NeilYoungIsBack
Well-Known Member
yep. The main ones to benefit from this will be people who work in London and can commute and the companies they work for. whilst at the same time pushing up prices for everyone else.
massive waste of money that should have been spent improving the appalling transport links we have now.
Also more people are working from home now. So surely in 30 years time travelling to work will be redundant for many
Actually, Rail travel between London and the North West increased by over 70% over the decade to 2017/18. The increase from the West Midlands was slightly higher. The consequence is that the WCML is close to capacity and therefore we need to build more railway. Anyone catching a train home from Euston between 4-7pm Mon-Fri can vouch for this.
HS2 will provide additional capacity and also relieve congestion on the WCML so more 'classic trains' can be run, including freight. Who knows, maybe places like Polesworth and Barlaston can have their stations back - these are places whose stations on the WCML have been sacrificed over the past 10 years to help keep the WCML moving.
Obviously we also need big improvements to routes within the North West and between the NW and adjacent regions. Top priorities should be the electrification of the Manchester Victoria to Leeds route, sorting out the ridiculous congestion that currently exists on the Castlefield corridor and probably also electrifying the route to Liverpool via Warrington Central.
But I haven't seen anything anywhere that suggests these improvements have been sacrificed in order to build HS2. Burnham said yesterday that he is supportive of the HS2 but he wants to see more details of what else will be happening. I agree with this 100%. We'll probably get more details come Budget time in March so I'm prepared to give the Government the benefit of the doubt until then.
Incidentally, according to the Labour Force Survey only 4% of people work from home and that includes people who use home as a base. The percentrage is growing but from a pretty low base. I am one of them actually (working from home 4 days a week usually, with the other spent travelling). But I still need to meet clients, and usually in London.