By Bones McCoy
#49318
Andy McDandy wrote: Fri Jul 21, 2023 3:19 pm So was a good chunk of Essex...

By that logic, Chelmsford's north and Carlisle's south.
The Treaty of Alfred and Guthrum:
First as to the boundaries between us. [They shall run] up the Thames, and then up[e] the Lea, and along the Lea to its source, then in a straight line to Bedford, and then up the Ouse to Watling Street.
The Older kingdon of the East Saxons
The Kingdom of Essex was bounded to the north by the River Stour and the Kingdom of East Anglia, to the south by the River Thames and Kent, to the east lay the North Sea and to the west Mercia
The Kingdom's Eastern Border varied with time.

Modern Essex follows the Northern and Southern bounds of the kingdom, while maintaining the Lea as its eastern boundary.
User avatar
By Malcolm Armsteen
#49333
Do we have an east-west issue? I don't think the eastern border changed much over time.*

*Coastal erosion excepted.
User avatar
By Malcolm Armsteen
#49341
It is now, it wasn't in 1000.

After all, not much has happened since.
By Bones McCoy
#49367
Malcolm Armsteen wrote: Fri Jul 21, 2023 9:03 pm Do we have an east-west issue? I don't think the eastern border changed much over time.*

*Coastal erosion excepted.
my mistake, being equally inept with either hand I frequently confuse left and right - hence east and west.
I knew what I was trying to say.

<Tory Backbencher>
It's time the party opposite stopped talking down the beautiful and cultured county of Essex
</Tory Backbencher>
By Youngian
#49703
Used to qualify for export credit guarantees for selling military hardware to Ba’thist dictators. Sleazeball diarist Alan Clarke got into hot water over some disreputable deal with Saddam Hussein.
‘Who cares if one lot of foreigners is killing another lot of foreigners as long as they pay their bills,’ was Clarke’s ultra pragmatic approach.
User avatar
By Tubby Isaacs
#52845
Good luck to Andy with this. It's the right thing to do, but it'll need extra funding.

People often contrast London (no deregulation) with everywhere else and say "Look how much difference it makes!" I'm sure it does make some, and I certainly wouldn't want to deregulate London buses, but there are also big differences in population density, ease and cost of running cars etc. Deregulated buses are probably reasonably efficient in terms of identifying viable (if not profitable at least cheap enough that the council, even now, might subsidize them). If you're looking to serve places that haven't been well served, that'll probably cost you. Can Andy find that money?

I hope Andy can improve things, but expectations could be a bit high for the immediate future.

By MisterMuncher
#53185
Youngian wrote: Tue Jul 25, 2023 5:53 pm Used to qualify for export credit guarantees for selling military hardware to Ba’thist dictators. Sleazeball diarist Alan Clarke got into hot water over some disreputable deal with Saddam Hussein.
‘Who cares if one lot of foreigners is killing another lot of foreigners as long as they pay their bills,’ was Clarke’s ultra pragmatic approach.
Of course, a little nugget in the middle of the old ECG system is that the guarantees were paid out of the foreign aid budget. Because BAE Systems et al need the fucking money
User avatar
By Tubby Isaacs
#53335
Another article on Greater Manchester buses. Rather illustrates my worry about excessive expectations.

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfr ... -transport

Plenty on Mrs Thatcher, notorious Manchester bus wars, London. But...

This is the only bit on money.
We are all propping up the private operators in this broken system. Public money makes up 40% of bus company revenue, but the public has no control over fares, nor the vast majority of routes and timetables. And 10% of that public money is paid as dividends to bus company shareholders, instead of being reinvested in better services
That means.

Public subsidy re-invested in buses- 36
Money taken by bus operators- 4
Money paid by passengers- 60

That margin does sound too high. We can redue that when we negotiate under the new system. Let's say 5% margin. as a working figure as the new system beds in. We're up to.

Money paid by passengers 60
Public subsidy reinvested in buses- 38
Money taken by bus operators- 2

Well worth doing- do any policy that makes savings like this. Depends what expectations are. If it's purely "better use of public money, good", then fine. If it's "we'll be like London!", then you might well feel disappointed.

Burnham will have to do a lot of hard work on funding and encouraging passengers.
User avatar
By Boiler
#53425
The Weeping Angel wrote: Sun Sep 24, 2023 12:56 pm This sums up a lot of my issues with Burnham the way he plays up the whole poor north being ripped off by those southern ponces.
He should try living in the Fens, with all its long-closed east/west rail links and sparse buses... we lost whole railway lines from the 50s onwards.
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