aware and in receipt of capital funding, or some other as yet unexplained thing is occurring. Ask your local Govt TD. |
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#15 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2005
Posts: 378
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![]() A quick look at the Subvention review shows :
Goals: "To integrate public transport and non-public transport modes An understanding of changes in provision of car parking at stations, cycle parking at QBC bus stops, etc. will inform the overall assessment of performance and the issues impacting on performance, although they are not directly related to operational expenditure." In consultation with the Steering Committee, the view was taken that the assessment of the achievement of integration and sustainability objectives should not be an area of focus for the expenditure review. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
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#16 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Drogheda, Ireland
Posts: 1,275
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![]() While I'm thrilled about the prospect, paid parking is something I could suffer, especially since I can cycle to the station, it would give me an added incentive on those days I'm feeling lazy.
There are two aspects I have an issue with. As far as I know it's a pay and display system, so you'll have to allow an extra five minutes to feed money to a machine and stick the ticket on your windscreen. It will be infuriating watching your train leave while you pay for your parking. Passengers who park every day should only have to endure the ritual once a week, but occasional parkers who don't know ahead whether they'll need parking just lose another five minutes of their valueable time. The second point is that in order to pay a €2 parking fee, I have to earn nearly €4 and pay tax on it. I can already get the tax back on my train ticket. Why can't I pay for parking at my choice of station with my yearly ticket and get tax back on the lot? That would also solve the problem stated above, as I would have a yearly parking pas in the window of my car. |
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#17 | |
Member
Join Date: Sep 2007
Posts: 278
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![]() Quote:
People are incredibly lazy in this country and (mostly) when they have the option of driving short distances, they will drive the short distance. |
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#18 |
Member
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Northern line
Posts: 1,311
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![]() Hopefully the pay parking measures will deter those situations. I feel that Iarnrod Eireann could engage in some awareness campaigns at some of the other stations suffering from people driving short distances. Reminders to people that it only takes 10 mins to walk 1km, costs €X per km to run your car, pollution per km etc..
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#19 |
New to the board
Join Date: Feb 2007
Posts: 9
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![]() It's all very well to say that people who live within a km of the station are lazy for driving and should be walking, but this doesn't take into account:
1. The climate... it's hardly mediterranean! ![]() 2. The quality of roads, footpaths & street lighting around many outlying stations leaves a lot to be desired. I have had cars come uncomfortably close to me on the narrow road down to Louisa Bridge station... this does not encourage me to walk. 3. Other tasks achieved on the way to the station such as dropping kids to creche or school. I may be missing the point here, but I think paying €5 pw for a car park is infintely preferable to parking on a muddy verge on a poorly lit road. People are voting with their feet...or their wheels when they are too lazy to use their feet ![]() |
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#20 | |
Member
Join Date: Sep 2007
Posts: 278
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![]() Quote:
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