newirishman
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And if your paying tax at the higher rate, you'll save half the cost of that ticket. So €1,110 is the true cost.
That 2,180 also includes commuter rail which you forgot to mention!
Very few cyclists don't also have a car.It would take a hell of a lot of bus journeys to cover the cost of my annual road tax for my car - so I don't think you are correct about anyone subsidising me. Actually, I would suggest that indirectly, I am subsidising them, when you consider the cost of running my car.
Bring in a public transport system that is reliable, efficient, takes me where I want to go and when and I'd be happy to use it more. As things stand, I use the bus when it suits, but it doesn't always suit. Unlike some of the good people in South Dublin, I don't have the option of a Luas and Dart within minutes of my house, so perhaps you might like to consider that myself (and others who don't have those services nearby) are actually subsidising those individuals. Then there's the cyclists, that pay nothing and yet benefit from the roads, cycle lanes, traffic control and safety measures (which half of them sadly ignore !) etc.
Apart from that, € 1,110 is still about 20% more expensive than Paris. Or more than three times as expensive as Vienna.
LOL!Yeah, but you not comparing like with like, I mean, those in Paris and Vienna must be green with envy when they see the transport systems we have in place!
There is a good argument for buses, both Dublin Bus and regional buses. There may be an argument for a subsidy (though to suggest that those who avail of that subsidised bus service are somehow subsidising motorists is laughable) but there is absolutely no argument for running any trains in this country.just in relation to subvention, you couldn't remove subvention for buses solely without removing it for trains. The subsidisation for trains is much more per journey than buses. Can anyone provide an example of a functioning city where there is no subsidy of public transport?
Very few cyclists don't also have a car.
I know I shouldn't ask but I can't resist... there is absolutely no argument for running any trains in this country.
We once had the 2nd best train system in the world it is called shortsighted planning and use of resources and tunnel vision all rolled into one,I know I shouldn't ask but I can't resist...why is that?
If someone has a car and a motorbike, they pay road tax for both.
consider the impact on the wider economy with slowing other modes of transport down across the city to facilitate cyclists
Here's an old ERSI report but it's a good one.I know I shouldn't ask but I can't resist...why is that?
The Dublin-Galway route was served by one bus a day in each direction, via Mullingar (which is not the most direct route), in 1980 under monopoly. By the summer of 2001, following the development of the route by independent operators, opposed by both CIE and the regulating department, there were 21 buses a day, on the direct route, in each direction. The operators were Bus Éireann, owned by CIE, Nestors, Burkes, and so-called auxiliaries, or independents not licensed by the Department of Transport but subcontracted by CIE. The SRR examines the expenditure of €238 million on the Dublin-Galway railway line by 2002 in order to “Stay in the Game” and a further €160 million in a “Going for Growth” scenario. However, the SRR does not deal with the optimum market share of traffic on this route between the rail, bus and air modes.
So no rail at all, including DART or commuter services into Dublin or Cork?
or Belfast to Dublin will the train stop and turn back at the invisible border,I suppose we could rename it Belfast to EU 27 sounds good,So no rail at all, including DART or commuter services into Dublin or Cork?
well it doesn't get the all-day numbers that LUAS does, it's very busy at rush-hours but not so much in between.There's no way the DART *should* be losing money.
From the NTA 2016 Report;So no rail at all, including DART or commuter services into Dublin or Cork?
€552
Limerick - Ballybrophy
No, DART could and should be run without a loss.Take away DART and commuter services to Dublin....how many more buses would be required per hour on already congested roads to cater for the passenger numbers?
Irish Rail handles 42 million passenger journeys a year and get nearly 5 times that in State subsidies. That is excluding funding for infrastructure.Or are you suggesting the rail lines be ripped up and replaced with tarmac for the buses only, which could work?
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