07-07-2010, 17:41 | #41 |
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I presume that you have made the NTA aware of the inconsistent figures IE are throwing around?
The line's running cost magically became €4 million over the past week - well up from the original figure of €2.5 million. And an interview has surfaced from 2005 where Dick Fearn was talking about the line carrying 70 passengers per day. Still not impressive but he should have to explain to the NTA how he managed to lose over 50% of the service's passengers over the course of five years. |
13-07-2010, 10:17 | #42 |
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The actual running cost is 1.9 million per annum, of which 55% is pure staff cost. A significant service level increase would be offset in full by increased revenue as much of the cost base is fixed.
The line will NOT CLOSE on July 21st, that is for sure. From our discussions with various groups and consultants we foresee services continuing into 2011 and beyond. That said the board of CIE have questions to answer as to the process followed and the underhand media operation which pushed out false numbers to sway public opinion.
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13-07-2010, 13:30 | #43 | |
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My real concern is whether the NTA will stand up to IE given as the Tribune revealed months ago, the closure is essentially a political decision sanctioned at some unofficial level by the Minister for Transport. May I suggest that a well-worded FOI to the Department of Transport might make interesting reading? |
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15-07-2010, 09:12 | #44 | |
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Services will continue until at least September 3rd, though probably until September 30th
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Unhappy with new timetable - let us know Last edited by Mark Gleeson : 15-07-2010 at 09:14. |
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15-07-2010, 11:05 | #45 | |
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Just to be clear
1. The fact the NTA are taking there time and are considering submissions forced this change 2. The law requires 8 weeks notice of the intention to close, its open ended. Irish Rail can close any day from July 21st onwards 3. The legality of the notice issued on May 21st is in some doubt and has been subject to legal review by several parties and formal complaints by others including RUI 4. For a legal point of view Irish Rail can claim the legal right to close the line on July 21st and pay the resultant penalty from the NTA, however this would leave Irish Rail management in breech of the CIE code of ethics Quote:
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16-07-2010, 16:33 | #46 | |
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18-07-2010, 13:22 | #47 |
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Looks like IE are going to act unilaterally before the NTA have decided....
http://www.rte.ie/news/2010/0718/rail.html So if they can get away with this, the purpose of another quango, the NTA is what exactly? |
18-07-2010, 14:48 | #48 |
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That was recorded last Saturday the 10th, usual lazy journalism and editing.
Services will continue for some time. Notices stating this are posted at the stations, was in Bridgetown yesterday amongst others.
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18-07-2010, 15:06 | #49 | |
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18-07-2010, 15:12 | #50 |
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I would expect to see a new notice.
The line remains open, in some respects the longer it remains open the more likely it will be retained.
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Unhappy with new timetable - let us know Last edited by Mark Gleeson : 18-07-2010 at 23:42. |
18-07-2010, 17:12 | #51 |
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RTE changed the report for the 6-1 to reflect the truth
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18-07-2010, 18:36 | #52 | |
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Website still says this. Were you talking to someone in RTÉ?
http://www.rte.ie/news/2010/0718/rail.html Quote:
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19-07-2010, 11:44 | #53 | |
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The Waterford - Rosslare will remain open until further notice.
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20-07-2010, 02:22 | #54 |
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After all the bad news about train travel in Ireland recently, I'm sure we're all devastated to read the above.
What IE simply don't get, and never have got, is the idea of putting the passenger first. In fact, in this country, the paying passenger comes last when travelling by rail. For decades, the advantage enjoyed by Irish Rail over other forms of transport here was it's speed. Long distance, short distance, rush hour or slack hour, you could rely on it, plan your journey time around it, and spend more time at home, than using the bus. Twice a year since 2006, I've gone to LOI games in Galway, and used the Friday evening express service which would take you from Heuston to Galway in just 140 minutes. This year, the departure time was brought forward, and 2 more stops added, equating to a 20 minute delay on the route, despite more powerful engines and better quality trains. By comparison, the bus route from Dublin to Galway is faster, cheaper, and more frequent. For the first time going to Galway yesterday, I went there by plane instead of using the train, because of the above reasons. When the Malahide Viaduct collapsed last year, Irish Rail needed the bus to help them run a Northern Commuter Service. When the bridge was ready again, the business failed to pick up, as people preferred using the bus. Why? Cheaper, faster, more frequent. Currently Bus Eireann run 20-odd daily services between Rosslare Europort and Dublin. The service is available, and it is used. IR run a handful of services in both directions each day, the last one leaves both destinations in evening rush hour, and so people desert the service in favour of the bus. After decades without a service, Limerick and Galway are once again connected by rail. But the road network can do the journey in half the time at a fraction of the price. You don't get those passengers back without a few changes. The way forward is to give your customers what they want, roll the trains out 24/7, run direct inter city services between the major cities in order to compete with other modes of transport. Cut fares at stations, away from the "book online" method. The market is there to use rail transport, but not the services. Vast swathes of the country are served by a single rail line, further reducing frequency and quality of service. As seen by the viaduct collapse, all it takes is one incident to paralyse the network. Overnight trains are an idea completely alien to IR, despite it been standard practice across Europe. There is one service between Waterford and Rosslare every day, and obviously it isn't going to attract business, because of how it's run. The closure of a rail line is never a happy event, however the Waterford-Rosslare line's imminent demise is not the fault of passengers, but due to Irish Rail's complete inflexibility with it's schedule, and abject failure to react to market forces in the region over a considerable period of time. Put your passenger first, not last.
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"We'd like to apologise for..." Last edited by on the move : 20-07-2010 at 02:25. |
20-07-2010, 10:12 | #55 | |
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I was one of the 43 on Saturday. A passenger boarded at Ballycullane. Three bikes onboard as well. 2 through passengers for the UK. The count was taken by two people. Its going to get very embarrassing for Irish Rail as this article is only the start.
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Unhappy with new timetable - let us know Last edited by Mark Gleeson : 20-07-2010 at 10:37. |
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20-07-2010, 10:58 | #56 | |
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No ticket checker on board
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20-07-2010, 15:27 | #57 | |
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More in their line to challenge some of the "children" to prove their age - drinking and smoking before getting on train and then demanding a child ticket |
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20-07-2010, 20:15 | #58 | |
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20-07-2010, 21:13 | #59 |
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Not wanting to drag this thread off topic, but seeing that 90% of journeys on that line are too or from Cork, why not just have entry and exit validation in Cork. In fact, tickets are usually checked while boarding.
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21-07-2010, 22:24 | #60 |
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There isn't a lot of space at the top pf platforms 1, 2 & 3 for validators and as a lot of trains terminate there, there would be a delay in clearing the platforms => miss the bus connection. You would also beed to have some way of checking the few through (Cobh-Mallow) services that use platforms 4 or 5.
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