Wednesday, March 17, 2010

KHOODEELAAR! Diagnosing Big Biz touting role by the LONDON ‘EVENING STANDARD’ which continues to suppress comments from khoodeelaar! It is a fact. All our comments that the LONDON EVENING STANDARD has suppressed have been original and the policy of suppressing the comments has been in place for almost seven years. The comments we have made and the EVENING STANDARD SUPPRESSED have all been vindicated by events. Including by one of their ‘columnists’, Simon Jenkins. His latest denunciation of Andrew Adonis’ stunts and touting for Big Business appeared yesterday. In that comment, Jenkins referred to Crossrail and condemned it again as being a tool flaunted by the City of London. Simon Jenkins echoed the Khoodeelaar! Diagnoses in parts of his comment and said that if the City of London ‘loved’ Crossrail so much then they – the City of London –m should fund it [Read the comment we have published here, below]


1545 Hrs GMT 
LONDON 
Wednesday 17 March 2010.
Editor © Muhammad Haque. 

LONDON ‘evening standard’ continues to suppress comments from khoodeelaar! It is a fact.  All our comments that the LONDON evening standard has suppressed have been original and the policy of suppressing the comments has been in place for almost seven years. The comments we have made and the evening standard suppressed have all been vindicated by events. Including by one of their ‘columnists’, Simon Jenkins. His latest denunciation of Andrew Adonis’ stunts and touting for Big Business appeared yesterday [Tuesday 16 March 2010]                         [To be continued]  ___________________________________________________________________  “Costly high-speed train scheme will send us all off the rails  Simon Jenkins Simon Jenkins  16.03.10  Related links      * Read more comment from Simon Jenkins  Sponsored links  Ads by Google  Remortgage Now at 1.9%  £200,000 remortgage from £367/mo. No Obligation. Get a free quote now  www.lendgo.co.uk  Europe High Speed Trains  European High speed train holidays. Rail + Hotels. Call to book now.  www.Railbookers.com/High_Speed  London St Pancras Savings  Save 43% at The Train Line. Your First Stop for Cheap Train Tickets.  www.TheTrainLine.com  La Senza Official Store  Update your lingerie drawer. Shop sexy lingerie & nightwear now!  www.LaSenza.co.uk  Nothing is scarier than a minister with too much money and a consultant with a pet  project. The outcome is always the same, a useless NHS computer, a Crossrail tunnel, an  ID card scheme, an aircraft carrier, an Olympic Games. You name it and someone will  say it is “a good investment for Britain”.  These so-called “lumpy projects” are seldom worth anything except to their cheerleaders.  They cost billions that might have been better spent elsewhere. But they offer ministers a  headline and a possible directorship, while consultants and contractors walk off with  huge amounts of public money. People soon forget that these things were meant to be  profitable. Addicts of grand projects love high-speed rail lines, largely because the French have  them. Last week the transport secretary, Lord Adonis, heavily massaged by consultants,  declared his enthusiasm for a new high-speed line, HS2, to run from Euston out through  the Chilterns and the Vale of Aylesbury to the north and Scotland.  Apart from tearing up some of the loveliest landscape in the Home Counties, the line of  the route is curious. It will not connect with Heathrow, so as to offer hope of supplanting  numerous domestic air links. The new line will require transferring air passengers  somehow to get from Heathrow to Old Oak Common in Acton to catch the new train to  Scotland.  Nor will HS2 connect with Britain's only other high-speed line, from the Channel Tunnel  and the continent. This is inexplicable. The Channel Tunnel link was already botched. It  came 10 years late after its route was changed by Michael Heseltine in the early Nineties  for political reasons. Instead of sensibly going under London from the existing Eurostar  terminal at Waterloo and straight on to the North and Scotland, it came round from the  east into St Pancras and stopped dead.  Foreigners arriving in Britain by high-speed train and wishing to continue that way will  have to sweat their bags along Euston Road past the British Library from St Pancras. So  much for high speed. Adonis's decision means that never in our lifetime will Continental  railways link with Britain north of London. The Government must be desperate to  prevent the Scots getting too close to the French.  