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Climate change – the political divide – politicalbetting.com

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  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,143

    Drakeford is following the Khan playbook of poor implementation of a policy that has merits when applied sensibly but will enrage many by its blanket nature
    Nothing will happen.

    The whole of Wales has been gaslit into voting Labour for 100 years, and for once the electoral system is designed to keep them in forever.

    Drakeford could pledge the death of the firstborn, and he'd still get back in.
  • Pagan2Pagan2 Posts: 10,730

    Do you ever have a positive word for anything Pagan?
    Yes actually I do, people like you tend to attack me for cynicism on these things....go on then tell us how many council representatives are on these management boards...quote a source....if I am cynical and I admit I am then prove me wrong they arent a token
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617

    Utter nonsense - of course not but a blanket 20mph is just unnecessary
    Okay, tell me in your opinion where it's OK to kill children in an average Welsh village. If it's 30mph limit now, then the improved survival rate makes it a no-brainer (so to speak) to make it 20mph. Simple as that.

    Bit odd of you to support the RNLI but ...
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 10,087

    Utter nonsense - of course not but a blanket 20mph is just unnecessary
    So do you want the Tories to publish a list of roads to keep at 30mph?

    Two seconds later and you've got a NIMBY who doesn't want 30mph past their house telling North Wales Live "The Tories want to kill my Cockerpoo"

    (Eureka - just link 20mph to dog deaths and it's a winner)
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    ydoethur said:

    Are we back to the exhaust pipe :hushed:
    Now, now. We may not share those, erm, specialist amours, but as good woke types we should be accepting and uncensorious.
  • MiklosvarMiklosvar Posts: 1,855

    Speak for yourself.

    I love my car.
    Does Mrs (or other Mr) Royale know about this? Cod therapist advice: never love anything that is incapable of loving you back
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    edited August 2023
    Eabhal said:

    So do you want the Tories to publish a list of roads to keep at 30mph?

    Two seconds later and you've got a NIMBY who doesn't want 30mph past their house telling North Wales Live "The Tories want to kill my Cockerpoo"

    (Eureka - just link 20mph to dog deaths and it's a winner)
    Much more so than child deaths (unless a puppy, when you get bonus points, or a pit bull*, in which the driver gets positive marks and a little transfer to put on his door).

    *Judging from my periodic delves in the DM.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,350
    edited August 2023

    Pretty much. Reducing speed from 30 to 20 cuts the energy involved in the collision by half and makes the collisions less likely. The catch is that drivers often don't do 30 in a 30 area anyway, so cutting the speed limit to 20 has less effect than you might expect from physics.

    For example, the results from Belfast were positive, but not big enough to be statistically significant (though that can be a high bar to cross);

    https://www.rac.co.uk/drive/news/motoring-news/do-20mph-speed-limits-reduce-the-number-of-car-crashes-and-casualties/

    I don't know enough about the road system in Wales to say whether alternating 30/20/30/20/30 is better than 20 all the way, but my intuition is that changing the limit a lot is more trouble, and causes more harm, than it's worth.
    Thank you. Some evidence at last (even if it is only from the RAC). I must say I'm surprised they consider 22% 'statistically insignificant.' I would describe more than a fifth as pretty significant. The 0.8mph reduction in average speeds is more interesting and frankly disturbing as it suggests a proportion of high speeders are skewing the stats.

    One point to make here of course is that Drakeford does have a stated aim of reducing traffic on all Wales' roads, for environmental reasons, so I think he probably would accept the reduction in traffic that article highlights.

    One major snag however is that outside the Valleys - where public transport is OK-ish (better in some places than others) cars are really a sine qua non for living in Wales. Since the axing of the rural branch line network, with buses never having been particularly good, rural Wales has shockingly bad public transport. I couldn't have got to Aberystwyth reliably by train and one flatmate who tried it gave up after two terms and bought a car.

