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Trouble in open access paradise?

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Trouble in open access paradise?
Posted by jeaton on Thursday, July 20, 2006 7:23 PM

Just a few bugs to work out.

From the UTU Website

"Tories switch track on rail policy

The Conservatives will today (July 17) admit that the privatization of the railways under John Major in the 1990s was a mistake that inflicted costs on both passengers and the taxpayer as well as hindering expansion, according to this report published by The Guardian.

Launching a Conservative Rail Review today the shadow transport secretary Chris Grayling will say that privatization pushed up the cost of running the railway system -- and hence fares -- and the party will not seek to re-privatize the system if it returns to power.

Speaking to a meeting of rail industry figures Mr. Grayling will say: "We think, with hindsight, that the complete separation of track and train into separate businesses at the time of privatization was not right for our railways.

"We think that the separation has helped push up the cost of running the railways -- and hence fares -- and is now slowing decisions about capacity improvements.

"Too many people and organizations are now involved in getting things done -- so nothing happens. As a result, the industry lacks clarity about who is in charge and accountable for decisions."

A review, leading to a strategy paper next year, will be carried out "with a view to securing a much greater degree of integration between track and train."

Mr. Grayling will also warn that passengers are facing higher fares and greater overcrowding in the next few years because no increase in capacity is planned before 2014 despite a projected 30% growth in passenger numbers.

"All of this adds up to more and more passengers, on more and more overcrowded trains, and with constant upward pressure on fares to try and take the sting out of overcrowding. Frankly, I don't think this is sustainable," he will say.

Mr. Grayling will add: "We are not expecting to recreate British Rail, but we do want to work with the industry to identify a better structure to ensure it can meet the challenges of the next decade."

While politicians should be removed from making decisions on the railways he will say that the Tories do not intend to take the rail network back into public ownership but that new integrated organizations would be expected to work under franchise rather than own the track.

The aim would be, however, to ensure there is greater scope for more long-term investment decisions which are often impossible under the current shorter franchise arrangements.

"The new structure would also have to protect the interests of freight users to get more freight off the roads. Of paramount importance in the work we do will be ensuring that any new structure must protect the interests of freight users and encourage future growth in rail freight."

Mr. Grayling will also indicate the Conservatives would give railway workers financial incentives to improve customer services and prevent strikes.

"We want to see rail workers share in the future financial success of the railways, particularly to discourage future militancy and strike action. We regard the people who work on our railways as skilled professionals, responsible for the safety, operation, logistics and customer service of our network. We think they should share in its success and have a real incentive to help improve the service it offers."

(The preceding report was published by The Guardian on Monday, July 17, 2006.)

July 17, 2006"

"We have met the enemy and he is us." Pogo Possum "We have met the anemone... and he is Russ." Bucky Katt "Prediction is very difficult, especially if it's about the future." Niels Bohr, Nobel laureate in physics

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Posted by Anonymous on Thursday, July 20, 2006 8:10 PM

Yep, another unbiased report from the UTU (insert sarcastic smiley here).

However, if you read between the lines, you will see that this is more a criticism of privatization of the British rail system than of having separate infrastructure and operating entities.  In fact, the very first paragraph states that privatization was the "mistake". 

What the quotee does is to blur the lines of distinction between the act of privatization and the act of separating track from train.  He makes the allegation that separation is the cause of higher fares, when in fact privatization is the real cause of higher fares.  When the railroads were run by the government, they were not expected to make a profit, rather they were effectively subsidized.  The fares charged for using the passenger trains under British Rail did not cover the cost of providing the service by a long shot.  (Hmmmm, sounds like Amtrak to me!)

Now that fares are expected to cover costs and provide a profit, of course they are gonna go up!  Put that one in the "duh" file, will you Jay?

Funny, but there is no mention here of comparative freight rates pre-privatization vs post-privatization.  The whole idea of open access is to allow natural market forces to drive decision making, which means moving the stuff that makes money, e.g. freight, not passengers.  However, in Europe it is considered a natural right that citizens will have rail passenger services.  It is hard wired into the socialist tapestry of the Continent, and is the number one reason that growth in rail freight is stymied.  Doesn't really matter if it is private separated track and train operations, or private integrated track and train operations, freight will always play second fiddle to passenger trains in Europe.  The big difference between private OA operations and private integrated operations is that under OA, rail freight at least has a chance of growth, since 3rd party operators can bid for slots.  That is what is happening now in most of Europe, slowly but surely.  Under integrated operations, freight has no chance, because political forces will demand passengers first of the integrated operator, and 3rd party freight entities will be left out in the cold

.That is the real political aim of the Fascists........er, I mean the "Tories" - use the "mistake" of rail privatization as political tool to get votes.  Remember, passengers vote, freight does not.  Re-read the article, and you will see it is focused on higher passenger rates, not on the ostensible attempts at getting freight off roads and onto rail.  In truth, in this article OA is the straw man taking the pot shots for the higher passenger fares associated with privatization.  Take out OA and replace it with private integrated operations - you still will have higher passenger fares, and like the US you will have a lack of infrastructural investment to keep up with demands.  All that privatized integrated operations will accomplish is to create one or two monopolistic fiefdoms.  Yeah, that'll get those passenger rates down.Laugh [(-D]Laugh [(-D]Laugh [(-D]

Sir Grayling is either less than honest, or an economic moron.

 

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Posted by jeaton on Thursday, July 20, 2006 11:45 PM

Well I am sure glad you set me straight on the whole situation. 

