Advertisement
If you have a new account but are having problems posting or verifying your account, please email us on hello@boards.ie for help. Thanks :)
Hello all! Please ensure that you are posting a new thread or question in the appropriate forum. The Feedback forum is overwhelmed with questions that are having to be moved elsewhere. If you need help to verify your account contact hello@boards.ie
Hi all,
Vanilla are planning an update to the site on April 24th (next Wednesday). It is a major PHP8 update which is expected to boost performance across the site. The site will be down from 7pm and it is expected to take about an hour to complete. We appreciate your patience during the update.
Thanks all.

Western Rail Corridor / Rail Trail

11314161819181

Comments

  • Closed Accounts Posts: 876 ✭✭✭Lord Glentoran


    Mikedexter wrote: »
    The velorail is all tied to the FG side

    I Don't.know.much about the wider picture

    Someone call the tumble dryer, there’s a sock missing.


  • Registered Users Posts: 28,979 ✭✭✭✭end of the road


    eastwest wrote: »
    'Faceless men' didn't close and don't close railways.

    they do, and they did.
    eastwest wrote: »
    'Local people who don't use them are the ones that close them

    no they aren't. especially where there was no service to actually use in the first place. 1 train a day each way or whatever the timetable was at the time of closure is quite likely not to have been designed with userfriendlyness in mind.
    eastwest wrote: »
    'you can't keep a railway open once usage drops down to a handful of people.
    The reason local people don't use these 19th century routes of course is because there aren't enough of them, they don't suit their needs, and alternatives are more attractive and cost effective.

    every rail route in the country is from the 19th century, so the 19th century nonsense is invalid. the "alternatives" that are supposibly "more cost effective" are really only so because they get away with not having their infrastructure cost counted as part of their running cost like rail has to put up with.

    eastwest wrote: »
    'The notion that resurrecting a piece of antiquated victorian infrastructure will solve the problems of the west is naive and shows a complete lack of understanding of why the west is in decline.

    nobody said it would solve the problems of the west.
    eastwest wrote: »
    'This ignorance is often manifested be a hatred of tourism, one of the industries that helps sustain local communities elsewhere, that can be the catalyst for rural renewal, and that helps make areas attractive to modern in industries such as the IT sector. This ilogical hatred of outsiders coming to spend money on rural localities is often described in populist, disparaging terms as 'Dublin 4 types on bikes' or indeed in terms like 'compliant playground'.

    this is complete nonsense tbh. i have saw absolutely nothing from those proposing the railway to show your claim to be the case. it sounds like the usual "they don't agree with us so they agin us" guff.
    eastwest wrote: »
    'Areas that understand basic economics and the development of sustainable industries are happy to allow high-end sustainable tourism to maintain local services, to support local jobs and to attract additional industries drawn by the resultant quality of life can and do profit from tourism infrastructure.

    yes, however they also understand the reality that nothing is guaranteed, and they are realistic in terms of their projections in terms of what to expect, and what they will likely get.
    eastwest wrote: »
    'In laces like Kiltimagh and Claremorris however, a small number of people prefer to wallow in the past while leaving their brains outside the door.
    The only way forward, while these views prevail, is downward.

    it's nothing to do with some people who supposibly "Wallow in the past" . it's actually quite likely that these people actually do believe that these towns aren't really going to attract the numbers to make it worth while converting a cross-country corridor/main line into a greenway. perhapse they may believe and understand that for something for locals, something else could be found that would deliver just as much of a benefit to them.

    shut down alcohol action ireland now! end MUP today!



  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    Del.Monte wrote: »
    Where are you getting this stuff from? The anti-rail colours of those supporting the WRC project are really showing now. I'll say no more in case I get site banned.

    What the hell are you talking about!
    I was just making aa general comment about railway development in the past and why they came into being in the first place.


  • Registered Users Posts: 12,363 ✭✭✭✭Del.Monte


    dolanbaker wrote: »
    What the hell are you talking about!
    I was just making aa general comment about railway development in the past and why they came into being in the first place.

    If so it was misinformation in the Irish context given that most lines here were built for passengers and freight from the outset rather than the other way round.


  • Registered Users Posts: 5,796 ✭✭✭Isambard


    well of course there was no competition when lines were built, but nowadays people like the immediacy of their cars which means for a service to succeed there needs to be as intensive a service as possible.
    It's no longer a case of people planning their journeys around the train times, they want transport when they want it and if there isn't a convenient train, they'll go another way. Of course adding more trains dilutes the passenger numbers and increases the costs, and there's a huge gulf there that is probably not fillable in most of Ireland.
    I wonder how Bus Eireann does on it's services that aren't supposed to be subsidised? To add a rail service (from the same Company)when there's a parallel bus route seems crazy to me .