    So unless he intends to do something really quite clever and dramatic (which can't be buses - buses need good roads) I wonder if this would be the best way of achieving that.
  • darkagedarkage Posts: 5,398

    There is so much exaggeration on climate change it is hard to know where to start. For instance people on Twitter are going on about the oceans boiling. How can that be regarded as anything other than an exaggeration?

    I think people can be led to agree either that climate change has potentially catastrophic consequences, and also that it is also sometimes exaggerated if for example they are presented with examples of the latter.

    Personally I don't feel qualified to offer an opinion on climate change - other than to go along with the consensus of scientific opinion and to act accordingly.




  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    Miklosvar said:

    Does Mrs (or other Mr) Royale know about this? Cod therapist advice: never love anything that is incapable of loving you back
    I recommend the Guardian agony aunt column. Very good on that side of matters.
  • Jim_MillerJim_Miller Posts: 3,252
    Recently, on two streets leading to a nearby elementary school, automatic speed cameras were installed, supplementing the flashing lights and the radar that warns those who are going too fast in a school zone, while school is in session.
    https://www.kirklandwa.gov/Whats-Happening/News/Speed-Enforcement-Cameras-Expanded-to-Two-More-School-Zones

    They don't look terribly expensive to me, but I haven't bothered to find out how much they actually cost.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,183

    Drakeford is following the Khan playbook of poor implementation of a policy that has merits when applied sensibly but will enrage many by its blanket nature
    I agree it has been very poorly sold, but it is not a blanket 30 to 20 conversion. Local authorities have had the final say as to where the 20 begins and ends.. Although word from Senedd Cloud Base is if there are street lights, unless it states otherwise consider the limit to be 20. Yes, the messaging has been terrible.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617

    Recently, on two streets leading to a nearby elementary school, automatic speed cameras were installed, supplementing the flashing lights and the radar that warns those who are going too fast in a school zone, while school is in session.
    https://www.kirklandwa.gov/Whats-Happening/News/Speed-Enforcement-Cameras-Expanded-to-Two-More-School-Zones

    They don't look terribly expensive to me, but I haven't bothered to find out how much they actually cost.

    Sure, but that doesn't answer the issue of how the children are to survive elsewhere for the rest fo the time outside school.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,350

    Recently, on two streets leading to a nearby elementary school, automatic speed cameras were installed, supplementing the flashing lights and the radar that warns those who are going too fast in a school zone, while school is in session.
    https://www.kirklandwa.gov/Whats-Happening/News/Speed-Enforcement-Cameras-Expanded-to-Two-More-School-Zones

    They don't look terribly expensive to me, but I haven't bothered to find out how much they actually cost.

    Those signs are effective in getting me to slow down, particularly if I've missed a sign with the speed limit on (too easy in the early summer with hedges growing over the bloody things).

    One gripe I do have with them (and again it's particularly Wales - it doesn't seem to happen in England) is that they will start flashing at you some way before the speed limit comes into force. Now that's not on. By all means flash if I'm still doing 35 as I pass the sign, because I should have slowed to 30 by then, but not 250 yards away where the limit's still different.

    It just makes the person who programmed them come across as a preachy twat.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,080

    As a matter of interest where is it ?
    In one of the historic dockside warehouses of Hamburg that, despite levelling all the residential areas of the city, allies bombers managed to leave intact.
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 10,087
    ydoethur said:

    Thank you. Some evidence at last (even if it is only from the RAC). I must say I'm surprised they consider 22% 'statistically insignificant.' I would describe more than a fifth as pretty significant. The 0.8mph reduction in average speeds is more interesting and frankly disturbing as it suggests a proportion of high speeders are skewing the stats.

    One point to make here of course is that Drakeford does have a stated aim of reducing traffic on all Wales' roads, for environmental reasons, so I think he probably would accept the reduction in traffic that article highlights.

