With UK winters being poor for outdoor activities
So give your county-level councillor hell. Www.writeToThem.com What kind of stupid place has useful buses uphill but not down? If the local commercial car hire market is completely tourist focused, why is there no community or public car club for local people? Government should intervene if the market fails.Car free is a good idea for those who live in a suitable area but not where I live.
I don't believe that would make a measurable difference to overall carlessness in either UK or France.
The numbers of people making that journey often enough to matter are insignificant. And the numbers who drive it now but would use the train are an insignificant proportion even of those. The people who don't use the train because of those limitations will usually fly.
What is needed is 5-10 times as many stations in the UK as we currently have, and much more frequent trains from most of them to all nearby (I.e. Within about 25 miles) destinations. Plus a lot more bus services, with frequent buses.
Eh ? Cycle all year, all weathers. UK weather isn't particularly extreme, and there is nothing better than getting out. Cycling indoors is mind numbingly sheite !
So give your county-level councillor hell. Www.writeToThem.com What kind of stupid place has useful buses uphill but not down? If the local commercial car hire market is completely tourist focused, why is there no community or public car club for local people? Government should intervene if the market fails.
so what is going on here ? is this some sort of gym in a barn, and the bikes have been converted into exercise bikes - is it a spin-class (have heard of those but not sure what they are) and what is with the computer screens
so what is going on here ? is this some sort of gym in a barn, and the bikes have been converted into exercise bikes - is it a spin-class (have heard of those but not sure what they are) and what is with the computer screens
Well, yes, and also being realistic, most transport is loss-making at the point of delivery, with the exception of a few exclusive high-priced services and some toll roads. The aim is to provide mobility which unlocks benefits, either economic or social. The £125m-and-ever-rising diversion of two miles of the A10 won't make a profit itself, but it'll enable 3200 more houses... what it does to bus and bike service levels is still unclear.Being realistic the service is certainly loss making
and is in fact a diversion which I would not care to tackle with the problems of existing streets with blind and very tight corners allied to badly parked cars.
😲 What, all of them? You get a 4x4, you get a 4x4, everyone gets a 4x4, local council as Oprah?So far as car hire clubs the population here now is wedded to large 4X4’s with well off retired people and the actual workers are often itinerant and are not very likely to hire cars or are tradesmen who need vans.
It's pessimism and Thatcherite worldviews that get in the way, much more than idealism. Don't believe the argument that bus and tram services aren't "feasible" if fares don't cover 100% of their costs: car infrastructure is funded from council tax, not only tolls and vehicle taxes. There's few good reasons not to cover 95% of rural dwellers with a mobility service, even if for some it's only a CallConnect-style online/dialup one (effectively a subsidised taxibus).We also have a large proportion of rural dwellers in places where no bus service is feasable.
It is all very well being idealistic but real life in places like this gets in the way.
Don't believe the argument that bus and tram services aren't "feasible" if fares don't cover 100% of their costs
so what is going on here ? is this some sort of gym in a barn, and the bikes have been converted into exercise bikes - is it a spin-class (have heard of those but not sure what they are) and what is with the computer screens
Well, yes, and also being realistic, most transport is loss-making at the point of delivery, with the exception of a few exclusive high-priced services and some toll roads. The aim is to provide mobility which unlocks benefits, either economic or social. The £125m-and-ever-rising diversion of two miles of the A10 won't make a profit itself, but it'll enable 3200 more houses... what it does to bus and bike service levels is still unclear.
😲 What, all of them? You get a 4x4, you get a 4x4, everyone gets a 4x4, local council as Oprah?
It's pessimism and Thatcherite worldviews that get in the way, much more than idealism. Don't believe the argument that bus and tram services aren't "feasible" if fares don't cover 100% of their costs: car infrastructure is funded from council tax, not only tolls and vehicle taxes. There's few good reasons not to cover 95% of rural dwellers with a mobility service, even if for some it's only a CallConnect-style online/dialup one (effectively a subsidised taxibus).
UK weather isn't particularly extreme