  • Advertisement
  • Closed Accounts Posts: 876 ✭✭✭Lord Glentoran


    Isambard wrote: »
    well of course there was no competition when lines were built, but nowadays people like the immediacy of their cars which means for a service to succeed there needs to be as intensive a service as possible.
    It's no longer a case of people planning their journeys around the train times, they want transport when they want it and if there isn't a convenient train, they'll go another way. Of course adding more trains dilutes the passenger numbers and increases the costs, and there's a huge gulf there that is probably not fillable in most of Ireland.
    I wonder how Bus Eireann does on it's services that aren't supposed to be subsidised? To add a rail service (from the same Company)when there's a parallel bus route seems crazy to me .

    So just cars, and buses as a fill-in for the majority of the country then. Yee-hah.


  • Registered Users Posts: 5,796 ✭✭✭Isambard


    So just cars, and buses as a fill-in for the majority of the country then. Yee-hah.
    what choice is there? If you built 6 lines tomorrow you still would only be covering a tiny proportion of the population, most of the rest of whom you could never serve with a train or indeed a bus. What is the point of running buses and trains on parallel routes when much of rural Ireland has neither?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 876 ✭✭✭Lord Glentoran


    Isambard wrote: »
    what choice is there? If you built 6 lines tomorrow you still would only be covering a tiny proportion of the population, most of the rest of whom you could never serve with a train or indeed a bus. What is the point of running buses and trains on parallel routes when much of rural Ireland has neither?

    So no point in the railways existing then. Thanks for the clarification.


  • Registered Users Posts: 5,796 ✭✭✭Isambard


    So no point in the railways existing then. Thanks for the clarification.

    no point in parallel bus routes being put in in competition (if they don't exist) would be closer to my point.


  • Moderators, Science, Health & Environment Moderators Posts: 19,335 Mod ✭✭✭✭Sam Russell


    So no point in the railways existing then. Thanks for the clarification.

    Well, not a lot of point having railways in remote rural areas that have small populations.

    Lots of reason for having them feeding commuters into cities from outlying centres of population. This can be improved by feeder bus services and P&R facilities.

    Hence Dart expansion, Metrolink, Dart Underground, Quad tracking of the mainline feeding Dublin. Cork could do with more trains as well as Limerick.


  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users Posts: 12,363 ✭✭✭✭Del.Monte


    Well, not a lot of point having railways in remote rural areas that have small populations.

    Lots of reason for having them feeding commuters into cities from outlying centres of population. This can be improved by feeder bus services and P&R facilities.

    Hence Dart expansion, Metrolink, Dart Underground, Quad tracking of the mainline feeding Dublin. Cork could do with more trains as well as Limerick.

    Why bother - surely buses are cheaper and faster and will do for the great unwashed and FT pass holders who don't have cars.


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,665 ✭✭✭serfboard


    Del.Monte wrote: »
    Why bother - surely buses are cheaper and faster and will do for the great unwashed and FT pass holders who don't have cars.
    No you're wrong. It's far better to have trains rattling around the countryside carrying an amount of passengers that wouldn't even fill a minibus - while taking longer and costing more.


  • Registered Users Posts: 5,796 ✭✭✭Isambard


    If buses are faster and cheaper for a particular journey, why would you need a slower dearer train?


  • Registered Users Posts: 7,883 ✭✭✭Coillte_Bhoy


    Mikedexter wrote: »
    The cost overrun was on the rail lines

    Not sure where the money will come from to complete the project

    It certainly won't come from the so-called charity behind the project

    Who are you referring to?


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,282 ✭✭✭westtip


    Well the Tuam Herald did us all a service this week!


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 652 ✭✭✭Muckyboots


    http://www.sinnfein.ie/contents/518http://www.sinnfein.ie/contents/5187676
    There is enough Irony in this to fully Ferrous Oxide the tracks from Sligo to Athenry.


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,665 ✭✭✭serfboard


    Muckyboots wrote: »
    http://www.sinnfein.ie/contents/518http://www.sinnfein.ie/contents/5187676
    There is enough Irony in this to fully Ferrous Oxide the tracks from Sligo to Athenry.
    Jaysus that's feckin hilarious.

    You could imagine a German MEP (let's call him Helmut Fritz) looking at a map of Ireland and thinking - "Yes, there is no rail infrastructure there. There should be."

    Unfortunately, Herr Fritz is basing that analysis on the belief that Ireland is planned like Germany, where only people who work on the land live on the land, and everyone else is in a well-planned town or city.