    One major snag however is that outside the Valleys - where public transport is OK-ish (better in some places than others) cars are really a sine qua non for living in Wales. Since the axing of the rural branch line network, with buses never having been particularly good, rural Wales has shockingly bad public transport. I couldn't have got to Aberystwyth reliably by train and one flatmate who tried it gave up after two terms and bought a car.

    So unless he intends to do something really quite clever and dramatic (which can't be buses - buses need good roads) I wonder if this would be the best way of achieving that.
    Here is the Edinburgh paper: https://www.research.ed.ac.uk/en/publications/the-processes-of-transport-and-public-health-policy-change-20mph-
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022

    Recently, on two streets leading to a nearby elementary school, automatic speed cameras were installed, supplementing the flashing lights and the radar that warns those who are going too fast in a school zone, while school is in session.
    https://www.kirklandwa.gov/Whats-Happening/News/Speed-Enforcement-Cameras-Expanded-to-Two-More-School-Zones

    They don't look terribly expensive to me, but I haven't bothered to find out how much they actually cost.

    If they’re being used to give tickets to people, then they’re expensive ($10k ish) and require regular calibration. Someone receiving a ticket can ask the cops to produce a valid calibration certificate in court.

    If they’re being used to give warnings and advice, then they’re cheap ($500 ish).
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,350
    Eabhal said:

    Here is the Edinburgh paper: https://www.research.ed.ac.uk/en/publications/the-processes-of-transport-and-public-health-policy-change-20mph-
    Eabhal, I asked for evidence that cutting speed limits makes a major difference. That paper is not on that subject. It's on how to effectively persuade people to accept lower limits. Which is altogether different.

    I did note that above, but as it was in an edit I'll forgive you for not seeing that.

    You want the QUB study which Stuart linked to a report on above - which suggests bluntly that the picture is mixed. Fewer vehicles, meaning fewer crashes. Well, that may be an acceptable tradeoff. But if it doesn't really cut average speeds by a noticeable amount, that doesn't suggest it's working as intended.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    darkage said:


    There is so much exaggeration on climate change it is hard to know where to start. For instance people on Twitter are going on about the oceans boiling. How can that be regarded as anything other than an exaggeration?

    I think people can be led to agree either that climate change has potentially catastrophic consequences, and also that it is also sometimes exaggerated if for example they are presented with examples of the latter.

    Personally I don't feel qualified to offer an opinion on climate change - other than to go along with the consensus of scientific opinion and to act accordingly.




    Two things -

    1. Marine life is actually very sensitive to temperature - it's not as if it can sweat it off, etc. This is very evident when walking on a beach in SW England vs NE Scotland - the species balance is markedly different, especially the pelagic or planktonic forms (I had never seen cuttlefish in the wild before a wander in Dorset, for instance). Yet the sea doesn't feel that different ...

    2. As noted before on here, water absorbs a hell of a lot of heat energy, so to be as warm as it is mewans there is a huge amount of energy in ther climate system not previously present.

    Neither are good at all.
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,832
    ydoethur said:

    If you have a way of controlling sneezing, let me know, as I'd like to use it.

    Everyone meanwhile has a way to control their mobile phone use, called, er, not using it...
    This month has been an interesting experiment for me in that respect. I’ve sneezed once since the start of July, and I instantly regretted it. Normally I’m a big sneezer but I’ve been stifling them. So it is actually possible to control sneezing if you have to.
  • Jim_MillerJim_Miller Posts: 3,252
    Arthur C. Clark addressed the question of city versus country living in "Against the Fall of Night". (Which I prefer to the later version.)
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Against_the_Fall_of_Night

    I would say that Lys (country) comes out ahead of Diaspar (city) in that novel, because it produces better people.

    (And I have long been struck by the fact that the two Americans I believe have done the most for the world in the last fifty years, grew up on farms:
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norman_Borlaug
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maurice_Hilleman )
  • darkagedarkage Posts: 5,398

    Speak for yourself.

