Zoney wrote: » It'll take more than a lobby group to get bus lanes in Limerick city. The main arterial routes, particularly O'Connell Ave. (Raheen) and Ennis Road (Caherdavin) are home to the well-heeled who don't wish to lose their on-street parking (or have to park on the other side of the road) and they can ensure councillors won't progress bus route plans. On the Mulgrave St. route some retail interests have ensured nothing happens, and Childer's Road would need expanded to probably 5/6 lanes to allow bus lanes (two plus two for ordinary traffic and 1 or 2 bus lanes).
serfboard wrote: » I have been following with great interest the Western Rail Corridor thread on this forum for quite a while and my views are fairly clear on this issue - I'm against it. I'm wondering if there are people who live in the West Of Ireland who would be in favour of setting up a new group - it could be called West-By-Bus or West-Off-Track (okay, a bit cheeky I know) - to campaign in favour of the following: 1. The halting of any future plans to develop the Western Rail Corridor north of Athenry, and the srapping of any plans to develop a Luas in Galway. (I realise that funding will probably not be there for these projects anyway). 2. The commencement as soon as possible of the Gort->Tuam M18/M17 road. 3. The advancement (in so far as possible) of developments to upgrade the M17, particularly from Curry to Collooney. 4. The provision of more Bus lanes in major urban areas in the West (Galway, Limerick, Sligo & Castlebar). 5. The provision of Bus Park & Ride facilities in various strategic locations. 6. Knock Airport to be served by all Galway->Sligo routes. 7. Bus Services to serve Industrial Areas - there is no point in having buses serve town centres if a larger percentage of commuters work in industrial estates. This would not be additional services, but modifications of peak-time routes. 8. The preserving of the Western Rail Route by turning it into a Greenway/Cycleway as has been done in many other parts of the country. I would be particularly interested to know if people who live in the West would be willing to participate - thus demolishing one of West-On-Track's arguments that anyone opposed to it is "agin the Wesht". I also think that it might be possible to get certain interests aligned in favour of this proposal - particularly Bus Eireann and the private bus operators.
murphaph wrote: » These unscrupulous councillors need to be voted off the city council then. Do people in Limerick city use the bus much? Would they use it instead of the car if it had greater priority? It's actually quite disgraceful that Limerick hasn't bothered to build any buslanes. Priorities are obviously wrong.
gunbarrel wrote: » While I dont live in the West I am certainly supportive of your idea for better bus services in the West. However, I think you should keep such a scheme focused on the issue of buses. If you are anti-WRC then attacking there ideas will only give them cause for propaganda. ?
Zoney wrote: » It'll take more than a lobby group to get bus lanes in Limerick city. ).
murphaph wrote: » Serfboard-If you do start a lobby group, better to start with what most people perceive as positives (more bus routes etc.) rather than "we want the (ridiculous) WRC stopped" because people have a VERY short attention span and most are too lazy to read on. They'll see your proposal and immediately condemn you as being an "anti-wesht of Ireland west brit from Dublin" or some other tripe and not read the details. Do what the WoT crowd always do, except instead of saying "Dublin has a DART, we want one" say "Dublin has effective Quality Bus Corridors, why have none been developed in Galway, Limerick, Sligo?"
gunbarrel wrote: » While I dont live in the West I am certainly supportive of your idea for better bus services in the West. However, I think you should keep such a scheme focused on the issue of buses. If you are anti-WRC then attacking there ideas will only give them cause for propaganda.
