Peyote wrote:
As much as I agree with the gist of Glaikie's post I think they could really do with being slightly more diplomatic!
It is true that the motorists has been "on top" for several decades now, the automatic choice of transport is the car, the reason for the road network has ceased to be to allow the movement of goods and people and has now become somewhere to drive. So it isn't really surprising that when the status quo is challenged a significant number of motorist will start to get quite annoyed at the "perceived" victimisation. When in someone else's point of view it is simply the redressing of the balance which has been distorted for so long.
But we have "out of town" shopping malls, cinemas, "industrial centres/business/retail parks"... Bulk buying.. zero bus routes to these places and it's not practical to hump all this lot back home on the bus or bicycle either.
Internet shopping:scratchchin: Last time one of us tried this - she got out of date food and ended up having to dine out instead of cooking "chez eux"

If I recall.. Jazz miaowed or rather roared - nay - blasted on her saxphone! a "never again" and hogs the "reduced for quickly sale counters at her local supermarkets"
Wimmin in this family
But the point is that the way the folk designed the towns and the places of work and places to shop.. plus the rather daft placing of kids into schools has created a desperate need for the car for many families. (My comment on the daft placing of kids in various schools is based on comments from my teacher sisters who did cut their eye teeth in roughish comps before landing jobs in decentish olde worlde grammar schools They found that some kids ended up travelling over three miles to an undersubscribed school because of rather illegal selection at the desired school more local to them.. but for which they did not meet the "league table criteria"
This is a separate rant in its own right.. but still peripheral to the topic as to why folk will stick with their cars .. come what costs may!
There's also the unwillingness of some employers to allow flexible working hours or even work from home - when this is actually quite feasible.

Wildy did a heck of lot of work from home when expecting the last kitten (and why she was able to dip into the internet "for a toes up!"

when waiting for a reply to her work input!
Obviously her work does require her presence at the lab or a supervision of the trial .. but again these trials take place at different bases and she has to travel to them all .. and pay for her parking just as I do.

But, all the same, I would suspect a lot of admin sales/finance/whatever work could be done from home via the internet on occasion and I am surprised that this is not encouraged more to be honest. Oh sure - we need the social input from work... but many office staff could still be office based for half the time in many, many cases these days and have the freedom of working at home - relatively stress free...
I think perhaps we need to address more our way of working and really USE the computer and the internet more productively, with economy and value for money services.
[quote+"peyote"]
WildCat wrote:
Mad Doc already has to pay to use the hospital car park - as do the junior medics und nurses und porters

It has not stopped any of them from using their cars .. nor the patients either.
By the way - they never did improve the bus services around these hospitals either. They did put a speed cam a couple of miles further down the road though..

- where it safe und serve no other useful purpose than a potential "ker-ching-a-ping"

:
Interesting how sometimes these schemes can be really successful and sometimes terrible. There's a hospital in Nottingham (coincidence, honestly) that has a very successful travel plan, including car parking charges related to salary, they have also introduced a very successful bus service too.
[/quote]
"Old Queen Bessie's"
We have relative based in Nottingham. She trained there and works as a junior medic on the ladder up now

She once posted somewhere as "madeleine" and "Schneewittchen"

She's Siegli's daughter

She still reports back to us that her parking fees are a chunk out of income regardless and that like the rest of us .. if you forget to renew when the wretched ticket expires.. an angle grinder in the boot comes in "jolly handy"

It's true mate. If we forget to go to admin to buy a replacement when it expires and many of us do because we are too darned busy and think "Oh.. do it tomorrow!"
Only

I am sure you know that "tomorrow either never comes or steals up with a surprise clamp"

for so many young nurses and doctors.
{Peyote mate.. I pay a small fortune to park in the hospital car park .. as does Mike (brother-in-law) and my own brothers and sisters who are fellow medics. It's a lot of money in reality. Honestly.