    I love my car.
    Yeah but they could throw you a bit of meat over ULEZ and it will have pretty much the same effect as announcing they are 'pro motorist', only with the added advantage of not alienating lots of other voters.
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 10,087
    edited August 2023
    ydoethur said:

    Eabhal, I asked for evidence that cutting speed limits makes a major difference. That paper is not on that subject. It's on how to effectively persuade people to accept lower limits. Which is altogether different.

    I did note that above, but as it was in an edit I'll forgive you for not seeing that.

    You want the QUB study which Stuart linked to a report on above - which suggests bluntly that the picture is mixed. Fewer vehicles, meaning fewer crashes. Well, that may be an acceptable tradeoff. But if it doesn't really cut average speeds by a noticeable amount, that doesn't suggest it's working as intended.
    You're right, wrong link. (Sorry!)

    https://www.journalslibrary.nihr.ac.uk/phr/XAZI9445/#/abstract
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,350
    TimS said:

    This month has been an interesting experiment for me in that respect. I’ve sneezed once since the start of July, and I instantly regretted it. Normally I’m a big sneezer but I’ve been stifling them. So it is actually possible to control sneezing if you have to.
    Well, don't keep it to yourself.* What's the trick?

    *unlike your sneezes!
  • Carnyx said:

    Okay, tell me in your opinion where it's OK to kill children in an average Welsh village. If it's 30mph limit now, then the improved survival rate makes it a no-brainer (so to speak) to make it 20mph. Simple as that.

    Bit odd of you to support the RNLI but ...
    That is an unnecessary and unfair comment

    Exceptions are being considered so even LAs accept a blanket ban is unnecessary and it is likely that many more will be reviewed once implemented in September

    Indeed last time I visited Scotland many villages had 30 mph zones moderated to 20mph in the centre which seemed sensible
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,087
    Nigelb said:

    .

    I’m a fan of 25mph urban speed limits, but I recognise that’s pretty unlikely starting from where we are now.
    20 mph makes sense on streets where there is any actual chance of pedestrian/car interaction.

    Another point is that consideration is being given to mandating Auto Emergency Braking. What effect will this have?
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,832
    Carnyx said:

    Two things -

    1. Marine life is actually very sensitive to temperature - it's not as if it can sweat it off, etc. This is very evident when walking on a beach in SW England vs NE Scotland - the species balance is markedly different, especially the pelagic or planktonic forms (I had never seen cuttlefish in the wild before a wander in Dorset, for instance). Yet the sea doesn't feel that different ...

    2. As noted before on here, water absorbs a hell of a lot of heat energy, so to be as warm as it is mewans there is a huge amount of energy in ther climate system not previously present.

    Neither are good at all.
    Boiling the ocean is related to reinventing the wheel and giving it war and peace in the wonderful world of biz speak.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617

    That is an unnecessary and unfair comment

    Exceptions are being considered so even LAs accept a blanket ban is unnecessary and it is likely that many more will be reviewed once implemented in September

    Indeed last time I visited Scotland many villages had 30 mph zones moderated to 20mph in the centre which seemed sensible
    But as has been pointed out there is no blanket 20mph speed limit which is what you were complaining about. So it's a matter of 30 vs 20 in selected areas. And to my mind the 30 mph limit should only be used *outside* the villages to slow the traffic.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,350
    Carnyx said:

    Two things -

    1. Marine life is actually very sensitive to temperature - it's not as if it can sweat it off, etc. This is very evident when walking on a beach in SW England vs NE Scotland - the species balance is markedly different, especially the pelagic or planktonic forms (I had never seen cuttlefish in the wild before a wander in Dorset, for instance). Yet the sea doesn't feel that different ...

    2. As noted before on here, water absorbs a hell of a lot of heat energy, so to be as warm as it is mewans there is a huge amount of energy in ther climate system not previously present.

    Neither are good at all.
    IIRC the oceans are also a major sink for carbon dioxide, which they would give off if warmed.

