Mike Oxsaw
8:02 Fri Oct 6
Re: HS2 may not run through to central London - report
|
What would Labour's view have been had the government remained committed to the full, as originally planned, route?
I strongly suspect they'd have moaned about that as much as they;\\'re moaning about it's cancellation.
What part of "We don't need it, we can't afford it" do they not understand?
|
Side of Ham
7:29 Fri Oct 6
Re: HS2 may not run through to central London - report
|
Yep, we have the vote to let the Labour shambles in....round & round & round it goes.....meanwhile things need sorting not brushing aside to get in again......that is all they are ALL bothered about.
|
RM10
7:18 Fri Oct 6
Re: HS2 may not run through to central London - report
|
Another Tory shambles! Remember you have the vote.
|
Westham67
6:34 Fri Oct 6
Re: HS2 may not run through to central London - report
|
Blowing my own trumpet. I predicted Jan this year nothing North is practical as in realistic
|
Fifth Column
5:56 Fri Oct 6
Re: HS2 may not run through to central London - report
|
This was always a stupid vanity project of politicians.
If they had just invested the money IN THE FIRST PLACE in northern rail it would have made much more sense.
Now we've got the worst of both worlds. Shambles.
|
Westham67
4:57 Fri Oct 6
Re: HS2 may not run through to central London - report
|
More than that MIM someone I know on LinkedIn his mate £600 a day who is "Awful"
True Zeb Manchester to Birmingham was more practical
|
zebthecat
1:18 Fri Oct 6
Re: HS2 may not run through to central London - report
|
The final nail in the coffin is Rishi Sunak approving the sale of the land that has been bought for the Birmigham to Manchester route which, more or less, guarantees that it cannot be resurrected. A lot of farm and woodland has been lost and I am willing to bet that it will never be given over to agriculture or nature again. It would have been a much better idea to start with that route. The "Network North" thing was obviously cobbled together in a big hurry and two thirds of the money is going to raod schemes and not public transport. It also includes two schemes that have already been built and whole bunch that were cancelled by Boris Johnson and Liz Truss.
|
mashed in maryland
12:13 Fri Oct 6
Re: HS2 may not run through to central London - report
|
Has anyone on here worked on HS2? Like actually on site?
Heard a load of "mate of a mate" type stories about it being an abortion, trades on £35/hr dayrate sat round doing nothing cos nothing for them to do, scaffold put up, left up for weeks then taken down unused, electricians putting in a load of wiring then being told to rip it out next day, etc etc etc.
None of this would be unbelievable, and would explain a lot, but unsure if true, be interested in any first person accounts from on the ground
|
Westham67
12:04 Fri Oct 6
Re: HS2 may not run through to central London - report
|
The PM did say one of the benefits of leaving the EU was being able to join Trans (She/her) Pacific partnership with our close neighbors Japan , Australia, Mexico, and Canada amongst others a mere 6 weeks to ship goods to the UK
There is a surge in the recruitment of QSs in the. West Midlands by HS2 contractor's. Everything in a contract sighed between HS2 and the contractors for cancelled work will go to an independent arbitor and HS2 will then have to give reasons why the contractors won't be paid the full sum of money within their contracts
|
northbankboy68
11:17 Fri Oct 6
Re: HS2 may not run through to central London - report
|
WH6
Sounds like you know what your talking about on here unlike many. I'd much rather spend billions on my mates Covid contracts than be in the single market.
