An update - I'm crossposting this from an obscure thread on another board, as I feel it's worth a wider reminder!I remember being interviewed on Radio Wiltshire (Swindon) last summer on the morning breakfast show. I remember telling the presenter during a live broadcast that it would take him over 2 hours to travel the 40 miles to Salisbury - the second largest urban centre in the county after Swindon - if he went to the railway or bus station at that time and took public transport. Clearly he thought, as someone who didn't personally make big use of public transport, that I was exhadurating, as he had his researcher check into it while we continued to talk. And at the end he came back and confirmed - 2 hours and 3 minutes. That's twice the time that a "TransWilts" train should take.
To the North in Wiltshire, you have Swindon (the largest population area in the county and Chippenham which is 4th, well linked by public transport. To the South and West, you have Salisbury (2nd), Trowbridge (3rd), and Warminster and Westbury too which are also substantial centres of population, and well linked. But the connections between the two areas are poor (and that's putting it mildly!). The route between the two areas, via the "TransWilts" railway line, or via the 234 bus service, takes you along the A350 corridor through Melksham - itself the fifth largest population centre in the county (so you have 1st - 2nd - 3rd - 4th - 5th on the route).
There are substantial through journey requirements between the two areas, in addition to the travel requirements to and from Melksham; various statistics that I have (and give a rough indication at least) show that for every journey to or from Melksham, the line serviced (and would service) a further 3 to 5 journeys that pass the place, and it's that significant extra traffic which means that Melksham is not just a small town on a branch line - it's simply that "via Melksham" has become shortened to "Melksham" in so many discussions and papers, and with such a change in perception the case is woefully presented.
(This is going to turn into a long post, I'm afraid - but the points are important ones, and you have given me an excellent opportunity to refresh the case and answer some all-too-ingrained suggestions and certain misleading data)
On the figures you have seenThe traffic figures that were quoted in order to specify the service that's currently offered on the TransWilts line were surveyed (as I recall) over a few days around Easter 2002. At that time, the service provided by Wessex Trains was less than a year old, as it had been radically altered in May 2001. When a service has major changes, it does take a time for the new services to settle down (you can see this more recently where the December 2006 changes lead to major problems that are only now being fully resolved) so to take those 2002 figures and portray them as "typical" is misguided at best, and seeking to distort the truth at worst. And statistically, they should not be relied upon - not enough samples.
But it went from bad to worse. An assumption (and remember that to Assume is to make an "ASS out of U and ME") of 0.8% growth was made, whereas the actual figures achieved from 2002 to 2006 where between 10% and 35% compound depending on which measure you take. So that a service was specified for 2007 that would cater for around 20,000 to 30,000 journeys to replace a 2006 service that had carried 120,000 or so.
And worse yet - the specification was designed for a peak service from West Wiltshire (Westbury, Trowbridge, Melksham, connections from Frome and Warminster) into Swindon, and a return in the evening. The draft timetable already shown an extended day, and we protested. Then -
incredibly and in direct opposition to our consultation inputs - the
SLC▸ was relaxed to allow the morning train to run even earlier. West Wilts commuters can now only use a train "borrowed" off the Stround Valley line before the morning rush hour, and can only return home when they "borrow" the same train back after it's completed its Stround Valley commuter run. Result? An absurdly long day and a service that's criminally worse that even the draconian
SRA» /
DfT» specification.
I travelled on the very last 5 p.m. train from Melksham up to Chippenham and Swindon, and on the last return commuter working. That's one "nonpeak" and one "peak" train. They were busy; yes, I was able to get seated on both, but I could not have had a pair of seats on my own on either train. And, no, they were NOT single coach "153"s - I recall a 150, but could have been a 158.
On use of the current serviceWe now have a very curious service - with trains running at times that are designed to fit the convenience and profit of the train operating company rather than the requirements of the area. I understand that the technical term is "marginal time".
Under the 5-trains-a-day regime of Wessex trains, the quietest southbound service was the first train off Swindon. And the quietest Northbound was the last train back up to Swindon.