    Thereby causing a rather nasty feedback loop.
  • viewcodeviewcode Posts: 24,152
    Carnyx said:

    I recommend the Guardian agony aunt column. Very good on that side of matters.
    "...Dear Grauniad. I have just found out that Dear Hubby voted Conservative. I have tried an intervention and essential oils, and explained he's been influenced by Other People, but he insists that Conservatives are normal people. I'm at my wit's end. Can you please help him see sense..."
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    Eabhal said:

    You're right, wrong link. (Sorry!)

    https://www.journalslibrary.nihr.ac.uk/phr/XAZI9445/#/abstract
    Quite impressed Ydoethur is actrually considering the documentation. But then he'ss a historian. Spooner refers, so to speak.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,350
    edited August 2023
    Carnyx said:

    But as has been pointed out there is no blanket 20mph speed limit which is what you were complaining about. So it's a matter of 30 vs 20 in selected areas. And to my mind the 30 mph limit should only be used *outside* the villages to slow the traffic.
    The policy is, 20mph will be put in place in residential areas unless an exemption is granted for it to be higher or lower.

    Currently, and in England (and also I think in Scotland) it is 30, except where an exemption is granted for it to be higher or lower.

    So yes, effectively it is a blanket change. Or at least, a change in presumption.
  • pm215pm215 Posts: 1,231
    Carnyx said:

    There's an arguable case for passing a law that all drivers should only be allowed to drive a 2CV or Trabant, or the modern electric equivalent. They'd be a lot slower, and not just because of the engine.
    I used to keep a copy of the official euro crash-test photo for my car on the dashboard as a reminder. It was a cheap little Fiat and there wasn't much driver's compartment left post-impact...
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    ydoethur said:

    The policy is, 20mph will be put in place in residential areas unless an exemption is granted for it to be higher or lower.

    Currently, and in England (and also I think in Scotland) it is 30, except where an exemption is granted for it to be higher or lower.

    So yes, effectively it is a blanket change. Or at least, a change in presumption.
    Thanks - as a starting pointd for consideration, anyway.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,350
    Carnyx said:

    Quite impressed Ydoethur is actrually considering the documentation. But then he'ss a historian. Spooner refers, so to speak.
    Oi! I always consider documentation. Even when it doesn't say what I expect it to.

    Otherwise I wouldn't have asked for it, would I?

    Honestly, who do you think I am? A journalist at the National?
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    viewcode said:

    "...Dear Grauniad. I have just found out that Dear Hubby voted Conservative. I have tried an intervention and essential oils, and explained he's been influenced by Other People, but he insists that Conservatives are normal people. I'm at my wit's end. Can you please help him see sense..."
    The last but one column was titled "I recently got sober – and have stopped enjoying sex with my husband".
  • IanB2 said:

    In one of the historic dockside warehouses of Hamburg that, despite levelling all the residential areas of the city, allies bombers managed to leave intact.
    Thank you - very interesting
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,350
    edited August 2023
    Carnyx said:

    The last but one column was titled "I recently got sober – and have stopped enjoying sex with my husband".
    Sounds like a high on whisky strategy was being used.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    ydoethur said:

    Oi! I always consider documentation. Even when it doesn't say what I expect it to.

    Otherwise I wouldn't have asked for it, would I?

    Honestly, who do you think I am? A journalist at the National?
    No: a PB commentator. Very refreshing change. I am always making myself a pain with certain colleagues in insisting on documentation and referencing and often publish an overlapping article in another journal if the editor of the original piece doesn't let me give full documentation.
  • ydoethurydoethur Posts: 73,350
    edited August 2023
    Actually, although it wasn't the study @Eabhal was trying to communicate, that paper was rather interesting and I found it worth reading.