    That is not Ireland. Here, we scatter the houses throughout the countryside like confetti, hence no critical mass in our towns, hence no demand for rail services from those towns.

    Bus and Rail Park 'n Rides on the peripheries of the cities are what's needed here. Not empty trains meandering around the countryside.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 652 ✭✭✭Muckyboots


    serfboard wrote: »
    Jaysus that's feckin hilarious.

    You could imagine a German MEP (let's call him Helmut Fritz) looking at a map of Ireland and thinking - "Yes, there is no rail infrastructure there. There should be."

    Unfortunately, Herr Fritz is basing that analysis on the belief that Ireland is planned like Germany, where only people who work on the land live on the land, and everyone else is in a well-planned town or city.

    That is not Ireland. Here, we scatter the houses throughout the countryside like confetti, hence no critical mass in our towns, hence no demand for rail services from those towns.

    Bus and Rail Park 'n Rides on the peripheries of the cities are what's needed here. Not empty trains meandering around the countryside.
    These reports go on to the Commission next. I'd expect big Phil & Co will but a thooth in it so as not to leave the Government exposed to a half billion white elephant & to the EU stumped to match it. Zee Germans will get to march through and cycle our fair and pleasant lands and leave their easily earned euros in towns and villages all along the inner West. WAW for the yanks in hired cars and guided coaches.


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,282 ✭✭✭westtip


    Muckyboots wrote: »
    These reports go on to the Commission next. I'd expect big Phil & Co will but a thooth in it so as not to leave the Government exposed to a half billion white elephant & to the EU stumped to match it. Zee Germans will get to march through and cycle our fair and pleasant lands and leave their easily earned euros in towns and villages all along the inner West. WAW for the yanks in hired cars and guided coaches.

    Clearly Matt Carthy did not let slip the following
    • 23,000 have signed an online petition asking for a greenway on this route.
    • 3,000 people marched on streets of Tuam asking for greenway
    • several more thousand have signed hard copy petitions for the greenway
    • Sligo county council have officially (no protesters or petitioners their Matt) applied for funding for a greenway on the Sligo section of the route
    • Galway county council have applied for funding for a study to look at the greenway on the route
    • Mayo County council (bless them) have received 300,000 euro use 12 km of the route for leisure purposes with a license for a Velo Rail until 2027 to us the route for leisure. This project is a bit of a hotchpotch but still it shows that even the diehard MCC WOT supporters don't see this becoming a railway.

    Matt....Did the SF/WOT high command ask you to keep quiet about all this! Perhaps a few press releases into the right email boxes in Europe might do that!


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    All the greenway groups along the route are actively now making submissions to the North West Regional Assembly after it was spotted that some WOT shenanigans were underway.

    50843214_10156937165928917_6994637584823484416_n.jpg?_nc_cat=105&_nc_ht=scontent-bru2-1.xx&oh=102438295c43f555c29121cf5fbe3cb4&oe=5CF2C8CF

    The submissions being made are as follows and are being submitted through the online submission form at https://www.nwra.ie/rses/
    I am making a submission in relation to the RSES draft report. It is clear that Objectives 115 (a) and 115 (b) of the draft plan need to be removed as they clearly contravene the National Development Plan. Both objectives 115 (a) and 115 (b) are presumptive of the outcome of the Western Rail Corridor Review of the closed railway line that is currently being undertaken by the DTTAS as part of the Ireland 2040 National Development Plan. It is not within the remit of the Regional Spatial Economic Strategies to assume the outcome of the rail review. Objectives 115 (a) and objective 115 (b) contradict the Ireland 2040 National Development Plan which only facilitates a review of the line from Athenry to Claremorris and does not include the line north of Claremorris. Until this review is completed no assumptions can be made about the closed railway line ever being re-opened and to make such a sweeping assumption and build it into a Regional Strategy would be contrary to the National Development Plan. I suggest that objectives 115 (a) and (b) be reworded so they do not contravene the National Development plan and instead include the following text;

    Revision of objectives 115 (a) and 115 (b): If the outcome of the Western Rail Corridor Review from Athenry to Claremorris indicates that the closed railway is unlikely to be re-opened before 2030, then the closed railway shall be considered for alternative uses, for example such as a greenway, until such time as a railway might be possible, in order to protect the route in public ownership. Such alternative usage of the closed railway route would be under a strict licensing arrangement with Irish Rail that if needed for railway in the future then railway will take precedence at that time.


  • Advertisement
  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    As for the rail review......

