The HS2 Euston Action Group have a car crash in Parliament

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The HS2 Euston Action Group gave their evidence to the Hs2 Hybrid Bill Committee today – and what a car crash it was too! Presented by Camden’s new MP, Keir Starmer, backed by former MP Frank Dobson & local anti group member Robert Latham, it was halting, incoherent & completely failed to make the case they wanted to – the abandonment of Euston as an Hs2 terminus in favour of halting the line at Old Oak Common.

Starmer was awful. He didn’t seem to understand the case he was trying to make and had no idea about the cross London connectivity issues that are solved by having both Hs2 stations. Put simply, Old Oak Common serves East & West London & Euston serves North & South London.

The Committee looked less than impressed, especially Sir Peter Bottomley who clearly has a far better grasp of the issues than Starmer. Dobson wasn’t much better. His cavalier approach to facts & reliance on supposition didn’t score him any points. As for Latham, he made no impression at all. In contrast Sir Peter Bottomley was excellent. He pointed out that the projections were that only 2 out of 5 Hs2 passengers were expected to use Old Oak Common with the rest using Euston. In his evidence the QC representing Hs2, Timothy Mould gave a far more impressive and informed performance forensically demolishing the antis argument brick by brick – as if it were the former Doric Arch at Euston!

Have a look at the session here;

http://parliamentlive.tv/Event/Index/1a9f4ae3-c26d-4dda-979c-b62cc696f9c0

Once the transcript is out I’ll update this blog as Mould’s tour de force will be worth reading!

After the session was over, Starmer tweeted this;

Starmer

All I can say is – if that shambles was a ‘good’ session it’s not difficult to see why the anti hs2 campaign’s got nowhere in over 5 years!

To be fair to Starmer, he has been put in an impossible situation. The idea of scrapping the Euston Hs2 terminus is so obviously a non-starter I suspect even he knows it’s going to be impossible to sell. He’s been put in that position through no fault of his own but by a crazy cocktail of a Council that’s become hostage to a vociferous minority and the actions of the previous MP, not to mention a few rather upset Labour luvvies. Admittedly, the original Hs1-Hs2 link plans didn’t help as they weren’t well thought out (which is why Higgins dropped them) but that’s history.

Somehow, I can’t see the Hs2 petitioning Committee being persuaded by today’s efforts….

UPDATE.

The transcript of evidence has been published here

The London bombings 10th anniversary – a personal memory

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Ten years ago today I was sitting at home in North London, editing pictures from the previous day when London had celebrated winning the 2012 Olympics. I’d been at Eurostar’s Waterloo terminal where the company had thrown a party to await the announcement. As both Paris & London were in the running they couldn’t lose either way. It was a euphoric moment and the feelings of elation were still with me as I went through the pictures.

The moment it was announced that London had won the 2012 Olympic bid...

The moment it was announced that London had won the 2012 Olympic bid…

Then I got a call on the landline from a friend who said “have you heard the news, there’s been a power failure on the tube” I knew nothing about it so I turned on the TV to see what was going on. It soon dawned on me that something terrible was unfolding. I tried ringing my wife but there was no way I could reach her by mobile phone. The fact mobiles were useless made things even more unsettling. How quickly we had come to rely on them…

I soon made the decision to grab my camera kit, jump on my bicycle & cycle into the centre to cover the story. What I saw that day shocked, saddened & also inspired me. With no tubes or buses running, London was eerily quiet – apart from the noise of helicopters & sirens. Many people had left work as offices had closed. Quite a few of them had made their way to pubs to watch the TV news, find out what the hell was happening & figure out how they were going to get home. The mood was sombre, but it was also defiant. I cycled between many of the sites & finally joined a group of journo’s who were gathered by the police cordon near Aldgate where we waited for updates from a police spokesperson. She had little to tell us. I decided to & see how people were managing to get home so I headed over to Fenchurch St station where I found thousands of people patiently queuing, waiting for their turn to get on a train & go home. There was no panic, no crying – just a sombre, defiant mood. That defiance is my overwhelming memory of that day & the days that followed. 52 people had been killed, London was bloody, but it was unbowed. It would not allow itself to be beaten. I’d always been proud to call London my home. That tragic day made me prouder still. Today (like so many people, Londoners and others) I will be remembering the people we lost that day – and also the living – who had their lives changed in such awful ways.

Kings Cross station was surrounded by ambulances,fire engines & members of the emergency services.

Kings Cross station was surrounded by ambulances,fire engines & members of the emergency services.

With no tubes & buses running, people made their way home as best they could. Thousands of people waited patiently outside Fenchurch St station. There was no fuss or panic, despite the obvious concern that such a crowd of people made an easy target.