westtip wrote: » IN fact on the subject of branding I think WEst on Bus - gives too much credit to West on Track - and the two might get confused or might be considered complimentary, West off track would not be taken seriously and would be ridiculed by West on Track: Actually even though I have just written it I think Transport West might have a good ring to it in the publics minds, you may well have sown a good seed here Serfboard. You could even launch the group as A THINK TANK FOR INTEGRATED TRANSPORT PLANNING IN THE WEST OF IRELAND
westtip wrote: » Whilst we recognise the value of the WRC, we also recognise the need for focus on the greatest needs of transport infrastucture in the west. The west of Ireland is by nature of its settlement patterns and size of towns very dependent on road transport; and in our view the greater priority for the west must be the Atlantic Road Corridor and the economic benefits it will bring and benefits to both private road users and bus operators and in general to the business activity taking place in the west. To get our bus services moving quickly and efficiently we need to have better roads, and bus lanes into our major urban centres -building this better road infrastructure will lead to potentially greater critical mass of both economic activity and people living in the west - which may in turn lead to the need for better rail commuter services that could be provided by the Western Rail Corridor. However, until we get that critical mass of people, we believe the WRC should be postponed, and the alignment of the track be maintained in public ownership as a greenway - for potential future use as a railway. Using the WRC this way will give the alignment of the WRC back to the public to make good use of it now. etc etc
serfboard wrote: I agree with what a lot of people say and that it would be better to be for something rather than against something else.
Chris_533976 wrote: » Add to that that perhaps Citylinks (or BEs) Galway - Dublin service should stop at Galway airport. Not many would use it at first, but then BEs service to the airport is as good as non existant so it would take a bit to get used to. It would probably only add 5 minutes to the journey and would be very useful.
gunbarrel wrote: » I am surprised Westtip has missed a key point. How about ensuring that all Sligo - Galway services serve both Tuam and Claremorris train station (maybe they do already). That way, through integrated transport, Tuam would now be connected to the rail service. .
serfboard wrote: » 6. Knock Airport to be served by all Galway->Sligo routes.
westtip wrote: » Gunbarrel if I advocated the train line from to Tuam and Claremorris I think many readers of this board (see Western Rail Corridor thread) would be sending round the men in the white coats for me! Please read that thread to consider the debate on the WRC, my views on it are well known! The future for public transport on an intra-town basis and intra-city basis in the west is clearly in buses - our greatest infrastructural issue in the west is not opening rural railway lines but having decent trunk roads for buses, commercial traffic and private cars to travel on safely.
Neworder79 wrote: » This one annoys me, it's a no brainer, 630,000 used the airport last year and it's location next to the junction of the N17 & N5 means there are literally hundreds of Bus Eireann services (Glaway - Sligo - Donegal, Longford - Ballina) passing the door of Ireland West every week losing out on customers. The airport car parks are heaving as there is no alternative to driving, with people now parking on the entrance roadside. On several occasions this summer there were no hire cars left at the airport despite there being 7 hire companies, and arriving passengers were left to wait for the few taxis that were available and pay €70 - €100 to get to Westport or Galway. I often hear similar complaints from tourists arriving in the west about the lack of any public transport option. Not much attraction in low cost Ryanair or AerLingus flights if you have to pay 3 times as much for a taxi. Bus Eireann announced 7 routes (including existing Galway, Sligo, Donegal, Derry, Castlebar, Westport & Ballina routes) would be serving the airport back in 2005 with lots of media fanfare and large decals on the side of all their western coaches advertising the fact. I believe the airport built bus stands and changed the entrance gates to accommodate them. Nothing had happened 2 years later so some pressure was put on politicians and an announcement was made that the DOT had "sanctioned" the routes and they would now begin in 07. It's nearly 5 years since the announcement with no movement, the coaches still drive by the gates, and the stop-gap Charlestown shuttle is being cut. In the same period Bus Eireann have launched several Dublin Airport services direct from towns in the West! Where's the joined up thinking there?
Neworder79 wrote: » I read on another board that there are 86 bus departures from Cork Airport, and 136 through Shannon every day (Bus Eireann & Citylink). With the previously mentioned false announcements at Knock and Bus Eireann advertising 4am Ballina - Dublin Airport services on local radio, you'd be forgiven for thinking the state agencies were colluding to prevent growth at regional airports. Surely Bus Eireann could at least try routing the Galway - Sligo service via Ireland West, it would add very little to the journey time. And there are no bus services from Westport or Castlebar that go anywhere near the airport.
Chris_533976 wrote: Add to that that perhaps Citylinks (or BEs) Galway - Dublin service should stop at Galway airport.
gunbarrel wrote: » Might be difficult to get a private company to do it but BÉ should not have a problem with it. If Citylink were willing to do it then it might not be too far out of their way to do it for the Shannon service either.