    50233417_10156922382828917_6226457047274094592_n.jpg?_nc_cat=111&_nc_ht=scontent-bru2-1.xx&oh=ed2a6ba447cc8fe23716f1ce2fa2b801&oe=5CF2E671


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,610 ✭✭✭eastwest


    DaCor wrote: »
    All the greenway groups along the route are actively now making submissions to the North West Regional Assembly after it was spotted that some WOT shenanigans were underway.

    50843214_10156937165928917_6994637584823484416_n.jpg?_nc_cat=105&_nc_ht=scontent-bru2-1.xx&oh=102438295c43f555c29121cf5fbe3cb4&oe=5CF2C8CF

    The submissions being made are as follows and are being submitted through the online submission form at https://www.nwra.ie/rses/
    I am making a submission in relation to the RSES draft report. It is clear that Objectives 115 (a) and 115 (b) of the draft plan need to be removed as they clearly contravene the National Development Plan. Both objectives 115 (a) and 115 (b) are presumptive of the outcome of the Western Rail Corridor Review of the closed railway line that is currently being undertaken by the DTTAS as part of the Ireland 2040 National Development Plan. It is not within the remit of the Regional Spatial Economic Strategies to assume the outcome of the rail review. Objectives 115 (a) and objective 115 (b) contradict the Ireland 2040 National Development Plan which only facilitates a review of the line from Athenry to Claremorris and does not include the line north of Claremorris. Until this review is completed no assumptions can be made about the closed railway line ever being re-opened and to make such a sweeping assumption and build it into a Regional Strategy would be contrary to the National Development Plan. I suggest that objectives 115 (a) and (b) be reworded so they do not contravene the National Development plan and instead include the following text;

    Revision of objectives 115 (a) and 115 (b): If the outcome of the Western Rail Corridor Review from Athenry to Claremorris indicates that the closed railway is unlikely to be re-opened before 2030, then the closed railway shall be considered for alternative uses, for example such as a greenway, until such time as a railway might be possible, in order to protect the route in public ownership. Such alternative usage of the closed railway route would be under a strict licensing arrangement with Irish Rail that if needed for railway in the future then railway will take precedence at that time.
    I'm surprised that an official body like the NWRA would propose a draft document like this with such an obvious anomaly. It smells of undue influence by the anti-greenway lobby, and it removes all credibility from the NWRA -- they are nothing more than another quango of expenses-gathering councillors with their thinking done for them by wot.


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,282 ✭✭✭westtip


    eastwest wrote: »
    I'm surprised that an official body like the NWRA would propose a draft document like this with such an obvious anomaly. It smells of undue influence by the anti-greenway lobby, and it removes all credibility from the NWRA -- they are nothing more than another quango of expenses-gathering councillors with their thinking done for them by wot.

    I don't believe the NWRA planners were fully aware of the facts, my understanding is that SF/WOT virtually told them at the pre-draft stage of the new regional plans, there was to be no mention of greenway or western rail trails in the initial first draft. From what I have heard the NWRA planners met and listened to the greenway advocates in the now closed public consultation period and seemed to take on the ideas as quite rational. I also understand an unprecedented number of submissions has been made on the greenway idea so at least it might be up for discussion. Mind you we have been at this a long time, and you never can tell what SF/WOT might do to make sure the members of the North West Regional Assembly don't even get the chance to debate the greenway, they have done this before now, they (SF/WOT) still consider the closed railway as "not up for discussion"


  • Moderators, Motoring & Transport Moderators Posts: 14,072 Mod ✭✭✭✭monument


    westtip wrote: »
    I don't believe the NWRA planners were fully aware of the facts, my understanding is that SF/WOT virtually told them at the pre-draft stage of the new regional plans, there was to be no mention of greenway or western rail trails in the initial first draft. From what I have heard the NWRA planners met and listened to the greenway advocates in the now closed public consultation period and seemed to take on the ideas as quite rational. I also understand an unprecedented number of submissions has been made on the greenway idea so at least it might be up for discussion. Mind you we have been at this a long time, and you never can tell what SF/WOT might do to make sure the members of the North West Regional Assembly don't even get the chance to debate the greenway, they have done this before now, they (SF/WOT) still consider the closed railway as "not up for discussion"

    Posters have been warned on this before -- cut out the SF/WOT nonsense.

    -- mod


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,282 ✭✭✭westtip


    eastwest wrote: »
    I'm surprised that an official body like the NWRA would propose a draft document like this with such an obvious anomaly. It smells of undue influence by the anti-greenway lobby, and it removes all credibility from the NWRA -- they are nothing more than another quango of expenses-gathering councillors with their thinking done for them by wot.