A couple things I don't quite understand.  If ridership has gone up to the point that capacity is being used up and fares have increased so much, why isn't money being spent to increase capacity?  Wouldn't the private companies make even more money if they had the capacity to increase their business?  Further, if the companies could make even more money hauling freight, why are they ignoring that business?

By the way, the Tories are the political conservatives of the country.  The people and politicians of your state are considered very conservative.  Fascists?

"We have met the enemy and he is us." Pogo Possum "We have met the anemone... and he is Russ." Bucky Katt "Prediction is very difficult, especially if it's about the future." Niels Bohr, Nobel laureate in physics

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Posted by Limitedclear on Friday, July 21, 2006 2:16 AM

Speaking of mistakes...oh, hi FM...

FOFLMAO...

LC

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Posted by beaulieu on Friday, July 21, 2006 8:18 AM
 jeaton wrote:

Well I am sure glad you set me straight on the whole situation. 

A couple things I don't quite understand.  If ridership has gone up to the point that capacity is being used up and fares have increased so much, why isn't money being spent to increase capacity?  Wouldn't the private companies make even more money if they had the capacity to increase their business?  Further, if the companies could make even more money hauling freight, why are they ignoring that business?

By the way, the Tories are the political conservatives of the country.  The people and politicians of your state are considered very conservative.  Fascists?



Don't confuse the situation in the UK as complete "Open Access" its not. For passenger services they are franchised out, once the franchise is let there is not direct competion. There is one single Open Access passenger service from one small city, Hull to London, The City receives minimal service from the franchised operator so there was minimal objection to the entry of the competion. There is another niche Open Access operator that may start up soon. The British press tends to ignore freight operations as though they don't exist. For freight there is strong competition and the market is growing. The market is constrained by the small size of the UK which means that haul distances are very short compared to the US. The Channel Tunnel provides the potential to lengthen hauls in a big way, but until the last couple of months France has been totally closed to Open Access. SNCF Fret the National Railway has been losing traffic at a terrible rate due to continual strikes, and poor service. Down  last year, and down better than 10 percent for the first six months of this year. EWS, the largest UK operator has just begun operating in France last month, but it will take time to grow the business.

The Railroad Companies for Passenger Services in the UK are just franchise Operators who provide a service to specification, most receive a subsidy. Think of them like Herzog Transportation in the US. Two generate a surplus that pays money back to the Government. The Government decides on capacity enhancement and also on major changes to services offered. The companies can make minor changes on their own. Just like the situation with Highways The Government funds and specifies all significant changes to the Railway Network. Network Rail then maintains the network out of regular income. The freight Operators are on their own.  Mostly no subsidies, except a company neutral one to promote Intermodal, and a special one for Channel Tunnel freight which is to end this year. It is hard to draw a direct comparision to the US.
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Posted by TomDiehl on Friday, July 21, 2006 10:01 AM
 jeaton wrote:

Well I am sure glad you set me straight on the whole situation. 

A couple things I don't quite understand.  If ridership has gone up to the point that capacity is being used up and fares have increased so much, why isn't money being spent to increase capacity?  Wouldn't the private companies make even more money if they had the capacity to increase their business?  Further, if the companies could make even more money hauling freight, why are they ignoring that business?

By the way, the Tories are the political conservatives of the country.  The people and politicians of your state are considered very conservative.  Fascists?

Laugh [(-D]  Laugh [(-D]  Big Smile [:D]

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Posted by edblysard on Friday, July 21, 2006 11:02 AM

Actually Dave,

It is Mr. Grayling, not Sir or Lord.

As of yet, he carries no Crown Title.

 

I find it funny that you call an MP in the House of Commons of one of the biggest industrialized nations in the world, who publicly expressed the need to review his country’s policy, an economic moron, when you, technically, don’t exist at all.

 

And most of us can read the words written and draw a sensible conclusion from them, we don’t need to “read between the lines”, which contains nothing but empty space, something I am sure your very familiar with.

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Posted by MP173 on Friday, July 21, 2006 12:31 PM
Thank goodness this forum is returning to it's glory days.  I am tired of ____thread for everyone.  Lets muck it up with open access, Milwaukee PCE, captive shippers, and 180% VR discussions.

ed

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Posted by edblysard on Friday, July 21, 2006 1:06 PM

You forgot evil monopolistic pricing practices and greedy retrenchment!Clown [:o)]

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Posted by Anonymous on Friday, July 21, 2006 7:44 PM
 jeaton wrote:

Well I am sure glad you set me straight on the whole situation.

Glad to help the cause of the cognitively challenged.Wink [;)] 

A couple things I don't quite understand.  If ridership has gone up to the point that capacity is being used up and fares have increased so much, why isn't money being spent to increase capacity?

Because passengers don't make money for any railroad, even in passenger train paradise.  Passenger trains can use up capacity to the hilt and not make a dime for the operator or the infrastructure owner.

  Wouldn't the private companies make even more money if they had the capacity to increase their business?  Further, if the companies could make even more money hauling freight, why are they ignoring that business?

They're not.  Read bl's post regarding the freight situation.  If not for the French closed access Evil [}:)] blockade, more long haul freight companies would be banging down the doors to get a piece of that potentially humoungous pie.

By the way, the Tories are the political conservatives of the country.  The people and politicians of your state are considered very conservative.  Fascists?