With no tubes & buses running, people made their way home as best they could. Thousands of people waited patiently outside Fenchurch St station. There was no fuss or panic, despite the obvious concern that such a crowd of people made an easy target.

My website contains a gallery of pictures from that euphoric & tragic 24 hours. You can find it here.

This is why the anti Hs2 campaign was doomed from the beginning…

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The anti Hs2 campaign has always tried to pretend more folks support it than really do. More often than not the media swallow their nonsense & talk about the ‘strong’ opposition to Hs2.

The daft thing is, it only takes a few minutes research for these ridiculous claims to be exposed – mostly by the anti Hs2 campaigners themselves! Here’s a great example. Step forward the ‘Mid Cheshire Against Hs2’ group. Regular readers will know about this bunch already, but for those not familiar with them, allow me to elucidate.

The Mid Cheshire group are one of only a handful of anti groups on the whole of the phase 2 route (both East to Leeds & West to Manchester). Famously, a few of them turned up at Sir David Higgins ‘Hs2 plus’ launch in Manchester where they pretended to be from the city. That’s because, embarrassingly for the anti Hs2 campaign – there’s not a single anti group in the whole of the city or larger Greater Manchester area of some 2.7 million souls! Here they are in all their ‘glory’..

DG173944. Anti Hs2 protest. Manchester. 17.3.14

Whilst they were there one of them was interviewed by the Manchester Evening News & made the laughable claim that the anti Hs2 campaign was bigger than the opposition to Margaret Thatcher’s poll tax. I kid you not! Here’s the MEN article.

Bigger than the poll tax eh? So, their annual meeting must have been packed to the rafters then…

Not according to the (barely legible) minutes of their AGM, which they’ve just published

Their minutes reveal that a grand total of 23 people attended. To put this in perspective, between 300-400,000 folks live in what’s loosely described as Mid-Cheshire. Bigger than the poll tax my arse…

Next time you hear certain sections of the media churn out the same lazy nonsense about ‘strong opposition’ to Hs2, feel free to point them in the direction of this blog.

UPDATE.

Not long after I published this blog and exposed the derisory turn out at the AGM, the minutes mysteriously disappeared from their website. Funny, that. None have ever appeared since. I wonder why?

Crazy anti hs2 campaigner of the week – No 7

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Despite strong competition, this weeks award goes to Camden resident Peter Jones (who Tweets as Hs2DeadDuck) for this superb bit of financial illiteracy & economic nimbyism.

dead duck

Quite how overcrowding & a lack of rail capacity can be solved by less public subsidy is a mystery. As for the idea that, rather then providing the means for increasing numbers of people to travel to & from work we should simply price them off the railways – it’s the sort of bonkers nonsense that the Taxpayers Alliance would be proud of! Come to think of it, the anti Hs2 campaign does increasingly resemble the TPA in that it’s anti public transport – having switched from just opposing Hs2 to being against Hs3 & any other modern rail investment.

Jones neatly ignores the fact that the reason most people travel at peak times is that they have to in order to get to work on time! They have no option. If they can’t get on a train then either they have to find another way to get to work, or find another job. Clearly, retired Camden Nimbys like Jones consider themselves first & foremost & damn the rest of the UK, its economy and its environment. It’s the classic ‘I’m alright Jack’ attitude.

Now, assuming the vast majority of folks wouldn’t be looking for lower paid jobs elsewhere, how will they get to work? By coach or car, obviously. Both of which are far more dangerous than rail travel – and far more polluting. There’s also the small matter of where they park in London.

So, in one fell swoop, Jones is proposing to get a few more people killed in the inevitable road accidents that would follow, further damage the environment with the pollution these vehicles will cause, cause gridlock on London’s roads – and see us have to build vast multi-storey car parks to accommodate the vehicles. No doubt many of them will have to be built in Camden as it’s outside the congestion charge zone!

There’s also the small matter of freight too. Without the paths for freight that Hs2 frees up on the WCML we’ll be seeing more HGVs on our motorways – and London’s roads. Of course, the problem won’t just be confined to London. Hs2 frees up commuter capacity at other major city stations like Birmingham, Leeds, Sheffield & Manchester.

It’s absolutely bonkers but it very neatly illustrates the illogical mindset & ‘I’m alright Jack’ attitude that permeates the anti Hs2 campaign. These people try and hide their Nimbyism with a green figleaf, pretending they’re ‘environmentalists’ when it’s clear from what they claim they’re anything but. There’s only one thing they care about. Themselves. 

