My only misgiving is that the closure was surely said to be "temporary" but is now likely to become permanent. This IMHO▸ is setting a very dangerous precedent. I perceive a risk of other low use stations being closed "temporarily" to facilitate upgrade works, and then 10 years or more of delay, after which it is found that re-opening is uneconomic.
IMHO the poor precedent set in this example is that these decision making processes are allowed to drag on for so long. This consultation should have taken place 10 tears ago, when I bet fairly detailed operational plans would have already been showing that there was no possibility of station calls ever being reinstated...
Paul
Agree completely with both of you. Bet at least one person sees fit to protest vehemently though...
I'm not entirely convinced that it only serves 600 people, as the DfT» report claims. The town of Eccleshall, population just under 5000, is three miles away - easy cycling distance. But given the current cost structure of the railway industry I'd reluctantly agree that keeping it open doesn't make much sense.
I too am significantly trouble by this being "unfinished business" from ten years ago - how was it intended in those days to continue to provided the statutory permanent train service at a realistic two way station on the completion of the West Coast works? Or if there was no such intent, would it not have been correct to deal with it at that time?
I read stories from the 1960s of lines, services and stations being "softened up" with inappropriate services ... to be followed by selective surveys of the remaining passengers "look - no school traffic" in Easter week, for example, leading to closure procedures which seemed based on deliberately lowered data.
I don't know the area around Norton Bridge - but I do have 20 years of station usage stats. In 2000/01, there were 5,155 entrances and exits; please excuse me comparing to Melksham, which had 3,266 that year ... and by last year than had risen to 58,000 plus - even though we had been through dark times equated to the 1960 'tricks', with a service gap from 06:38 to 19:20 and buses for weeks on end. Where would Norton Bridge be in 2015/16 with a half decent service over the years.
A DfT consultation, judged by a minister at the DfT and signed off by a body sponsored by the DfT, looking at a temporary situation which has been allowed to become permanent as potential traffic goes away, local development takes place that takes trains further from the platforms, and the platforms decay does not strike me as being open and transparent. Thus misgivings. And further misgivings about five other stations where there may be some similarities.
But having said all that - it might actually be the right decision even if reach in incredibly the wrong way.