I've been paying this for years now and when you add this £400 to what I pay out on bus services per child to get to school..
To be honest .. it cost us LESS when our young sixth former drivers drove the brood to school with them .. and that's even paying their whopping insurances as under 25s..
We drop them off at the bus stop or at the school depending on time and travel arrangements on the day. If we take them .. we pay TWICE as we still pay the School for the service. Their School invoices us with the fees each term ..

The fostered brood are different. We pay daily fares for them. We then fill in a form at the end to the foster or academic year and receive a partial re-imburse
Bus services? Again we have a postcode lottery on this. I happen to think York.. Canterbury. Chester.. Liverpool .. Oxford... are beacons to look up to here. I think Leeds also has a decent system per Mike (Krissi's husband whom you have "met" on line before ..

(He's OK.. but like Andreas ....... you need a small dose

)
Basically - where there's a park and ride scheme with good value for money... timely connections etc - there's not probs. Icing on the cake if they have facilities for the bicycles as well.
peyote wrote:
WildCat wrote:
But wait .. what happen next....
There will ten million bicycles in Nottingham a potential fact!

Congested und caught in the tram track...they'll be charged to park und ride the tram as well as the Sherriff of Nottingham will want to rob from the poor und give to the rich...

You reckon ten million people commute into Nottingham?? Calmer logic indeed!
Staying in Wildy-land for a bit longer (!), if all the folk currently commuting by car did swap to bikes, there'd be a lot more room on the roads and a lot less congestion!
She's being tongue in cheek

But seriously - we've ridden in a "bunch" and it's not that easy even when you KNOW what you're doing

I worry over training and expertise in this skill. Because if IS a skill when all is said and done
You may recall (OK - "shudder"

) Krissi and Mike posting on C+ that they had ridden in China and felt extremely vulnerable in a "riding pack" like that.
But I have to admit that our average cycling commuter has not ridden in such condition and if and when you do .. it's a serious "wake-up call"

I think about the only time I've seen Krissi looking "worried" as she did in the holiday video of the "Chinese adventure". (She was not keen on their food either apparently. She did not enjoy steamed snake apparently

)
Peyote wrote:
WildCat wrote:
The ones hit hardest are the porters/nurses/junior medics in leaner economic times.
This is true, unless the car parking management system is properly thought out and implemented. In which case it can be fair and effective at reducing single occupancy car use.
Only porters,nurses andjunior medics or any one else in a fairly basically paid job do not live near each other and thus cannot share the car
Many folk do not work at the same location. iT MAKES car sharing rather difficult.

They do not all work similar hours or shifts.. and again this can make carsharing inpractical for many.

I am thinking on a wider impact scale. We cannot assume neigbours work within same vicinity.. or bus routes work to meet actual bespoke working needs

which means employers really do need to work on job specs - and not rely on the goodwill of unpaid overtime any more
Quote:
WildCat wrote:
Basically - it a soppy greeny idea which do nothing more than irritate folk. It still cheaper than the proposed £16 daily toll tax proposed for Manchester - allowing for inflation.

Possibly, but we need these kind of ideas to be raised so the public can debate them, pick holes in them and accept/reject them as necessary.
But Peyote.. we are all subject to whims of ill-informed councillors (and I will be frank here.. they are not as astute as one could reasonably expect at times. Some are. Others .. I am afraid we have cause to SHUDDER

)
Do they "listen"?
No. Because my sisters have been lobbying against the proposed toll tax for Manchester and found that whilst the councillors were not in actual favour. "they were bound to obey the local "WHIP" or else be disciplined.

Oh and do the sums here. If each worker pays £185 to park.. and we are taking thousands in reality.

Where does the cash go?
I doubt it will subsidise tram fares .
My parking fees do not subsidise the NHS or benefit patients to be blunt.
I do not believe it will be invested in any initiative other to ensure pensions get paid
I accept I have to pay to park my car in the car park. I do not accept this fee benefits the public or the planet.
I am a realist. I do not see the world in rose tinted glasses any more than I think it owes me a living