Zoney wrote: » Yeah, I'm not a fan of Knock (I think Shannon should serve the entire West from Sligo to north Cork - although the current roads built/uc/planned are decades late for that) but with it being there, it seems a bit silly to encourage people to use the overcrowded Dublin Airport.
Neworder79 wrote: » So the dream of Shannon serving the whole 350 mile western seaboard is unlikely to happen unless WOT get their Maglev.
Zoney wrote: » Actually the existing M18, completion of N7 SRR phase 2, the under construction/planned M18, and planned M17, Tuam bypass, and Galway bypass will make a huge difference for people getting to/from Shannon. No Maglev involved. Sure people were going on in the WRC thread about how the new roads would allow 2 hours Limerick-Sligo, how would that not make Shannon more viable for even somewhere as far away as Sligo?
Surely Bus Eireann could at least try routing the Galway - Sligo service via Ireland West, it would add very little to the journey time. And there are no bus services from Westport or Castlebar that go anywhere near the airport.
Yeah, I'm not a fan of Knock (I think Shannon should serve the entire West from Sligo to north Cork - although the current roads built/uc/planned are decades late for that) but with it being there, it seems a bit silly to encourage people to use the overcrowded Dublin Airport.
It won't be overcrowded for long with T2 on the way though.
Neworder79 wrote: » In the same period Bus Eireann have launched several Dublin Airport services direct from towns in the West! Where's the joined up thinking there?
serfboard wrote: » I have been following with great interest the Western Rail Corridor thread on this forum for quite a while and my views are fairly clear on this issue - I'm against it. ... 1. The halting of any future plans to develop the Western Rail Corridor north of Athenry, and the scrapping of any plans to develop a Luas in Galway. (I realise that funding will probably not be there for these projects anyway).
pointofnoreturn wrote: » I And in relation to your group, It should co-operate with IR in the WRC project to connect services together.
westtip wrote: » POR I think you may have missed the point of Serfboards idea - and SB correct me if I am wrong. Many of us debating the WRC on that by now legendary thread, have done so on the basis that it makes bad transport planning - I am not going to go over all the arguments which I and many others have espoused on that thread; many of us think it is fundamentally not needed. We know that Ennis-Athenry-Galway will open - but we don't have much faith in it - WE MIGHT BE WRONG - but I doubt it. Its not that we are against transport investment in the west - of course we all have that common aim, but for a pressure group, think tank, lobby group to come together with ideas for travel in the west it does not mean we have to agree with another lobby group - because its in the wesht, for the wesht and the wesht must fight its corner, and must collaborate with that group -how can we when we fundamentally disagree with the raison d'etre of that group. I think the issue is the west, (like other parts of the country) needs its transportation issues sorted out - living in the west we are entitled to have an opinion and collectively apply pressure and put our point of view into the public arena about how we think those transport issues could be sorted. We do not believe in WRC not because we are anti rail or anti west - but we don't think it is the right solution for the west, at this point in time; and both the capital expenditure on the project and probably far more important the level of subvention required to keep it going - will mean monies will be diverted from far more effetive transport solutions for the west - in terms of capital expenditure on the primary roads development needed and in terms of subvention of the WRC how that money would be far more effective in providing a decent public transport service by massively subventing the bus services, which would server far more people. Our view (again SerfB come in and tell me if I have grasped your OP correctly) is a more hollistic one: The west has transport issues, there is only so much money to spend, how would our share of the pot be spent most wisely, and can WRC be part of that wise spend of the money, the OP thinks not and many others agree - Sorry Serf I don't want to turn this into the WRC thread mark 2! and if we don't agree with the WRC why embrace it as part of the overall west strategy, sure we may as well all move to Claremorris and join the holy movement!
If the whole of the Atlantic Corridor is built then Knock airport should be closed and its services moved to Galway. Theres absolutely no need for both. Edit: Or even move Galway airport to Knock, as Galway will be 1 hour from Shannon.