Posts by Matthew Poole
Last ←Newer Page 1 2 3 4 5 Older→ First
-
Hard News: Competing for Auckland, in reply to
Cullen held up rail network investment last time Labour were in govt, for instance
But once he got the religion, he got it fully. Everything that's happening to the Auckland rail network currently is courtesy of Cullen (with grudging thanks to the Minister for Everything and the Minister for Pies for having not cancelled any of it).
-
Hard News: Competing for Auckland, in reply to
none of the alternatives explored in the CCFAS turned out to be viable.
You don't find it odd that none of the options to a problem were financially viable? Don't think that maybe there's something seriously broken about the models used? There were some really out-there choices considered for the initial scoping, including personal transport pods, so you can't accuse the CCFAS of being too narrow or flawed in its considerations.
The models are dud, it's that simple. NZTA itself has said that the models tend to overstate the benefits of road projects while understating the benefits of public transport projects. That's made perfectly clear when the best-scoring option for resolving a clear problem cannot doesn't even break even with conventional modelling.
-
Hard News: Competing for Auckland, in reply to
Milford is also pretty close to the busway, too; regular bus services that linked to it would make it easy to get to the city and back.
That’ll be happening as part of the reorganisation of bus routes that’s slated to be carried out over the next three years. The aim will be to reduce significantly the number of buses that travel through the ’burbs to get to town, instead turning them into feeder services for the Rapid Transit Network of the Northern Bus Way and the rail network. Will change public transport in Auckland beyond all recognition once it’s completed.
-
Hard News: Competing for Auckland, in reply to
Would anyone like to liberate the meat of the story from behind the NBR paywall?
The meat is thus:
Brown owns a 406sqm house on a 6,970sqm bush block on Tiffany Close, that he and his wife bought (undeveloped) for $180k in 1995. He even *gasp* has a swimming pool! And his property is just outside the current MUL; but is inside the proposed RUB, though NBR doesn’t mention that wee fact.Ergo he is a prize hypocrite for preaching density while not having traded in a property that he’s owned for nearly 20 years in order to live in an apartment.
The Dick quacked: "Len Brown lives on a country estate in a McMansion and wants the rest of us to live in rabbit hutches."
The article quotes Brash talking about how land inside the MUL works out at $8m/ha (based on a 500sqm section going for $400k) while “prime dairy land” is $50k/ha just across the border outside the MUL. Exploration of the value of dairy land inside the MUL wasn’t part of the article, of course.
-
OnPoint: MSD's Leaky Servers, in reply to
That error means that either the sites SSL certificate is invalid, or someone is man-in-the-middling your SSL traffic.
Or it means that the browser doesn't recognise the certificate authority that signed the cert, which is entirely possible. That it works with your browser doesn't mean anything if you aren't replicating Ian's exact CA chain.
-
OnPoint: MSD's Leaky Servers, in reply to
Surely if the agreement is collective all you should have to do is change the value of a pay-scale code? surely?
If not then the system will never work.Depends what else the collective agreement contains, and when it comes into effect. Also, what if a teacher is on parental or medical leave when the agreement comes into force but they don't get the increased pay until they return to teaching duties? Or they're a reliever who is working for different rates at different schools?
-
Hard News: You can Roughan but you just…, in reply to
My guess is that in 20 years time, cars will all be talking to eachother under the central control of artificial intelligence
You’re optimistic. We’ve been promised something like that for at least the last 20 years. It’ll be probably another decade before we start to even see such cars appearing on NZ roads (based on the current state of testing of true smart cars), and with our average vehicle age approaching 13 years it’s more like 30 years after first arrival before we see such technology in widespread use.
-
Hard News: You can Roughan but you just…, in reply to
Angus can speak for himself, but I presumed he actually meant west-south
Sayeth Angus: Sans-CRL there could be trains going West-East for much less investment than buying a tunnel. There could be trains running West-South today if the funds were cleared to do so.
So, no, he very definitely meant west-east in addition to west-south. He's dead right about west-south and I think it needs to be explored as a near-term measure - once we have transfer fares sorted and there's no penalty to change trains at Newmarket - to address the congestion at Britomart. West-east, though, is not a matter of spending money - no spending is needed to enable west-east switching at the Parnell yards - as both you and I have observed.
-
Hard News: You can Roughan but you just…, in reply to
Sans-CRL there could be trains going West-East for much less investment than buying a tunnel.
Actually, Angus, it’s a practical impossibility to run trains west-east without the CRL. The switching is already possible through the Parnell yards to have Western Line trains go out east (and vice-versa) instead of through Britomart, but since they’ve already spent nine minutes travelling from Newmarket to the waterfront why not just go to Britomart and turn around? No amount of investment short of the CRL will change that simple geographical fact, and the routing patterns would be so hideously complex that it’s just pointless.
Also, there will never be rail to the airport or to the North Shore without the CRL. It won’t happen, ever.Plus, I wasn’t aware that the benefit to you, personally, was the point of the exercise. I thought it was the benefit to the 10s-of-000s of people who work in the area that will suddenly become between 11 and 25 minutes closer to a travel mode that is immune to traffic jams (some of whom will stop contributing their personal vehicles to said traffic jams)? Or did I miss the bit where you were anointed Supreme Being of New Zealand?
-
Hard News: You can Roughan but you just…, in reply to
they either accounted for the operating cost of the second purchase of 26 trains or they didn’t. It turns out they didn’t.
Rodney, we don't budget in the OpEx for additional cars and trucks to make use of the new tarmac when we build or expand a motorway - and goodness knows we wouldn't build half those additional lanes if we did budget it in. How is it in the least bit logically consistent to expect that the OpEx of trains that are not required in order to make use of the Core Rail Link be included in the CRL's construction cost? The CRL will be useful with the initial order of EMUs, it doesn't need additional trains for its benefits to be realised. The costs of the Northern Bus Way don't (and never did) include the cost of additional buses, either in CapEx or OpEx.