The theme at the top of the page for May is "underutilised resources in Wiltshire", where we have a perfectly good railway line linking Salisbury to Swindon - the largest places in Wiltshire - and calling at the next four largest places (Trowbridge, Chippenham, Melksham and Warminster). Problem is ... if you miss the 06:15 from Swindon, the next train doesn't leave until 18:45!
It wasn't always like this - in 2005 and 2006, I regularly caught a bustling train at 17:02 from Melksham to Chippenham, and met people off various arrivals - the most popular at a 09:11 and 18:09. The traffic flows *are* there, the infrastucture *is* there, the line capacity *does* exist - it just needs carefully timed trips to operate between the existing first and last trains to meet those traffic flows.
Am I talking "pie in the sky"? No - Wiltshire Council, First Great Western and the Department for Transport have all looked carefully at the case and agreed it; a two-hourly or even hourly service is appropriate for the line. But Wiltshire Council doesn't trust the railway industry ("We lost a lot of money when we did all the background work for Corsham Station and the key contractor then trippled their plice" said Fleur de Rhe-Philipe of Wilsthire Council the other evening), and the railway industry won't move without at least some token contribution from Wiltshire. Oxfordshire, Hampshire, Bristol, and Devon are all quoted as nearby examples of co-operation between the rail industry and the local authority, and it's needed as badly (if not worse) in Wiltshire.
I was heartened to hear all four major political parties who were represented at last week's West Wilts Rail Users Group hustings speak positively about the aspirations and need for the service. Careful analysis of what was actually said showed that one party was "talking the talk" rather than "walking the walk", with a promise that they would do a further report and if it was positive press for the servivce to be included in the next franchise. That runs from 1st April 2016, doesn't it, so an impressive sounding promise could actually have been a promise to continue to fillibuster.
With this political cowardice and buck passing going on, the "Save the Train" campaign is running a pledge for support online at
http://www.transwilts.org.uk ... it's running for the full months of April and May and already we have over 500 names, including over 220 who travel
daily in Wiltshire - that accounts for over 100,000 journeys per annum.
We're looking to add more names to our roll of supporters - we need to keep reminding the key players that they should get their head together to implement what everyone agrees is a sensible solution, rather than passing the buck round and round.
Please - if you haven't already - add your support at
http://www.transwilts.org.uk/pledge.html (there are links from there to more detail, and I and many others are happy to answer questions by p.m. or email ... or on the phone, or in person!)
An afterthought. The Westbury bypass - a road project which will run a new road some 7 miles long past the town on Westbury - is a key part of Wiltshire Council's investment for the future. And they cheerfully admit that they will then need to take measures at Yarnbook, and around Chippenham. The cost of putting a train on the parallel line that's already there is the equivalent of the cost of just 20 yards of that 7 mile road. I am
not getting myself into a road argument - but I am suggesting that there might be something of a sense of missing perspective here and that the railway would provide a very useful and - on road budget terms cheap - solution to some very real immediate travel needs!