How would such an idea fit in with
GBR▸ ? Obviously that depends what GBR turns into. But the devolution of city and regional services was strikingly absent from the Williams-Shapps Plan for Rail; there were just some vague words about co-operation. And the interaction of GBR's railway with those more local modes was even more absent.
What WSPR did say was:
31. Pay As You Go journeys will be expanded outside London to make millions more trips straightforward.
The roll-out of Pay As You Go, where passengers just tap in and out in a few seconds with a card or mobile, has supported significant passenger growth in London.66 It has shown that upfront investment can be more than repaid by cost savings elsewhere and by making travel quicker and more attractive for passengers.
Great British Railways will invest substantially in growing London-style Pay As You Go contactless ticketing on urban and commuter networks beyond the capital. It will learn lessons from the failure of previous regional contactless initiatives, including one by Transport for the North, and will adopt global
Mark Harper's speech did confirm the bit on
TfL» 's Pay-as-you-Go ticketing (aka contactless) but not about anywhere else - and certainly nothing about devolution!
More relevant, perhaps, was this bit in WSPR:
39. Journeys across rail, bus, tram and bike will become seamless in the future.
The government has committed £3 billion of new money to bring about a bus revolution in England outside London.71 Railway stations will increasingly be hubs for local bus services, with full information displayed about connecting buses and greater availability of integrated ticketing between rail, light rail and bus services.
The government’s ambition is for passengers to be able to buy a through ticket from any bus stop to any station with a single tap on their phone or contactless bank card. The government will work with operators to promote and improve the PlusBus scheme, which already allows rail-bus through ticketing, including by making PlusBus tickets available as digital tickets so that passengers can start their journey on a bus.
New transport services, such as automated vehicles and rented e-scooters, are emerging, with trials currently underway. As these mature, Great British Railways will need to aim for seamless integration and learn from the errors that have held up integration with other mobility services in the past.
Though that doesn't look very practical, at least starting from where we are, does it?