The Tories aren't any more conservative than the old pre-Reagan wing of the Republican party, which by today's standards would be considered very liberal.  That was back in the days of the Nixon/Rockefeller corporate liberalism, not the grass roots Christian/Conservative/Small Business aspects of today's Republican Party.  That Rockefeller wing was more in tune with propping up large monopolistic corporations in distain of small business and individualism, and thus at the expense of economic innovation.  So yes, I consider the Rockefeller *conservatism* as nothing more than corporate fascism, certainly not in the best interests of most US citizens.  And the Tories don't engender anything that would have widespread public benefits of true social conservatism.

The only reason the British press/public considers the Tories as "conservatives" is that the opposition party, Labour, is even more liberal.  Such is the political landscape in Europe.

Perspective, Jay, perspective.

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Posted by beaulieu on Friday, July 21, 2006 11:08 PM
I might add to my previous post that the former government didn't stop at separating the infrastructure from the operators, they then divided up the trackage into a significant number of sections and let bids for maintenance contracts, with the lowest bidder getting the contract. The Engineering Dept. was sold off and Railtrack had to contract back in their services. Indeed Railtrack was only allowed to retain a small number of track inspectors who were to function as auditors only. That proved to be way too few as at Hatfield a fast moving DMU derailed at a switch and slammed into the station platform. The cause was discovered to be missing bolts on an adjustment rod for the facing point lock at a switch. In other words the DMU picked the switch at nearly 90 mph. due to improper maintenance. Note that the contractor holding the contract for that section had reported excellent financial results for the previous year. The company was investigated and then fined heavily for serious failings in record keeping and employee qualifications, and  all their contracts were cancelled. Since then Railtrack has been replaced by Network Rail who has taken all Maintenance and Engineering functions back in House where they belong.
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Posted by mudchicken on Friday, July 21, 2006 11:43 PM

Context, FM - Context. (new forum, same pedantic snob act;  you remain clueless....)

 

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Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, July 22, 2006 11:49 AM
 mudchicken wrote:

Context, FM - Context. (new forum, same pedantic snob act;  you remain clueless....)

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Grow up.

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Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, July 22, 2006 12:07 PM

 beaulieu wrote:
I might add to my previous post that the former government didn't stop at separating the infrastructure from the operators, they then divided up the trackage into a significant number of sections and let bids for maintenance contracts, with the lowest bidder getting the contract. The Engineering Dept. was sold off and Railtrack had to contract back in their services. Indeed Railtrack was only allowed to retain a small number of track inspectors who were to function as auditors only. That proved to be way too few as at Hatfield a fast moving DMU derailed at a switch and slammed into the station platform. The cause was discovered to be missing bolts on an adjustment rod for the facing point lock at a switch. In other words the DMU picked the switch at nearly 90 mph. due to improper maintenance. Note that the contractor holding the contract for that section had reported excellent financial results for the previous year. The company was investigated and then fined heavily for serious failings in record keeping and employee qualifications, and  all their contracts were cancelled. Since then Railtrack has been replaced by Network Rail who has taken all Maintenance and Engineering functions back in House where they belong.

It seems then that the original separation went to far, making things more complex than it had to be.  OA should consist of two basic funtioning units - track owner and train operator(s).  It is fine if either basic unit wants to contract out certain services from time to time, but it should not be a requirement nor a standard practice.

I also think the franchising rights aspect does not allow the OA model to function optimally.  Franchising sole rights to use certain sections of track may invoke the unintentional lazy bug for the franchisee, and thus repress the need for competitive innovation.  Come to think of it, the only advantage of franchising over US-style integrated operations is that if the franchisee does not please the online clients, they can reject them for a new franchisee when the contract is up for renewal.  Under US-style integrated operations, the online clients are stuck with the "take it or leave it" attitude forever (or until the IO tears out the tracks, whichever comes firstWink [;)]).

For OA to work as intended, it would be better for Britain and the rest of the EU if they reject the franchise model and instead go with the slot bidding model.  This allows multiple entities to compete head to head, and allows the free market aspects of competition to spark the fight for innovation and better customer service.  Of course, under free market oversight, the freight entities would be able to outbid the passenger entities, and that might be the one area where Europeans may feel enmity for OA.  Taking freight off the roads is probably less important for the average European voter than keeping the public passenger trains running as expected.  They consider the passenger train a God-given right the way Americans consider the automobile a God-given right, right?

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Posted by TomDiehl on Saturday, July 22, 2006 12:15 PM
 futuremodal wrote:

 beaulieu wrote:
I might add to my previous post that the former government didn't stop at separating the infrastructure from the operators, they then divided up the trackage into a significant number of sections and let bids for maintenance contracts, with the lowest bidder getting the contract. The Engineering Dept. was sold off and Railtrack had to contract back in their services. Indeed Railtrack was only allowed to retain a small number of track inspectors who were to function as auditors only. That proved to be way too few as at Hatfield a fast moving DMU derailed at a switch and slammed into the station platform. The cause was discovered to be missing bolts on an adjustment rod for the facing point lock at a switch. In other words the DMU picked the switch at nearly 90 mph. due to improper maintenance. Note that the contractor holding the contract for that section had reported excellent financial results for the previous year. The company was investigated and then fined heavily for serious failings in record keeping and employee qualifications, and  all their contracts were cancelled. Since then Railtrack has been replaced by Network Rail who has taken all Maintenance and Engineering functions back in House where they belong.

It seems then that the original separation went to far, making things more complex than it had to be.  OA should consist of two basic funtioning units - track owner and train operator(s).  It is fine if either basic unit wants to contract out certain services from time to time, but it should not be a requirement nor a standard practice.