    Yep we might still come up against this nonsense - A member of Mayo coco and apparently on the NWRA by virtue of the fact he is on some committee of councillors called "The committee of the Regions", I know you couldn't make it up, I think it is a quango for European Expenses Cllr Murray who represents Sinn Fein who is also very Pro West on Track who said this in 2014.... it is the infamous "The Western Rail Corridor is not on the table and is not up for discussion" quote on national TV. He will do his best to stop the debate created by the hundreds of submissions the NWRA has received on this issue:

    Here is a reminder of how intolerant some politicians are of debate:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L7G_Zd47HRc


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,282 ✭✭✭westtip


    Sources suggest that the NWRA got just over a thousand submissions on the new Regional Planning Strategies, unofficial indications are that about 80% of all submissions called for the Western Rail Trail to happen on the closed railway from Athenry to Sligo. Submissions in support of the greenway came in from several of the TDs in Sligo and Galway, businesses, sports clubs and hundreds of members of the public - Mayo TDS were conspicuous in their silence. Several cllrs also made submissions and Sligo county council executive made a greenway supporting submission to counter any attempt by West on Track to try and stop the Sligo Greenway from happening, but you never can tell what might happen on that one.

    It would appear that the myth of all councils in the west now only supporting the railway option is just that ......a myth.

    The TDs who made submissions supporting the greenway were from FF and FG, it can be safely said that the only party that clearly has a one track mind re the railway is SF, although privately party members do support the plan to create tourism jobs with a greenway.

    There will now be a battle of political minds in the North West Regional Assembly to get the greenway written into the regional plans and to make sure the issue gets debated by members. What is clear though is that the Western Rail Corridor is most certainly up for discussion.


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,282 ✭✭✭westtip


    More pressure on politicians in Galway East that refuse to support the Greenway, and as for Mayo, dinosaurs still prevail.

    https://www.tuamherald.ie/news/roundup/articles/2019/02/20/4169634-greenway-group-form-company/


  • Registered Users Posts: 405 ✭✭McAlban


    westtip wrote: »
    More pressure on politicians in Galway East that refuse to support the Greenway, and as for Mayo, dinosaurs still prevail.

    https://www.tuamherald.ie/news/roundup/articles/2019/02/20/4169634-greenway-group-form-company/

    I wonder how much LEO money will be thrown at this company to support their "marketing" god knows the group could do with some better copywriters than the usual anti WOT/SF rubbish that's being put out lately. That said they would need an actual business plan to get that funding, it would be interesting to read to see where they think the business case is.


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,282 ✭✭✭westtip


    McAlban wrote: »
    I wonder how much LEO money will be thrown at this company to support their "marketing" god knows the group could do with some better copywriters than the usual anti WOT/SF rubbish that's being put out lately. That said they would need an actual business plan to get that funding, it would be interesting to read to see where they think the business case is.

    https://www.irishtimes.com/life-and-style/homes-and-property/interiors/postman-pad-village-post-office-with-a-history-gets-new-lease-of-life-1.3800220?mode=amp&fbclid=IwAR2Rph5IVjTHVZ5wPfNXinOhlWTQp1eNjpJY8IVaP7SLn8G1rePz_8OCKkg


    I think they might find the business case in Kilmactomas, Newport, etc suggest you read the "rubbish" article from the Irish Times about a property owner in Kilmactomas reinventing a family home for tourism, or look at the case study of the Great Western greenway and read every article written on how greenway-nomics transforms small communities, villages and towns. Duh...have you not glanced at all the public articles espousing the economic miracles that greenways bring! And you ask about the business case...Haha go look at every business in Tuam town centre with a sticker in the window saying they support the QMG!


    Alternatively, perhaps we could re-open the business case again for Athenry/Ennis and see if the business case blindfold can be pulled over the eyes of the independent consultants doing the rail review for Tuam - Claremorris.

    and as far as I know LEO won't be funding a not for profit community based company in Galway East, unlike some community based companies in Mayo that have had €300K thrown at them by their local chummy TD and Minister for the velo rail project - a project supported by the aforementioned group you refer to with a five letter synonym which I dare not type.

    Hey ho, keep taking the pills old chap, you cannot stop a Tsunami.


  • Advertisement
  • Registered Users Posts: 1,610 ✭✭✭eastwest


    McAlban wrote: »
    I wonder how much LEO money will be thrown at this company to support their "marketing" god knows the group could do with some better copywriters than the usual anti WOT/SF rubbish that's being put out lately. That said they would need an actual business plan to get that funding, it would be interesting to read to see where they think the business case is.

    Is that a typo. or do you mean 'Leader money'? As far as I know, the Tuam group is entirely voluntary and self-funded, so they don't qualify for funding from government.


Advertisement