UPDATE:

Jones is also a very good example of the abusive (& downright defamatory) nature & tactics of many of the anti Hs2 campaigners – as this tweet from last night shows.

dead duck 4

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Andy Burnham shows how politicians don’t understand social media

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A few commentators and I have observed over the years how politicians don’t understand social media. It seems that many of them think it’s a way to pontificate or score a few cheap points over your political opponents, nothing more. This is especially true of Twitter, where some of them put out all sorts of nonsense & forget that the electorate (many of whom are far better informed) have the right to reply and the unwary can end up getting their arse handed to them on a plate. When a politician decides to tweet, there’s normally no battle scarred Press Officer looking over their shoulder, ready to snatch the phone off them whilst shouting ‘Noooo…’!

The latest victim of this phenomenon is the man who fancies himself as the next Labour leader – Andy Burnham MP, who tweeted this earlier:

burnham 1

Such an uninformed cheap shot at both the Government and the rail industry wasn’t going to go unchallenged. Burnham had left an open goal & one of the first to reply was a rail industry & PR veteran, the ‘Fact Compiler’

FC burnahm

In truth, it was an incredibly stupid thing for Burnham to tweet. For a start, there wasn’t ‘total chaos’. I’ve been travelling today & used both the East coast & Midland main lines – including Cross Country services. Apart from some delays, there’s been few real problems. And, believe me, if anyone’s going to suffer from speed restrictions or ‘chaos’ – it’s Cross Country. Their franchise stretches from Cornwall to Scotland! I was at Derby & the latest train I saw indicated was 10 minutes. Nor have I seen ‘chaos’ mentioned in other TOCs Twitter feeds – or on Facebook. What this shows is neither understanding of the railways nor commonsense when it comes to public relations. Needless to say, many other Tweeters (including myself) joined in and Burnham was left looking an idiot. However, he didn’t learn & unabashed, added to his woes with this untruthful & cheap jibe..

burnham 2

Of course, his problem is the fact that trans-pennine electrification & line upgrade hasn’t been cancelled at all, it’s merely been postponed whilst a bigger & more comprehensive scheme is designed. Burnham should know this. If he doesn’t, he’s very questionable Labour leadership material. That said, I’m not too surprised. His leadership campaign manager is Shadow Transport Minister Michael Dugher – also well known for making an arse of himself on social media. (see previous blogs like this).

My concern is this. Is this really the best the Labour party have to offer as future leaders? Can you imagine the likes of Blair, Brown (or even Milliband) making such schoolboy errors? If Burnham (and Dugher) really are the future Labour leadership then I can see only one result in the 2020 election – and it ain’t a Labour win. Having your arse handed to you on a plate via Twitter is one thing, but by voters at a general election?

The anti Hs2 campaign have their green figleaf blown away by the Davies Commission

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Just as they were sobering up & realising last week’s furore over Network Rail wouldn’t stop Hs2 the anti campaign’s been dealt yet another blow by the Davies commission recommending building a third runway at Heathrow. This has exposed that for many hs2 antis, green issues were merely a figleaf to hide their nimbyism. After all, how can they oppose Hs2 on green grounds yet support building a 3.5km runway with all the associated pollution that will cause?

The truth is, many of those Chiltern Nimbys welcome Heathrow expansion. For them the airports only a short drive down the M40 in a ‘Chelsea tractor’ and they won’t have to put up with the noise, pollution & inconvenience.

So, can we expect the Hs2 anti’s to turn their fire on Heathrow, using the same ‘green’ arguments they trot out against Hs2 to condemn the environmental damage it will cause, or question why we need a 3rd runway if all the planes aren’t full? The immortal words of Jim Royle spring to mind…

The Hs2 debate shows why we should abolish the House of Lords

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Much excitement was generated amongst those of us who follow the HS2 debate by the spectacle late last year of the House of Lords Economic Affairs Committee investigating the economic case for HS2. Or not. After seeing the Chairman, Lord Hollick, simpering over Martin Tett of Buckinghamshire County Council and the failing 51m group of local authorities, expectations of objective and informed analysis rather faded.

Even on its own subject of Economics, the Committee seemed lacking. Lord Lawson of Blaby was deeply interested in different yield management practices on air and rail, but showed no clue that the cost structures of the two modes might drive them in different directions in this respect:

• For an airline, the marginal costs of flying compared with the fixed costs of being an airline are high, so you don’t fly unless you can fill your plane, and a regular interval service means having the same flight times two days in a row.

• By contrast, for a railway, the variable costs of running a train are low compared with the fixed costs of having a railway to run on, so it’s worth running a train so long as the extra fares match those small extra costs, and a regular interval service throughout the day is a key factor in generating income. That’s been common knowledge since the Brighton line electrification in 1932 – to everyone except ex-Chancellors of the Exchequer, apparently.

Lord Lawson (that’s Nigel Lawson, famous mainly for setting off the inflation of the late 1980s by shadowing the Deutschmark until, sadly too late, told not to by the Prime Minister) then confirmed the depth and subtlety of his knowledge by repeatedly suggesting that HS2 was only being proposed so that we could boast of having the fastest trains in Europe, an allegation that depends for supporting evidence on his own imagination. And possibly on the fact that he lives mainly in France these days.