I also think the franchising rights aspect does not allow the OA model to function optimally.  Franchising sole rights to use certain sections of track may invoke the unintentional lazy bug for the franchisee, and thus repress the need for competitive innovation.  Come to think of it, the only advantage of franchising over US-style integrated operations is that if the franchisee does not please the online clients, they can reject them for a new franchisee when the contract is up for renewal.  Under US-style integrated operations, the online clients are stuck with the "take it or leave it" attitude forever (or until the IO tears out the tracks, whichever comes firstWink [;)]).

For OA to work as intended, it would be better for Britain and the rest of the EU if they reject the franchise model and instead go with the slot bidding model.  This allows multiple entities to compete head to head, and allows the free market aspects of competition to spark the fight for innovation and better customer service.  Of course, under free market oversight, the freight entities would be able to outbid the passenger entities, and that might be the one area where Europeans may feel enmity for OA.  Taking freight off the roads is probably less important for the average European voter than keeping the public passenger trains running as expected.  They consider the passenger train a God-given right the way Americans consider the automobile a God-given right, right?

And what would stop the future applications of this concept from going equally as far, if not farther in this subcontracting? Railroads already subcontract some maintenance work, track as well as rolling stock, so the precident is there for this to happen no matter which operation concept is used. Since it's already such a corporate mantra in this day and age, why would it NOT happen here?

The more restrictions you put on implementing a new concept, the less interest there will be in companies wanting to bid on it.

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Posted by mudchicken on Saturday, July 22, 2006 12:25 PM

(1) What part of "Get Real" do you refuse to understand? Do you not understand the word context? (or are you afraid of it?...It kinda makes a mess of most of your warped arguments when the rest of the world fails to walk off in lockstep with you...)

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Posted by Limitedclear on Saturday, July 22, 2006 2:39 PM
 futuremodal wrote:
 mudchicken wrote:

Context, FM - Context. (new forum, same pedantic snob act;  you remain clueless....)

Disapprove [V]Disapprove [V]Disapprove [V]

Grow up.

 

WAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA!!!

FM, crying like his ol' self, eh MC...

But we can't expect an uneducated non-railroader like FM to understand much, can we???

LC

 

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Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, July 22, 2006 3:07 PM

However, if you read between the lines, you will see that this is more a criticism of privatization of the British rail system than of having separate infrastructure and operating entities.  In fact, the very first paragraph states that privatization was the "mistake". 

No, Chris Grayling was actually admitting that having separate operating/ infrastructure entities was a mistake.

What the quotee does is to blur the lines of distinction between the act of privatization and the act of separating track from train.  He makes the allegation that separation is the cause of higher fares, when in fact privatization is the real cause of higher fares.  When the railroads were run by the government, they were not expected to make a profit, rather they were effectively subsidized.  The fares charged for using the passenger trains under British Rail did not cover the cost of providing the service by a long shot.  (Hmmmm, sounds like Amtrak to me!)

Utter codswallop. The 1968 Railways Act recognised the social railway and that a subsidy would be paid for that. the socail railway was one that was percieved to be losing money but vital to the local community. Believe it or not, there are bits of Britains railway network whoch are very difficult to cover by using bus. During the 1980's, BR was sectorized; InterCity, Provincial, Network SoputhEast (the social bit) and Freight. Of those, both Intercity and Freight were expected to run without subsidy and to a set return (5-7%). Thus they cut their cloth accordingly. The Freight business therefore concentrated on bulk haul and nothing else, whilst the Intercity Business concentrated on the major routes out of London and charging what the market could pay. And lo, British Rail actually turned a profit, but as we know when Investment Plans are in full swing and when the passenger business follows the economy a nasty recession can produce a sea of red ink. Thus Major Major decided to privitise the "deeply inefficient" BR.

BR also applied Prime User charging to its routes which helped some opf the more marginal services which the Subsidy was paid for; that went when the system was privatised leaving some services facing 3x the track access charges they were paying before.

 

Now that fares are expected to cover costs and provide a profit, of course they are gonna go up!  Put that one in the "duh" file, will you Jay?

Under privitisation most of the saver tickets which wre eavailable have been either severely restricted or have disappeared. However sason tickets are regulated for political reasons which does not make much environmental or social sense rreally.

Funny, but there is no mention here of comparative freight rates pre-privatization vs post-privatization.  The whole idea of open access is to allow natural market forces to drive decision making, which means moving the stuff that makes money, e.g. freight, not passengers

Passenger trains do make money. Lots of it; Freight barely strugggles to make a 10% margin in this country. Thats why BR junked the marginal stuff and jacked the prices up to the captive shippers (hiss). Now that there is competition the rates have come down,  however the companies are finding it diufficult to get a decent return ( no suprise) and the infrastructure owner is finding it difficult to accomodate all users, or potential users.

However, in Europe it is considered a natural right that citizens will have rail passenger services. 

Anymore than it is considered a natural right for all Yanks to drink petrol drinking motorized vehicles.