    It is, for example, pretty explicit in how you need to do all the things the Senedd haven't done to get people on board with these controversial changes and prepare for them effectively...
  • EabhalEabhal Posts: 10,087
    ydoethur said:

    Oi! I always consider documentation. Even when it doesn't say what I expect it to.

    Otherwise I wouldn't have asked for it, would I?

    Honestly, who do you think I am? A journalist at the National?
    Curious that no one else noticed.

    Chapeau.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    This thread has wrapped itself around the Telford milestone near the Waterloo Bridge ...
  • Carnyx said:

    But as has been pointed out there is no blanket 20mph speed limit which is what you were complaining about. So it's a matter of 30 vs 20 in selected areas. And to my mind the 30 mph limit should only be used *outside* the villages to slow the traffic.
    The limit is 20mph unless otherwise stated and is defined the same way as 30mph areas are

    The exclusions in our area are virtually non existant
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,087
    ydoethur said:

    Actually, although it wasn't the study @Eabhal was trying to communicate, that paper was rather interesting and I found it worth reading.

    It is, for example, pretty explicit in how you need to do all the things the Senedd haven't done to get people on board with these controversial changes and prepare for them effectively...

    I rather get the impression that some politicians think that a Proper Environmental/Safety Policy *has* to be unpleasant. At least for a significant minority.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617

    I rather get the impression that some politicians think that a Proper Environmental/Safety Policy *has* to be unpleasant. At least for a significant minority.
    That is certainly the Conservative approach!
  • Jim_MillerJim_Miller Posts: 3,252
    Carnyx said: "Sure, but that doesn't answer the issue of how the children are to survive elsewhere for the rest of the time outside school."

    True enough. Some children are driven to and from in school buses (regular ones and short ones), many are dropped off and picked up by their mothers driving "light trucks" like that Corolla I mentioned earlier, some are walked to and from school by parents, and a few walk to and from home on their own, often in pairs.

    (By the way, the school district was so short of bus drivers that a year or so ago, they sent out post cards to everyone in the district, begging for applicants and offering, among other things, free training.)

    And here's a question for you: Is "short bus" an insult in the UK, as it sometimes is in the US?
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,183
    ydoethur said:

    When you consider that Welsh Labour make Truss look competent and Trump look honest, they should not have any votes left at all.

    So it shouldn't lose them a single vote.
    There would be a certain irony if they lost votes over speed limits than over - random example - their mishandling of education.
    The Conservatives often cite Labour in office in Wales as reason enough to stick with the very impressive Rishi over the lacklustre Starmer. Starmer like Drakeford is indeed lacklustre, so why in Wales do we not vote for RT as FM? Because he is head and shoulders worse than the Drake.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,087
    Carnyx said:

    That is certainly the Conservative approach!
    The Scottish Greens seem deeply committed to the idea of No Pain No Gain.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022

    Carnyx said: "Sure, but that doesn't answer the issue of how the children are to survive elsewhere for the rest of the time outside school."

    True enough. Some children are driven to and from in school buses (regular ones and short ones), many are dropped off and picked up by their mothers driving "light trucks" like that Corolla I mentioned earlier, some are walked to and from school by parents, and a few walk to and from home on their own, often in pairs.

    (By the way, the school district was so short of bus drivers that a year or so ago, they sent out post cards to everyone in the district, begging for applicants and offering, among other things, free training.)

    And here's a question for you: Is "short bus" an insult in the UK, as it sometimes is in the US?

    “Short Bus” is a very American insult. In fact, almost anything to do with school buses is very American in nature. In the UK, they’re almost non-existent except for private schools and very rural areas. “Busing”, with all the connotations about why it was introduced, has never been a thing elsewhere.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,183
    edited August 2023
    ydoethur said:

    The policy is, 20mph will be put in place in residential areas unless an exemption is granted for it to be higher or lower.

    Currently, and in England (and also I think in Scotland) it is 30, except where an exemption is granted for it to be higher or lower.