Ho hum.
|
Westham67
2:07 Fri Oct 6
Re: HS2 may not run through to central London - report
|
Maybe Mike knows of one hes well traveled.. I have worked on 3 high-speed railway projects and 2 ballast projects both more the 140 km. And there has not been 1 with an HS2 entity a specific company set up to manage a project . It's normally big global construction systems or railway companys managing the project they have the experience to do so
|
Mike Oxsaw
5:28 Thu Oct 5
Re: HS2 may not run through to central London - report
|
London sending billions to fund the opulent lifestyles of bureaucrats in Brussels obviously benefits the north of England - I just need a clever person to tell me how, then we can all move on.
|
northbankboy68
5:00 Thu Oct 5
Re: HS2 may not run through to central London - report
|
Sir Alf,
We need to reverse the wealth redistribution we've seen over the last 13 years. The Brexit dividend will obviously help.
|
threesixty
1:16 Thu Oct 5
Re: HS2 may not run through to central London - report
|
I always thought the issue with the north was more about the connections between northern cities needed improvement, not there connection to London.
That’s why I never really understood hs2 in terms of what it does for commuting.
I understood just as westhan67 said that the southern part was about allowing freight to move faster on existing lines. I’m not surprised that they had second thoughts about spending even more billions that they never forcasted to spend on it to be honest. It feels more of a political problem I.e. we don’t care about the north , rather than it’s actually going to ruin the country not extending hs2.
|
Sir Alf
11:23 Thu Oct 5
Re: HS2 may not run through to central London - report
|
Am I right or not thinking the goal of this HS2 project was wealth distribution away from London at a time when everyone was travelling to a place of work everyday?
I am guessing the unintentional benefit of Covid was forcing corporations and organisations to realise people could work from home( the effectiveness of that and change to work processes to make it effective is another discussion) .
Moreover, the objective of wealth distribution is being progressed to some degree via WFH ?
Hence cancellation makes sense in this context doesn’t it? Of course others may be able to enlighten me on what I’m missing here ?
|
Westham67
10:37 Thu Oct 5
Re: HS2 may not run through to central London - report
|
It may have posted before. It's the volume of traffic HS2 would have taken off off of the Northern Western railway which is the issue it would made the passage of freight trains more frequent and extended the lifetime of the existing railway
Tax year starting April 23/24 is the start of a 5 year spending period for network rail.The HS2 money won't be part of that spending unless the HS2 bill is revoked
These new 100 projects have not been awarded to any contractor if anyone want to take it. Nothing will happen apart from a few token gestures until after the election
|
chim chim cha boo
4:56 Thu Oct 5
Re: HS2 may not run through to central London - report
|
RM10 10:20 Wed Oct 4
|
eusebiovic
12:15 Thu Oct 5
Re: HS2 may not run through to central London - report
|
ray winstone 7:44 Wed Oct 4
The only problem with that is is it will need a brand new railway junction the size of Sheffield or Leeds city centre to accommodate the extra capacity. It's like Manchester, there is one line in and another out to cross the Pennines.
As usual they are blowing it out of their arses.
|
RM10
10:20 Wed Oct 4
Re: HS2 may not run through to central London - report
|
Mike- the British? Please don’t associate me with this cunt of a govt that possibly is the worst since Thatcher, killed our country and its future. Add that to khan who is also killing London, to be associated with these low life’s saddens me.
|
eusebiovic
9:19 Wed Oct 4
Re: HS2 may not run through to central London - report
|
Still, it's going to be super convenient for all the QPR fans who live in suburban Birmingham.
Every cloud...
|
Mike Oxsaw
8:57 Wed Oct 4
Re: HS2 may not run through to central London - report
|
With a financial panache that only the British can carry off, they blew the best chance to modernise the railways in the 10 years following WW2.
OK, money was tight, but there were loads of servicemen returning from battle who could have been deployed to upgrade the infrastructure whilst still in the employ of the MoD/War Office, rather than flood the labour market looking for work.
After that, the Beeching cuts were virtually inevitable, especially with so much army surplus gear hitting the streets taking custom from the railways.
It was said at the time of the original HS2 announcement that there were a dozen or so less glamorous opportunities to make significant differences to the network, mainly through reducing/removing bottlenecks.
Many of the less glamorous improvements identified still exist and it would make sense, but probably not additional votes, to now address them.
|
|