 It is hard wired into the socialist tapestry of the Continent, and is the number one reason that growth in rail freight is stymied.  Laugh [(-D]

Doesn't really matter if it is private separated track and train operations, or private integrated track and train operations, freight will always play second fiddle to passenger trains in Europe.  The big difference between private OA operations and private integrated operations is that under OA, rail freight at least has a chance of growth, since 3rd party operators can bid for slots.  That is what is happening now in most of Europe, slowly but surely.  Under integrated operations, freight has no chance, because political forces will demand passengers first of the integrated operator, and 3rd party freight entities will be left out in the cold

Some semblance of truth here. However, semblance only. Firstly what are the political forces aspirations. In many countries there are active schemes to promote freight onto the railways. If you are going to franchise a train operation which is not vertically integrated then the franchisee will run to what you pay it; a set timetable of lets say 10 trains for lets say £100 per year. The Franchisee can then have the option of adding extra services to that or not. Now, if there is space in the network and if the infrastructure operator is sufficently incentivised wither through regulation or fiscal inducement then whatever slots will be on offer can be then parcelled round and in the UK Freight pays mainly marginal costs. By Law OA operators where the market exists and b) if they do not abstract from the revenue of the franchisee in passenger terms can have a bite of the cherry, thier rights are protected.

That is the real political aim of the Fascists........er, I mean the "Tories" - use the "mistake" of rail privatization as political tool to get votes.  Remember, passengers vote, freight does not.  Re-read the article, and you will see it is focused on higher passenger rates, not on the ostensible attempts at getting freight off roads and onto rail.  In truth, in this article OA is the straw man taking the pot shots for the higher passenger fares associated with privatization.  Take out OA and replace it with private integrated operations - you still will have higher passenger fares, and like the US you will have a lack of infrastructural investment to keep up with demands.  All that privatized integrated operations will accomplish is to create one or two monopolistic fiefdoms.  Yeah, that'll get those passenger rates down.Laugh [(-D]Laugh [(-D]Laugh [(-D]

Sir Grayling is either less than honest, or an economic moron.

Oh dear. Mussolini was fascist. So was Hitler btw. Not sure if you can count the Tories under that umbrella.

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Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, July 22, 2006 3:16 PM

I might add to my previous post that the former government didn't stop at separating the infrastructure from the operators, they then divided up the trackage into a significant number of sections and let bids for maintenance contracts, with the lowest bidder getting the contract. The Engineering Dept. was sold off and Railtrack had to contract back in their services. Indeed Railtrack was only allowed to retain a small number of track inspectors who were to function as auditors only. That proved to be way too few as at Hatfield a fast moving DMU derailed at a switch and slammed into the station platform. The cause was discovered to be missing bolts on an adjustment rod for the facing point lock at a switch. In other words the DMU picked the switch at nearly 90 mph. due to improper maintenance. Note that the contractor holding the contract for that section had reported excellent financial results for the previous year. The company was investigated and then fined heavily for serious failings in record keeping and employee qualifications, and  all their contracts were cancelled. Since then Railtrack has been replaced by Network Rail who has taken all Maintenance and Engineering functions back in House where they belong.

Yes and no. It was railtracks decision when flogged to downgrade the enginerring function and concentrate on generating cash from property. They were sold a pup when the Infrastructure/ Renewal contracts were signed and then handed to them; as basically these were based on a RPI-3% basis over 5 years on system where the number of trains was increasing. Therefore there was no incentive to actually inspect; add in a perofrmace regime which was suspect and chaos ensued. Hatfied was caused by a railbreak on a curve through RCF, nothing to do with crossings; I believe that you are mxing that up with Potters Bar. However Hatfield was the straw whoch broke the camels back as Failtrack found out to its horror that it didn't know the actual state of its asset; therefore panicked and imposed 20MPH blanket restrictions. The result was massive penalties for the users and a rerailing of a lot of sites. Not long after Railtrack was forced int administration by the government.

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Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, July 22, 2006 3:20 PM

For OA to work as intended, it would be better for Britain and the rest of the EU if they reject the franchise model and instead go with the slot bidding model.  This allows multiple entities to compete head to head, and allows the free market aspects of competition to spark the fight for innovation and better customer service.  Of course, under free market oversight, the freight entities would be able to outbid the passenger entities, and that might be the one area where Europeans may feel enmity for OA.  Taking freight off the roads is probably less important for the average European voter than keeping the public passenger trains running as expected.  They consider the passenger train a God-given right the way Americans consider the automobile a God-given right, right?

Slot bidding. This was proposed in the UK and then thrown out as a) unworkable, b) inefficient and c) stupid.

Still, it did take them some time for that particular penny to drop.  I suggest FM that you brush up on your Britsh Politics and read the 1993 Railways Act. Then look at the current situation before spouting forth.

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Posted by Murphy Siding on Saturday, July 22, 2006 8:01 PM
     All things considered, I believe I'll go with cogload on this one.  He's a little closer to the subject than us "Yanks", and tends to tell it like he sees it.Big Smile [:D]

Thanks to Chris / CopCarSS for my avatar.

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Posted by n012944 on Saturday, July 22, 2006 9:11 PM

 Murphy Siding wrote:
     All things considered, I believe I'll go with cogload on this one.  He's a little closer to the subject than us "Yanks", and tends to tell it like he sees it.Big Smile [:D]

 

I would like to thank cogload for explaining the way things work over there for some of the hardheaded, open access is the fix for everything, users.

 

Bert 

An "expensive model collector"

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Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, July 22, 2006 9:18 PM
 cogload wrote:

For OA to work as intended, it would be better for Britain and the rest of the EU if they reject the franchise model and instead go with the slot bidding model.  This allows multiple entities to compete head to head, and allows the free market aspects of competition to spark the fight for innovation and better customer service.  Of course, under free market oversight, the freight entities would be able to outbid the passenger entities, and that might be the one area where Europeans may feel enmity for OA.  Taking freight off the roads is probably less important for the average European voter than keeping the public passenger trains running as expected.  They consider the passenger train a God-given right the way Americans consider the automobile a God-given right, right?