    So yes, effectively it is a blanket change. Or at least, a change in presumption.
    Yes it is a change in presumption, hence the notion that unless otherwise specified (which is important) if there are street lights present assume the speed limit to be 20.

    I am less uncomfortable with the idea that 20 is plenty than I was when they first launched the pilot in St Brides. I suspect it is one of those situations that one gets used to over time. It certainly changes one's behaviour over time.
  • FairlieredFairliered Posts: 5,557

    The Scottish Greens seem deeply committed to the idea of No Pain No Gain.
    As much pain as possible, coupled with no economic gain whatsoever.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,266
    Pagan2 said:

    Yes actually I do, people like you tend to attack me for cynicism on these things....go on then tell us how many council representatives are on these management boards...quote a source....if I am cynical and I admit I am then prove me wrong they arent a token
    You misunderstand. I don’t know how many council reps are on these boards but I’d say the fewer the better. The council should set the parameters, select an operator, and step back. One of the parameters will be clear targets, another will be regular reviews and exit points. Councillors are unlikely to be qualified individuals to run transport systems.

    We can all see what happens when councillors assume they know best, with the disastrous investment decisions taken by Thurrock and others
  • Pagan2Pagan2 Posts: 10,730

    You misunderstand. I don’t know how many council reps are on these boards but I’d say the fewer the better. The council should set the parameters, select an operator, and step back. One of the parameters will be clear targets, another will be regular reviews and exit points. Councillors are unlikely to be qualified individuals to run transport systems.

    We can all see what happens when councillors assume they know best, with the disastrous investment decisions taken by Thurrock and others
    I dont actually disagree with you on councillors no knowing their ass from their elbow. Maybe you misunderstood what I was getting at.

    If taxpayers are paying for it I think democratic oversight is needed. I dont trust a private company to take from the public purse but have no democratic oversight where voters can say....you are doing a crap job fuck off. That way lies corruption
  • Pagan2Pagan2 Posts: 10,730
    Pagan2 said:

    I dont actually disagree with you on councillors no knowing their ass from their elbow. Maybe you misunderstood what I was getting at.

    If taxpayers are paying for it I think democratic oversight is needed. I dont trust a private company to take from the public purse but have no democratic oversight where voters can say....you are doing a crap job fuck off. That way lies corruption
    I dont in this case think democratic oversight necessarily means election in many ways I think a sortition thing where every area had a transport committe chosen each year of 2 car drivers, 2 public transport users, two active transport people and a chairman wouldn't be a bad idea. The year term probably means they aren't worth bribing. They also probably have a better idea of what is wrong in the area than some town hall tin pot despot that may not even live in the area.
  • Pagan2Pagan2 Posts: 10,730

    You misunderstand. I don’t know how many council reps are on these boards but I’d say the fewer the better. The council should set the parameters, select an operator, and step back. One of the parameters will be clear targets, another will be regular reviews and exit points. Councillors are unlikely to be qualified individuals to run transport systems.

    We can all see what happens when councillors assume they know best, with the disastrous investment decisions taken by Thurrock and others
    Given what you said what makes you think councillors are qualified to set parameters, targets and do regular reviews. These are people with no idea how to run a transport system.
  • Pagan2Pagan2 Posts: 10,730
    The problem is most democracies is politicians, they will tell you like Nick Palmer does "they put themselves forward to make the country a better place". I actually dont dispute that in the least. They do genuinely think they are doing it to do a good thing.

    Simple fact of the matter is however they also meddle in a lot of things they don't really understand and do more harm than good which is how we ended up with RIPA for one, the online safety bill secondly to name but two. We have the french now demanding browsers obey a black list of sites, the spanish demanding an finish to end to end encryption, the australians declaring that the law of mathematics are great but in australia its australian laws that matter.

    Politicians need to get back into their zones of knowledge, for example if nick palmer has things to say on animal welfare that is worth listening to and considering. If he has something to say about for instance public transport well he probably knows no more than most of us on here
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