The only transport with which HS2 will link is Adonis's other adored project, the £16  billion, yet-to-be-built Crossrail, with no more purpose than to relieve the Central line in  rush hour. This jewel-encrusted gift to City commuters — financed almost entirely by  taxpayers — should be put out of its misery in the interest of national debt relief, before  its construction starts really gridlocking the West End.  City lobbyists love to claim Crossrail will “earn” London billions. In which case, let them  invest in it. Similar lobbyists claim HS2 “will generate £55 billion”, yet they look up to  the sky when a personal commitment is suggested. These projects are nothing to do with  profit. Every penny of this Concorde of the iron road will come from taxpayers.  Faster rail makes sense but high-speed rail in Britain is poor value for money. Carving  new routes is expensive and controversial, while commercial viability requires trains to  make frequent stops and thus extend journey times. Britain is not like France or Spain, a  place of great distances and widely spaced cities. I am sure there is demand for a non-  stop train to Scotland but such a train would be thinly used at the high fares needed to  make it remotely economic.  Unless heavily subsidised, high-speed rail would be an elite service for the rich. It would  be cheaper and more environmentally friendly to take every passenger by low-carbon  limousine. Just as Crossrail is now sucking the near-bankrupt London Underground dry of  investment, so HS2 will suck the surface railway. The alternative way to shorten rail  journey times is to improve signalling and build short bypasses round (or over)  bottlenecks. It also makes sense to use existing pathways, such as the M1 corridor, to  avoid environmental aggro.  Such construction can cause delays and impose other forms of cost. But as was seen in  the recent shambolic West Coast line re-signalling, that is largely a question of  management. If faster routes really are needed, it must make sense for the Government to  use existing corridors rather than fight its way across virgin pastures.  More to the point is how best to use limited amounts of new investment when, because of  the bailing out of the banks, public debt has soared and resources for transport are likely  to be minimal. Everything points towards constraining demand through rationing and  pricing, and spending available money on piecemeal improvement. Stimulating demand  with glamorous publicly financed infrastructure is unwise.  If I were to ask London commuters what they most wanted from Adonis's billions — and  why not ask them? — I cannot believe the answer would be, first, a new tunnel for City  bankers and, second, a premium train north of Euston. Most would plead for a better  existing service. They want fewer cancellations, improved time-keeping, more carriages,  better catering, cheerier platforms and smarter stations with more parking.  For transport planners this translates into more money for existing track and signalling,  no overrunning of night-time maintenance, no weekend closures and more investment in  rolling stock and stations. The cry is for the existing railway just to work properly. If it is  getting overcrowded, put up the fares.  Such a prescription is unexciting to jaded ministers and their aides. It offers no grandiose  project to put in a manifesto or boast of at an international conference. But in a time of  financial stress, it would mean happier passengers and a better railway.  Bookmark and Share  Also on this topic        Go-Ahead hit hard by rail cuts as profits fall 16%        Fast rail link would ‘cancel need for Heathrow extension’        Fewer commuters think trains offer value for money        The train at St Pancras will be departing for ... Germany via Channel Tunnel        Lack of high-speed rail link to Heathrow 'threatens City'  Sponsored links  Ads by Google  La Senza Official Store  Update your lingerie drawer. Shop sexy lingerie & nightwear now! www.LaSenza.co.uk  Local Public Service Info  Get an independent overview of your local public services.  oneplace.direct.gov.uk  Eurostar Beats Recession  Superb Value Short Breaks From £99! Europe City Breaks - Book Trip Here  www.Short-Breaks.com  Extreme Trains at HISTORY  High Octane Ride Through History's Most Incredible Rail Experiences.  History.co.uk  Reader views (20)   Add your view  Let's support a scheme put forward by such a prudent Government.  Let's accept a quote of £30bn as Lord Adonis expects!  Let's tax ourselves even more to pay for it.  Let's cut up more of the countryside.  Let's get to London 45mins quicker.  There must be better ways with less party political announcements.  - Ivan, Birmingham  A commenter writes: "Don't we owe xillions already? Where is this money coming  from?"  At the moment we owe almost a trillion pounds. Our current annual deficit is almost £200  billion.  