Slot bidding. This was proposed in the UK and then thrown out as a) unworkable, b) inefficient and c) stupid.

Your source, especially for that "stupid" designation?  Which political party was behind that bit of analysis?  The Standing In The Back Dressed Stupidly And Looking Stupid party?  (From the Blackadder III seriesWink [;)])

Slot bidding is the only free market approach that makes sense.  Franchising is just backdoor integration.  The thought behind both IO's and Franchise operators is that only one train operating entity can possibly utilize a particular stretch of track effectively for a particular commodity, because only one train can run on single track at one time, and said crews need to be trained to run those sections.  However, having multiple users does not inhibit effective use of single track, as US trackage rights agreements atest.  It is quite easy to allow multiple train operators to use the same sections of track to haul the same basic commodities from the same basic locales.

The bottom line is this:  If you want railroad rates to be market based, you need to have multiple competitors bidding for the same commodities.  That is what slot bidding accomplishes.  Apparently, you're saying the British politicos did not consider market based rates as the primary reason for privatization, rather just a simplistic notion that privatization is better than nationalization.  From what I've read about the European rail situation, the only reason for embracing track and train separation was to allow private train operators to cover the whole European rail system under EU Directive 91/440   Hey, if you're gonna have a common currency and such, better have a common basis for train operations. 

And of course, this directive for commonality of train operating services across Europe is why the idiotic idea of integrating British rail operations under a vertical private umbrella just won't work toward achieving the EU directive.  How can you have each nation endorsing US-style private integration and still achieve the cross border fluidity as desired by the directive?  You can't.  The IO operator from Britian will have to hand off or transload to the French IO at the French border station, who will have to hand off or transload to the Belgian IO at that border, and so on, and so on.  You will not have the British IO crossing over uninterrupted to France and continuing down French rails, will you? 

An unaffilated private 3rd party carrier can do that.  A privatized IO affiliated with a particular nation cannot.

Still, it did take them some time for that particular penny to drop.  I suggest FM that you brush up on your Britsh Politics and read the 1993 Railways Act. Then look at the current situation before spouting forth.

I suggest you go back and read the findings of the Adam Smith think tank and it's eventual influence on European rail privatization before spouting hither.  I suspect you are a renationalization advocate, but will differ on that until you can give us more background on your political wish list.

The way I see it, Europeans have to choose between prioritizing a saturated rail passenger network, or prioritizing a desire to get freight off the roads and onto rails.  If it's the former, go back to nationalization and forget privatization.  If it's the latter, develop a true private OA network with intramodal competition for providing rail services, e.g. slot bidding, none of this lazy backdoor integration called franchising.

But if rail users in Europe, both passengers and freighters, would rather bend over and get jacked in the crack, by all means go for Mr. Grayling's suggestion for a private US-style integrated rail system.

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Posted by beaulieu on Saturday, July 22, 2006 9:42 PM
 cogload wrote:


Slot bidding. This was proposed in the UK and then thrown out as a) unworkable, b) inefficient and c) stupid.

Still, it did take them some time for that particular penny to drop.  I suggest FM that you brush up on your Britsh Politics and read the 1993 Railways Act. Then look at the current situation before spouting forth.



Your right Cogload, I did mix up Potter's Bar with Hatfield. Hatfield was the straw that broke Railtrack's back, while Potter's Bar did lead to Network Rail bringing track maintenance back in house.

FM doesn't have a clue when he suggests slot bidding. The answer is to have enough capacity for both freight and passengers.

In the British case I think they need to renationalize passenger services, the networks are broken by the current franchising model. The Swiss system is what needs to be strived for. I do beleive that it is possible to franchise out some passenger services. It does seem to be working in Germany. But the contracts must be sensible, performance must be clearly specified, and their performance must be measured. Letting the franchise bidders propose services without consideration and coordination with the other franchises is ridiculous.
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Posted by Anonymous on Sunday, July 23, 2006 4:47 AM
 futuremodal wrote:
 cogload wrote:

For OA to work as intended, it would be better for Britain and the rest of the EU if they reject the franchise model and instead go with the slot bidding model.  This allows multiple entities to compete head to head, and allows the free market aspects of competition to spark the fight for innovation and better customer service.  Of course, under free market oversight, the freight entities would be able to outbid the passenger entities, and that might be the one area where Europeans may feel enmity for OA.  Taking freight off the roads is probably less important for the average European voter than keeping the public passenger trains running as expected.  They consider the passenger train a God-given right the way Americans consider the automobile a God-given right, right?

Slot bidding. This was proposed in the UK and then thrown out as a) unworkable, b) inefficient and c) stupid.

Your source, especially for that "stupid" designation?  Which political party was behind that bit of analysis?  The Standing In The Back Dressed Stupidly And Looking Stupid party?  (From the Blackadder III seriesWink [;)])

Slot bidding is the only free market approach that makes sense.  Franchising is just backdoor integration.  The thought behind both IO's and Franchise operators is that only one train operating entity can possibly utilize a particular stretch of track effectively for a particular commodity, because only one train can run on single track at one time, and said crews need to be trained to run those sections.  However, having multiple users does not inhibit effective use of single track, as US trackage rights agreements atest.  It is quite easy to allow multiple train operators to use the same sections of track to haul the same basic commodities from the same basic locales.

