This deserves a much longer response, if not a thread of its own, possibly under “Looking Forward – Life after Coronavirus to 2045” – but that is meant to be about transport in the South and South West, so I will stick to this thread if the moderators will permit me.
I'm delighted to have this thread here off wider as it is doing. Really important stuff and I may split, move, rename the topic to give it more exposure. I'm going to leave a full answer to a separate follow up - just comment on mechanism in this individual response ...
[snip]
Sorry to start the year on such a gloomy and negative note.
Please do NOT be sorry - indeed, thank you for those thoghts. We need to identify and acknowledge those issues and work forward with things like campaigning and partnership - I hope we can limit the complaining and protesting. Identification of an issue and brining the elements together - as you are doing in this thread - is a step (and
IMHO▸ a vital one) in starting to address it.
From a .sig on an email from yesterday ...
Railfuture – Campaigning for better services over a bigger railway - run by volunteers to benefit rail users
And this "tag line" now worries me.
Better services - yes, yes, yes. Whether that means "more", "better connecting", "more reliable", "better understandable", "lower cost [to whom]", "all trains with buffet cars", "comfortable","safer","less crowded" I will leave to discussion
Bigger - and this is where I'm not so sure. Size of infrastructure is a feature and not a benefit. I recall seeing a very sad picture of Felixstowe station, with three derelict trackbeds and just a single line leading to a buffer stop on the fourth. Ouch. But, hang on, that station now handles more passengers than it ever did in the past with the efficiency of modern trains without the need for run arounds, filling with coal and water, lots of cleaning, and the need for an extra person to keep the power train running with a head of steam.
Railway - not even so sure here, either. Public transport - whatever the mode - for the future. Railway technology is vey much the best in some places. But don't limit to trains - or even trains and buses. I suspect that not many members here use ferries or cable cars as part of their regular journeys, but a number do fly quite often. And upcoming perhaps we have hyperloop and material transfer.
Volunteers - I thinks the reference there is to the Railfuture organisation rather than to public transport. We can and should make much more use of volunteers - people doing the job for their keen advocacy of the topic rather that doing it [just] to earn a living. But there is (IMHO) a need to ensure that this keen advocacy (call it enthusiasm) is not limited by the financial limits on these advocates; at present, so much of this work is done in small chunks that we are grateful for by people in the earlier phases of life, with the lion's share by the newly retired who all too quickly fade and are no longer with us after too few years when we could have done with having them on board decades earlier.
benefit of rail users - Qualified yes. For the benefit of all people travelling around (whatever mode they use) and for the continued sustainable thriving of the places they go to and from and of other places too - including the wider social and economic benefit.
I suspect I have opened a further can of worms there ...