Seeing as no one else has bitten, with some credit to google:
Floral Hall, Southport convention centre?
Yes, it is. Community Rail is a big story in getting together all parties to bring life and passenger traffic to what have been lesser lines and services. Volunteers from the community, professionals from the rail industry going over and above their job specs, and local authority elected members and officer taking the innovative approach to things all come together to make a success - a more used facility than would otherwise be the case, with
ACoRP▸ numbers suggesting that a community rail line / service on average grows 4.2% per annum more than a similar line without community rail. And it's not just about the line - it's about the economics of the area it serves too.
In striving for awards, community rail teams are encouraged to look at themselves against the wider picture of community rail as a whole and to an extent manage their effort and resources for maximum effect. And the overall structure and awards help encourage some of the less forward organisation involved to be comforted into knowing that they're supporting a national scheme rather than going out n a limb when they support the line(s) within their locality.
A cold and exposed platform on a wet October morning, litter picking or pulling up weeds, isn't everyone's idea of fun for a volunteer. Nor is travelling out to some town or village hall many miles from home on a dark evening to face a crowd of demanding user or potential users for rail manager or local government officers who would be much more comfortable to be tucked up at home. But there are people who do these things for the great good, and the awards are the opportunity to say a huge "Thank You" to them and to celebrate the best of success even though we know that there are hour and days of unthanked and sometimes frustrating grind to get there.
This forum's in "Great Western Land" and it's noted that the overall winner at the ACoRP awards was "Great Western Railway, and its partnerships and volunteers". This overall award is unusual in that it's not something that's applied for / sought - it's given without expectation or influence by the combined judging panels who have been out and about around the country. And having spoken with many community rail people from elsewhere in the
UK▸ , I have to agree with the judges in their decision; in the present
GWR▸ team from top to bottom, and in the volunteers on my own line and those I have met across the franchise area, we have a remarkable group. So may I add a big "Thank You" here.
Because we're celebrating the excellent and top performance in this post, though, doesn't mean we should be resting on our laurels. The "best" may not be 100% the view of everyone and there's always scope for improvement - as this forum shows. There's a need for everyone to continue in the "critical friend" mode for us all to work together - a partnership that learns from the other partners and from its customers and strives for ever better over the years.