The bottom line is this:  If you want railroad rates to be market based, you need to have multiple competitors bidding for the same commodities.  That is what slot bidding accomplishes.  Apparently, you're saying the British politicos did not consider market based rates as the primary reason for privatization, rather just a simplistic notion that privatization is better than nationalization.  From what I've read about the European rail situation, the only reason for embracing track and train separation was to allow private train operators to cover the whole European rail system under EU Directive 91/440   Hey, if you're gonna have a common currency and such, better have a common basis for train operations. 

And of course, this directive for commonality of train operating services across Europe is why the idiotic idea of integrating British rail operations under a vertical private umbrella just won't work toward achieving the EU directive.  How can you have each nation endorsing US-style private integration and still achieve the cross border fluidity as desired by the directive?  You can't.  The IO operator from Britian will have to hand off or transload to the French IO at the French border station, who will have to hand off or transload to the Belgian IO at that border, and so on, and so on.  You will not have the British IO crossing over uninterrupted to France and continuing down French rails, will you? 

An unaffilated private 3rd party carrier can do that.  A privatized IO affiliated with a particular nation cannot.

Still, it did take them some time for that particular penny to drop.  I suggest FM that you brush up on your Britsh Politics and read the 1993 Railways Act. Then look at the current situation before spouting forth.

I suggest you go back and read the findings of the Adam Smith think tank and it's eventual influence on European rail privatization before spouting hither.  I suspect you are a renationalization advocate, but will differ on that until you can give us more background on your political wish list.

The way I see it, Europeans have to choose between prioritizing a saturated rail passenger network, or prioritizing a desire to get freight off the roads and onto rails.  If it's the former, go back to nationalization and forget privatization.  If it's the latter, develop a true private OA network with intramodal competition for providing rail services, e.g. slot bidding, none of this lazy backdoor integration called franchising.

But if rail users in Europe, both passengers and freighters, would rather bend over and get jacked in the crack, by all means go for Mr. Grayling's suggestion for a private US-style integrated rail system.

I find it refreshing being lectured by someone who lives 5000 miles away.

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Posted by jeaton on Sunday, July 23, 2006 9:40 AM

Actually, it's much farther than 5000 miles.  We think it is an alternate universe far to the right of ours.  One of the features of that universe seems to be that the money to invest in railroad infrastructure grows on trees, thus the inefficient and unworkable can be used because because there is no problem adding capacity.

This universe is populated by geniuses and the mere suggestion that any of their ideas is stupid will cause an onslaught of insults that would make a right wing talk show host stand up and salute.

"We have met the enemy and he is us." Pogo Possum "We have met the anemone... and he is Russ." Bucky Katt "Prediction is very difficult, especially if it's about the future." Niels Bohr, Nobel laureate in physics

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Posted by Anonymous on Sunday, July 23, 2006 12:03 PM
 cogload wrote:
 futuremodal wrote:
 cogload wrote:

For OA to work as intended, it would be better for Britain and the rest of the EU if they reject the franchise model and instead go with the slot bidding model.  This allows multiple entities to compete head to head, and allows the free market aspects of competition to spark the fight for innovation and better customer service.  Of course, under free market oversight, the freight entities would be able to outbid the passenger entities, and that might be the one area where Europeans may feel enmity for OA.  Taking freight off the roads is probably less important for the average European voter than keeping the public passenger trains running as expected.  They consider the passenger train a God-given right the way Americans consider the automobile a God-given right, right?

Slot bidding. This was proposed in the UK and then thrown out as a) unworkable, b) inefficient and c) stupid.

Your source, especially for that "stupid" designation?  Which political party was behind that bit of analysis?  The Standing In The Back Dressed Stupidly And Looking Stupid party?  (From the Blackadder III seriesWink [;)])

Slot bidding is the only free market approach that makes sense.  Franchising is just backdoor integration.  The thought behind both IO's and Franchise operators is that only one train operating entity can possibly utilize a particular stretch of track effectively for a particular commodity, because only one train can run on single track at one time, and said crews need to be trained to run those sections.  However, having multiple users does not inhibit effective use of single track, as US trackage rights agreements atest.  It is quite easy to allow multiple train operators to use the same sections of track to haul the same basic commodities from the same basic locales.

The bottom line is this:  If you want railroad rates to be market based, you need to have multiple competitors bidding for the same commodities.  That is what slot bidding accomplishes.  Apparently, you're saying the British politicos did not consider market based rates as the primary reason for privatization, rather just a simplistic notion that privatization is better than nationalization.  From what I've read about the European rail situation, the only reason for embracing track and train separation was to allow private train operators to cover the whole European rail system under EU Directive 91/440   Hey, if you're gonna have a common currency and such, better have a common basis for train operations. 

And of course, this directive for commonality of train operating services across Europe is why the idiotic idea of integrating British rail operations under a vertical private umbrella just won't work toward achieving the EU directive.  How can you have each nation endorsing US-style private integration and still achieve the cross border fluidity as desired by the directive?  You can't.  The IO operator from Britian will have to hand off or transload to the French IO at the French border station, who will have to hand off or transload to the Belgian IO at that border, and so on, and so on.  You will not have the British IO crossing over uninterrupted to France and continuing down French rails, will you? 

An unaffilated private 3rd party carrier can do that.  A privatized IO affiliated with a particular nation cannot.

Still, it did take them some time for that particular penny to drop.  I suggest FM that you brush up on your Britsh Politics and read the 1993 Railways Act. Then look at the current situation before spouting forth.

I suggest you go back and read the findings of the Adam Smith think tank and it's eventual influence on European rail privatization before spouting hither.  I suspect you are a renationalization advocate, but will differ on that until you can give us more background on your political wish list.

