Peter Flynt wrote: » It's all about forcing people to use public transport even if the areas in which they live either have poor or no public transport facilities. Typically Irish.
Peter Flynt wrote: » This. It's all about forcing people to use public transport even if the areas in which they live either have poor or no public transport facilities. Typically Irish.
LeinsterDub wrote: » Must of been someone else
Patww79 wrote: » Hate seeing stuff like this happen. Forcing people onto buses.
Patww79 wrote: » But the one that most people want is the one that is forced out. None of the above are options, only punishments.
papu wrote: » People are just lazy, the majority have perfectly fine access but it means having to walk and sit in a peasant wagon.
Patww79 wrote: » I've windows. Surely the cyclists/walkers/joggers/cartwheelers/unicyclists/etc will be the one choking on the fumes. I'll take it.
magicbastarder wrote: » we're talking about the very centre of dublin here. quite literally the very centre of the capital city, in the context of bus lane design being reorganised to reflect the fact that there's a tram line being built across one of the main pinch points. what has people living in areas with poor public transport got to do with it? how many people living in these areas are the ones (of a grand total of 600 people per hour) being forced to drive into the city centre via the quays?
Patww79 wrote: » Hate seeing stuff like this happen. Forcing people onto buses. Taking choices from supposedly free people is a dangerous path.
Phil.x wrote: » Fumes, dirty bus and car diesel fumes, that's why I stopped cycling to work.
Peter Flynt wrote: » subsidise people who use buses & bicycles and guess what?. . . People will leave their cars at home.
Deedsie wrote: » You are a member of the public and it's shared space. Our elected officials decide whats best for the majority of the public.
papu wrote: » Well "Children are at risk of dangerous levels of air pollution in cars because exposure to toxic air is often far higher inside than outside vehicles, a former government chief scientific adviser has warned." It applies to children it applies to you.https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2017/jun/12/children-risk-air-pollution-cars-former-uk-chief-scientist-warns " A range of experiments, some as far back as 2001, have shown that drivers inside vehicles are exposed to far higher levels of air pollution than those walking or cycling along the same urban routes."
Peter Flynt wrote: » Moderately sized European cities, like Dublin, have transport systems far beyond what we can even dream of. Decades of underinvestment have led to what we've got now: A European city with a creaking infrastrusture where large parts of the suburbs and sourrounding counties are left with poor transport links. A city with no rail link to its airport which nearly 30m use a year. If the government are serious bout people using public transport, then why have they cut subventions (and not restored them) by as much as 40% to Dublin Bus and others? No instead, they privatised some routes. . . Probably signed another shoddy contract where they'll pay up on our behalf even if passenger numbers fall. Put in place a proper transport system, fund it properly & subsidise people who use buses & bicycles and guess what?. . . People will leave their cars at home. But No the reverse is done in IRL. They might as well ban cars from the city centre from the phoenix park (apart from those that live in the city centre)
prinzeugen wrote: » So any space should shared right? That means ALL users. Our elected officials don't care about the majority. Take two DDC council members that have never replied to god knows how many letters, emails etc send by many of the residents in my area about a local issue, yet have oodles of time to go on social media 24/7 promoting cycling.
Stephen15 wrote: » Not one Dublin Bus route is being privatised its fake news. I assume you're talking about the routes being tendered out which is not 40% but rather 10% all of which don't even go into the cc so that point its pretty irrelevant. Anyway the NTA is planning to grow bus routes in Dublin over the next couple of years. Bus Connects is on its way. Already the 30 additional buses are being added to the fleet. I reckon that the way people like yourself go on about how awful Dublins public transport are exaggerating. While its by no means perfect it has improved in recent years with the introduction of Leap cards, RTPI, newer buses being introduced and on bus info as well as Luas extensions and the big one which is Luas CC. I struggle to think of any major area in Dublin that dosen't have access to some sort of semi decent public transport service to the cc whether that be a frequent bus, a QBC, a railway line, the Dart, a Luas line and some cases two or more of these. As for the direct rail link to the airport. I reckon that due to geography a direct rail link may end up taking longer than the Airlink or Aircoach that is currently. A train or a metro would likely make multiple stop en route while the bus gies through the Port Tunnel. Cycling and using public transport is already subsidized through The Cycle to Work and The Taxsaver schemes. I reccomend for future reference doing a little bit of research before making such generalisation posts.
Phil.x wrote: » Don't think so buddy. Do proper research
papu wrote: » http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S004896971400713X Can send you the article if you want to broaden you mind mate, I get access, I'm a researcher with peer reviewed publications.. what's your scientific background?
Peter Flynt wrote: » Go to a place like Frankfurt - a city of 700,000 with a surburban area of around 4m. A place destroyed in the second world war. Then cmpare its transport infrastructure to Dublin. No comparison.
Phil.x wrote: » Very weak generalisation and not worth the kilobits it's written in.