However, we would not be required for HS2 now. It won't even be built until at least  2017. The maximum amount that the government will pay each year to this scheme is £4  billion with an average of about £2 billion. This is a drop in the ocean compared with the  annual finances of this country. To top it all, we expect that the economic return on this project is £2 for each £1 spent.  It sounds like a good investment to me.  - Daniel, London  How can you say bump up the fares if it's overcrowded. People don't travel by tube out of  choice, in the main, but out of necessity. How do you suggest the people priced out of  using the tube get to work, if they live in, say, Watford, and work in the west end.  - Freddie, London  Hurrah!! A voice of reason speaks out amongst the guff of Government Ministers and the  fat cats who would undoubtedly get rich on this proceeds of this project. Whilst having a  personal interest in HS2 as it slices through our Area of Outstanding Beauty and is less  than a mile from our home, I am outraged that such huge amounts of public money  should be spent on such a small part of our pathetically underfunded rail and transport  system. Please upgrade the lines that exist and subsidise the ludicrously high fares that  are set by the operators if Government have so much public money to spare!.....  - Pippa Hart, Great Missenden, UK  I agree with Mr Jenkins, I live in the Kensington & Chelsea and there is nothing like a  councillor with too much money or a head teacher that needs a new school to house his  ego. We are in the process of demolishing a perfectly functioning school - a couple of  million would have sorted out the problems. Instead a multi million pound school is  being built. A local estate built in the 70's, loved by its tenants is to be demolished in  build a new estate to pay dividends to the shareholders of the parent company of the  housing trust (Catalyst). The BBC uses taxpayers money to buy Lonely Planet publishing  company. Where does all this money come from?  - Ludmilla Von Pincer, London  In my opinion journey times on British railways are quite good. The journey times  between major cities are competitive with flying times (if you include checking in times  and transfers getting to airports).  For example from London to Birmingham (1hr 30mins), London to Manchester (2hr  10mins)and London to Edinburgh (4hrs 20mins)are quite fast if you consider the large  distances involved. I used to live in the Netherlands and the dutch trains run at about  80mph a lot slower than here in the UK at 125mph.  Yes they could be a bit quicker (like the French TGV at 200mph) but I don't see much of  an economic demand for it at the moment.  The main problem with the UK railways is the price.  To be competitive with the airlines and to encourage more people to use the train rather  than fly the price needs to be a lot less. Reducing the price on longer distance travel would be more effective at getting more  people to use the train than spending such a massive amount on reducing already quite  fast services.  - Nigel, Harlsden  The old lines have been patched-and-mended already. It is cheaper, faster and causes less  upheaval to build new, more modern lines.  The extra capacity is needed anyway, on both long distance and lines such as the Central  which is packed even outside the rush hours. As the "backbone" of the tube system, it  needs reinforcements badly.  - Alex Mckenna, Woodford  The rail link is required because the existing rail system is reaching capacity, and  according to some predictions the West Coast main line will reach capacity as soon as  2015. The public rightly wants more freight on rail and this line is one of the main freight  arteries in England.  Improving existing lines costs two or three times as much as building new ones. HS1  came in on time and on budget, whereas improving the west coast line was very late and  exceeded the budget by two or three times.  It makes sense to make the new line for high speed because it does not cost that much  more to do so, and the potential to attract people out of their cars is much greater if the  line is high speed.  Some other points that Simon makes; Crossrail is needed because other transport links,  particularly the LUL Central line, are becoming dangerously overcrowded. Improving the  West Coast main line is out of the question due to costs of working round an existing live  railway. HS1 and HS2 will be easily be linked using a mile of existing line through  Camden Road station.  Heathrow will be linked to HS2 via Crossrail. To link Heathrow directly to HS2 is  unnecessary, will add to journey times, and cause increased environmental damage to the  Cotswolds as the route will be further west.  - Derek Monnery, Chairman Essex Rail Users Federation, Manningtree, Essex  Don't we owe xillions already? Where is this money coming from? We are broke - ah,  never mind, why don't we go and buy a new car, a house in France, what else would you  like, darling voter?  - Mari Warcwm, London  Glad several people have shown up this article for the nonsense it is. The second stage of  the high speed network will integrate the north and midlands into a unified region, with  Manchester, Birmingham and Leeds all an hour or less from each other. This region will  have economic clout to rival the south east, and the big European polycentric city regions  like the Randstad, Rhine-Ruhr, Lombardy and Rhone-Alps. But before that happens the London-Midlands high speed line has to be built, and the planned route is sensible and  minimises its impact on the Chilterns, which can't realistically be avoided altogether.  They should add a parkway station at Aylesbury to make it accessible to Bucks, Herts,  Oxford.  - Chris Packham, Birmingham  Simon Jenkins asks what London commuters want, and suggests better services, etc. Yes  - and fewer snouts in the trough! How much better would services be if we weren't  suffering PPP? Edinburgh is now 30 minutes further from London than it was pre-  privatisation. Perhaps he would prefer unwinding privatisation to HS2 - he might even  argue its economic advantage!  But seriously, despite its faults, the transport system is providing a service that is  increasingly used - and with sensible integration growth is likely to continue. So there are  some pretty big bottlenecks to be addressed and Crossrail and HS2 will be a significant  help  - Graham Morrison, London  Simon, have you ever tried to travel between Paddington and Aldgate? It's a long and  depressingly slow trundle which reminds one just how large central London is. As for the  fact that the business centre of London now extends from places like Hammersmith and  Padddington to Canary Wharf, well the last 20 years seems to have passed you by.  It's of course fun to bash bankers, but its also pathetic to extend that to bashing City  workers in general and by extension Crossrail. Around 500,000 people work in the City  and Docklands, mostly pretty ordinary types working long hours with uncertain job  security for salaries that fall vastly short of the mega-bucks of the few. And if you think  of it, those 500,000 support perhaps another 2-3 million in their families and through  their spending and tax payments.  Crossrail is absolutely necessary to keep London in business, and will be a boon to the  tens of thousands of commuters who currently have to struggle across London using what  is basically a century old underground system.  As for HS2, you say commuters want a railway with better reliability, fewer cancellations  and more carriages. But transforming the existing railways to do this would mean a  decade of disruptions and closures while a victorian infrastructure is torn apart and rebuilt  to drag it just part of the way into the 21st century - all of which would cost 10s of  billions just like high speed rail.  - Nick, Marylebone, London  And where does Simon live exactly? Wouldn't have a personal NIMBY-type interest in  this not being built would he...? - Ian Bartlett, Chesham, UK  I would much rather the government invested in improvements to services on the existing  line from Euston to Scotland (on which billions has already been expended).  I'm sure I heard a government spokesperson admit on TV the other night that the new  trains would run on existing lines initially in the north, so why not use the existing  infrastructure we have in the south too? We might not be able to reach quite such high  speeds on the existing line, but is there evidence of a huge demand for the ultra high-  speed service? If faced with a choice between a new high-speed connection between  London and Birmingham, or equivalent expenditure on improvements to existing rail  services country-wide, I know which I'd vote for.  Unless the service is heavily subsidised, a lot of people will probably not be able to  afford to take the fast train anyway. I know several people in Kent who still take the  slower trains to London because they find the high-speed service unaffordable.  - Janey, London  I would like to support this project, I really would. But then I see the cost - £30bn, and I  wounder what it will eventually cost, I will bet it will be north of £100bn at the end. Just  look at all the other large government proijects - NHS computer, ID cards, Scottish  Parliment, Millenium Dome, Chinook helicopters, all alrge Government IT projects, etc,  etc, etc. And I have to ask is the money wisely spent?? Should it be spent instead in  improving what we already have. Just £1bn or £2bn spent on comuter lines would make a  huge diffrence to many Londoners. Again £1bn or £2bn spent on rail networks around  Newcastle and prehaps some improvements to East - West networks. How about  freight?? This new line wont take freight - and I for one would love to see more lorries  off the road. So in all, a good idea, but I think we could do better things with the money -  even if we could afford it, which I doubt.  - Very Angry At Mp'S Expenses, Home Counties  I fail to see how getting to Birmingham 45 minutes sooner at the cost of £50+ Billion  plus is "vital for this Country's competitiveness" We are not the size of France or Spain  and do not need a fast track link up to our Cities, just a safe, efficient, reliable and  affordable one.  Spend the money on improving the existing infrastructure and save the money.  - Malc London, Gerrards Cross, England  I haven't read such a poorly researched article in a long time. The route is well defined and is sympathetic to the Chilterns landscape. There are a  couple of tunnels to minimise the impact and some cuttings to hide the line.  The passengers will easily be able to get from Heathrow to Old Oak Common by both  Crossrail and the Heathrow Express (i.e. all 5 terminals).  The government's report states that there is no firm decision yet on the HS1 link, but the  options have been made available and further investigative work is being done.  Quite how Simon expects a tunnel under London to start at the existing Waterloo  platforms I do not know. This would destroy Waterloo station and would be an incredibly  steep gradient under the Thames. Or did he mean that there should be an underground  station for HS2? Well, again, the reports (freely available on the DfT website) clearly  state that an underground HS terminus is prohibitively expensive. The amount of earth  that you'd have to dig out would be immense.  Crossrail serves many purposes other than being a sop to the bankers. It creates new  journey opportunities and increases the accessibility of Heathrow, Thameslink and  Stratford for starters.  Has Simon looked at the commercial viability? Really? Then he will know that the fares  need to be competitive so that the trains run full all the time.  So they won't be just for the rich.  Londoners want better train services. Well HS2 will provide that. Extra capacity will  work.  - Daniel, London  Oh Simon, do you ever stop moaning?  Crossrail will boost London's transport capacity and actually help the London  Underground by diverting passengers away from its over-crowded services.  And High-Speed rail is vital to this country's competitiveness. It takes far too long to get  from city to city in this country, and we lose out compared to those on the Continent.  High-speed rail helps to solve this problem, plus it allows more varied services to go  ahead on the old network (like the WCML). So it will actually help travellers on the  current system as well.  - Michael, London  Why can't we have an efficient service on the tracks we already have and god knows  there are enough of them up and down the country? Why must it be new tracks and new  lines or crap? - Bloke, Lambeth  As usual Jenkins uses his privileged position to have a pop at Crossrail. Grow up Simon,  Crossrail isn't bleeding LU dry - its part and parcel of delivering a 21 Century rail  network for London.  Everyone benefits - even ES hacks! Across London Crossrail delivers some £36 billion in  economic and transport improvements. Thousands of jobs across the UK.  And guess what? HS2 will do the same. Maybe you enjoy living with our Victorian rail  network but Londoners and people in Birmingham, Manchester, Leeds and Scotland  don't.  Crossrail and HS2 will revolutionise travel in the UK - super fast links across Britain, the  capital and on to Europe - good for jobs, business, leisure and tourism.  I have no doubt that had you been alive in the 1830s as the railways pioneers planned and  built the world's first rail network you would have been on your soapbox at Hyde Park  Corner grumbling that it was all a waste of money and why on earth couldn't folk travel  by horse and cart!  - Luke, London  Add your comment  Name:  Your email address will not be publishedEmail:  Town and country:  Your comment:Terms and conditions make text area bigger You have 1500 characters  left.  Remember me - this will save your name, location and email address for when you leave  your next comment.  Email me a link to these comments.



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