And just *when* are all seats taken on this service?
I wasn't talking specifically about this service - because you don't use your Turbo v Adealnte v
HST▸ capacity point specifically, just every time anyone mentions a 180. In the case of this latest service to lose an HST it is lightly loaded - but then so was the off-peak HST that
BR▸ /
GW▸ ran to Malvern and back for many years - indeed it was the first HST service on the route.
2004? That's 6 years ago. I bet you're no longer doing things you promised six years ago too!
Too busy to remember - but then i never put out a press release about it. And name me one other
FGW▸ service that in the past six years has seen the quality of the rolling stock provided go backwards? Apart perhaps from Reading-Gatwick, which has lost the far more suitable 166s (lots of luggage space) back to the Cotswolds to replace the HSTs.
I said 'plans' - i.e. in the near future.
So what did the panel do when the change to stock on that Sunday service was made? And if it did say something, it clearly had no effect on FGW's decision.
A scheme to raise patronage during the day is what this line needs,
A point that was made to FGW when they announced that the 180s were going and that they would acquire HSTs to replace them on the services they were then operating, the cotswold Line included. Everyone was well aware that there was a yawning gap between the number of seats in 180s and HSTs but FGW did nothing at all to promote off-peak travel on the line, nor the Cotswold Line and Network Railcards, despite the many months that they had to get something organised while the 180 fleet was being wound down.
I don't believe for a minute that HSTs will be coming back off-peak, because even with a carpet-bombing level of publicity and promotion, you will never generate enough bodies to fill them, because the number of people living on the line is not massive, despite what some in worcester believe, and there is a limit to how many need to travel to Oxford, Worcester or London.
That was why the 180s were ideal for the line. The right capacity for all but the very busiest services, combined with the right level of comfort for the length of journeys. As we know full well, the 166s are cheap to operate. And so what if they're a bit crowded after Charlbury? The passengers will use the service anyway, so why make the effort to provide a better but more expensive train?
And when I say the
CLPG» weren't told about the February changes last year, that's because they weren't, otherwise I wouldn't have said it. But then I'm just a journalist... so why would you believe me anyway?
Here is an extract from a story I wrote last year:
"CLPG chairman Derek Potter said: ^We were told last year we could expect to see most trains on the line operated by HSTs.
^We understand that situations will arise where, in order for the service to run, it^s a case of a Turbo or nothing, but we would expect to see the advertised type of train provided wherever possible. We weren^t consulted about these changes and are asking for a meeting with FGW managers to find out what^s going on.^
The full story is here
http://www.oxfordmail.co.uk/archive/2009/02/24/Oxford+news+%28om_oxfordnews%29/4151598.Payout_vetoed_despite_rail_crush/