The way I see it, Europeans have to choose between prioritizing a saturated rail passenger network, or prioritizing a desire to get freight off the roads and onto rails.  If it's the former, go back to nationalization and forget privatization.  If it's the latter, develop a true private OA network with intramodal competition for providing rail services, e.g. slot bidding, none of this lazy backdoor integration called franchising.

But if rail users in Europe, both passengers and freighters, would rather bend over and get jacked in the crack, by all means go for Mr. Grayling's suggestion for a private US-style integrated rail system.

I find it refreshing being lectured by someone who lives 5000 miles away.

C'mon, give us the official Government reference for slot bidding as being "unworkable, inefficient, and stupid".  We're still waiting.

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Posted by Anonymous on Sunday, July 23, 2006 12:33 PM

 beaulieu wrote:


FM doesn't have a clue when he suggests slot bidding. The answer is to have enough capacity for both freight and passengers.

In the British case I think they need to renationalize passenger services, the networks are broken by the current franchising model. The Swiss system is what needs to be strived for. I do beleive that it is possible to franchise out some passenger services. It does seem to be working in Germany. But the contracts must be sensible, performance must be clearly specified, and their performance must be measured. Letting the franchise bidders propose services without consideration and coordination with the other franchises is ridiculous.

I would venture that you don't have a clue about how to go about meeting the demands of having "enough capacity for both freight and passengers" or how to make franchisers responsible for your performance specs.  At least you didn't offer any proposed solutions to the inherent ineffeciencies of franchising.  How do you propose to make franchisers coordinate with one another?  What aspect outside of subjective government regulation would inspire them to optimize performance?

The only solution that works is the free market/intramodal competition model.  Slot bidding is more inline with that end than either franchising, integrated monopolization, and of course re-nationalization.  You don't like pure slot bidding?  How about preference based slot bidding?  Certain train types are given priority over others - passenger, intermodal, manifest, drags - then slot usage allotment is based on established prioritization.  That way you don't have the gravel hauler outbidding the intermodal for that crucial time slot.  The point is, there is always a workable solution for integrating a theoretical construct into a real world situation.  It's called using your collective brain power.

Again, franchising's only advantage over an integrated monopoly or a government-run train service is that the franchiser can eventually have his contract terminated and awarded to other franchise bidders if the clients are not satisfied with the performance.  But there is obviously a time penalty from the moment rail users find out things aren't so grand to the moment the contract is up for renewal, so they just have to wait a spell until that day comes (and that usually involves some significant monetary losses during the wait).  Under a model that promotes real time intramodal competition, if you don't like the service of one rail service provider, you can call up another the next day, just like trucking.  Under an integrated monopoly or a nationalized rail network, you're just stuck with the bad service indefinitely.

There are, what, four current freight service providers that have franchises with the infrastructure operator?  Then the Brits could do something as simple as this:  Keep the franchises as they are, but allow any dissatisfied rail shipper of one franchise to solicit service from one of the other freight service providers.

However, although that might provide some intrastate relief, when France finally allows current European rail freight service providers access to their rail network then the Brits are going to have to see if a continental freight service provider should be allowed access onto British rails.  Hopefully, having some common freight service providers across all the EU nations will finally come into play, and the benefits of the EU rail directive can finally be met.

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Posted by greyhounds on Sunday, July 23, 2006 12:52 PM

What FM doesn't get, and the Torries do (I think that's the first time I've ever used that word) is that when you split the infrastructure and train operations you create a monopoly where there was none before.  The infrastructure owner will have only one market, the train operators.  The train operators will have only one supplier, the infrastructure owner.  Only one supplier is, by definition, a monopoly.

Monopolies use too few resources, they maximize their returns by restricting supply and driving up prices.  That's not good for the people, and economies should be organized for the good of the people, not the good of one monopoly orgainization. (Government owned or privately owned, it makes absolutely no difference.)  The Torries see that, the infrastructure controlling orgainization is not expanding capacity (it's using too few resources) and is causing problems for the population.  Very typical of any monopoly.

An integrated railroad (one that owns track and operates trains) is not a monopoly.  This is not only true in the UK where distances are short, but in the US.  The US General Accounting Office says the only 6% of US freight is captive.  That means 94% is subject to effective competition.  No monopoly here.

When you split the train operations from track ownership, you make the track owner a monopoly.  It has no competition.  Only it can supply track capacity.  It's best interest (whether it be government owned or privately owned) will be to restrict that capacity to drive up prices.

On the other hand, an integrated company, one that owns the track and operates the trains, will see expanding track capacity as a way to increase returns in its competitive train operating environment.  That's why the BNSF, operating in a competitive environment,  is pouring money into track expansion while the monoploy track owner in the UK has no current expansion plans.

FM just doesn't understand this.  (Nor does he want to understand this.)  He's wedded to his ideology of open access.  And when the facts show that it doesn't work, he'll simply reject those facts. 

 

 

"By many measures, the U.S. freight rail system is the safest, most efficient and cost effective in the world." - Federal Railroad Administration, October, 2009. I'm just your average, everyday, uncivilized howling "anti-government" critic of mass government expenditures for "High Speed Rail" in the US. And I'm gosh darn proud of that.
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Posted by MichaelSol on Sunday, July 23, 2006 2:58 PM
 greyhounds wrote:

What FM doesn't get, and the Torries do (I think that's the first time I've ever used that word) ...

First time anyone's used it. It's spelled wrong.

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