Incredibly, trains still run close to these times! - an 06:15 from Swindon, and a train that gets back there at 20:20. These services look as if they could have been calculated to fail.
And we don't have a practical commuter service in to Swindon at all. Quite simply, eleven hours in Swindon is far too long for a day's work. On one hand you have working hour directives, and on the other hand you have the government specifying / accepting a train service that contradicts it.
Having said which, the need for the service is so critical that numbers are creeping up - but estimates are that over 90% of traffic has been lost.
On the futureAll of the towns along the route are growing, and under the Regional Spatial Strategy that planned growth is to continue for the next 15 to 20 years. 5000 new homes in Trowbridge, 5000 in the rest of West Wiltshire ... towns with a population of 20,000 will be up to 30,000 by 2020. Already, Melksham (quoted simply because I live here and know the figures) has grown from 18000 when I moved here to around 23000, and if you stand on the platform at Dilton Marsh - also on the line - you'll see what were green fields around the station five years ago being converted to housing. I understand that nowhere else in the South West are ther so many "Stategically Significant Towns and Cities" on a 40 mile corridor.
Road transport rather than rail is the preferred flavour of the powers that be at the local transport authority - that's Wiltshire Council. I heard this stated by their representative at the Enquiry in Public into the Regional Spatial Strategy in Exeter, and it was the extreme view of all the local authorities (indeed, Wiltshire stuck our like a sore thumb!). In a way I can understand this; traditionally, Wiltshire has been a wealthy and rural county where the car has ruled for the past 30 years, and the bus has been a practical way to provide a daily service to remote villages for those who don't have their own transport. Times are changing, however, and a more multimodal approach is now appropriate.
Can you beleieve that in a study undertaken by a county official, an "appropriate" service for the TransWilts came out as being an hourly train each way? That's not the universal view of everyone at County Hall, and I have been told that although they throw a lot of money at bus subsidies, they do not have funds to make any contribution at all to rail.
Why is such a high frequency defined for an appropriate service?
The A36 and A350 roads which run parallel with the railway are already overcrowded, with congestion spots all the way from Salisbury up to the M4 near Chippenham, and then into Swindon. Local improvements (such as the one around Westbury, which is going to a public enquiry very soon) would need to be carried out in considerable numbers to make a substantial difference to car journey times along the whole route - or even to maintain a status quo if road traffic grows in line with population growth plans.
Part of the issue is also access to town centres - Salisbury, Swindon and Chippenham, and other towns to a lesser extent, are already clogged and bypasses won't sort out the issues that people who are going to or from the town centres have. And public transport road services (i.e. buses) are unlikely to use the bypasses as they still need to serve the communities being bypassed; at the best, they'll get a spinoff effect from an easing of congestion. But you have to counter this with a an acknowlegdment that bypassing "x" will suck traffic into the area and put more pressure on unbypassed "y", where the buses will be slowed down again.
Look at these other factors too ...
Chippenham to Salisbury - well over 2 hours by bus. Under 1 by train.
Trowbridge to Swindon - 95 minutes by express bus, 35 by train.
Usage - 5 people will use a train for every one who would use a bus.
Fuel Prices
There's an enormous case for the future here; looking back at the past gives some clues and direction as where we should be going, but it's not a level playing field - we're taking what was a 3rd division area at the turn of the Millenium and with the government's plans it's going Premier League - and it needs Premier League facilities in order to cope.
Now - let's be realistic. We cannot get an appropriate service that will meet the needs for the next 10 years in the current economic climate - so let's look at something more modest that will move us in the right direction. That's why I'm endorsing the suggestions - commonly accepted as being a step in the right direction - for an extra 4 services a day between Salisbury and Swindon. The timings are substantailly good and
in combination with the existing service provide a realistic set of commuter, irregular traveller and longer distance opportunities that will put the service right back on track with growth in double figures (percantage, compound, annual). Two existing services, when linked to new services, provide round-trip commutes to their traffic will grow too.
I'm going to suggest that - with the proposed service from December ... we might be looking at overcrowding of that service and looking to strengthen it far quicker than you think!
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