This detachment from reality was reinforced by the constant refrain that pricing can spread peaks of demand to the point of not needing extra capacity – as if most of us have any choice when we travel to work. Unsurprisingly, given this naivety on the part of Their Lordships, the very real benefit of HS2 for the commuters who will inherit the West Coast Main Line was dismissed as if it was a disadvantage of the project, instead of a measure to address growth from locations such as Leighton Buzzard, Milton Keynes and Northampton on about the only route into London where significant new housing can be accommodated.

Thank heavens for Lord Deighton, giving evidence, who declared in respect of capacity that in his experience, the more people knew about capacity, the more convinced they were that there was a capacity problem on the WCML and beyond. Cue cries of “vested interests” from the opposition!

In attempting to minimise the regeneration benefits of infrastructure projects such as HS2, the committee were clearly influenced by the Institute of Economic Affairs, who have just broken cover with a report proposing the conversion of railways into roads – something that will probably not play well in the Chilterns as of course it was the Chiltern line that was proposed, and rejected, for such a conversion back in the 1980s. The IEA attempted to dismiss regeneration benefits on the basis that Doncaster is still depressed despite having a good train service to London, but neither the IEA nor the Committee had the wit to wonder what a town whose industries were based on building wooden railway carriages and steam locomotives to pull them would now be like without a good rail service to London.

If the Committee seemed ignorant of life and the economy North of Hampstead, this was rubbed in first by Richard Wellings of the IEA (yes, that IEA) who diagnosed the problems of the North as being due to “poor human capital” – that means “people” to anyone except a think-tank – then by Lord Carrington’s suggestion that HS2 would be building a station “in the wilds of Yorkshire”. He couldn’t name this alleged station, of course, but presumably meant Meadowhall – an established transport interchange adjacent to the M1, served by three railways, a tramway and numerous bus routes, and 10 minutes by frequent trains from Sheffield Midland station. Yorkshire, happily, still has wilder wilds than that!

At other times, having summoned a variety of busy people to entertain it, the Committee didn’t seem to know who it was actually talking to and why. Michele Dix of Transport for London was closely questioned about Network Rail’s plans for the rebuilding of Euston, in which TfL no doubt have an interest, but for which they have no responsibility. The issue had simply been in the news that morning, and the Committee just asked the first person they saw. Michele Dix also made clear that TfL regarded Crossrail 2 as essential full stop regardless of HS2, and that the link with HS2 Phase 1 was purely a matter of construction programming. Probably again prompted by the discredited IEA who are determined to add the costs of Crossrail 2 to those of HS2 (but not its benefits, of course), the Committee seemed determined to ignore her in favour of their preconception that HS2 made Crossrail 2 essential.

Then, when getting excited about the impact of fares on choice of route, the Committee didn’t realise that sitting in front of it were the very people who could enlighten them, in the form of representatives from Virgin Trains and London Midland. No-one actually thought to ask how the Birmingham business splits between Virgin’s fast expensive trains to Euston and London Midland’s slow cheap ones. The noble Lords instead speculated at length about demand on SouthEastern’s services from Kent, where choice of route depends at least as much on which terminus you can walk to work from as on speed and price.

Lord Carrington then excelled himself by suggesting that HS2 was “just a punt”. Well, welcome to the real world, where judgements have to be made about what people will do in the future, “people” and “the future” being about the least predictable things I can think of. But people with responsibilities, as opposed to Lords who enjoy the luxury of sitting back and pontificating, can’t use that as an excuse for doing nothing in the face of real problems such as HS2 addresses.

For a Committee that couldn’t cope with uncertainty about the future, though, its enthusiasm for the nascent driverless cars was a surprise. What relevance exactly do they think driverless cars have to long-distance rail demand? Do they really think that just because people wouldn’t have to steer down the M1, they are willingly going to suffer (and thus add to) the congestion on the Edgware Road from the M1 into central London? If driverless cars have any relevance at all, they sound to me like a rather good way of accessing railway stations – such as Meadowhall.

Perhaps the whole affair was typified by Lord May (an Australian, which would presumably upset Frank Dobson MP who likes to run down HS2’s Sir David Higgins on the basis of his nationality). This heavyweight (speciality – theoretical ecology) played to the Twitterati by declaring that he wouldn’t trust HS2 to mow his lawn. Not that he’d interviewed anyone from HS2 at that point, of course, but never let knowledge get in the way of a soundbite.

Not wishing to respond in a similar churlish vein, may I say that I would happily trust Lord May and his colleagues with mowing my lawn – but not with anything to do with economics.

‘Snail mail’? Damned right – and it’s getting worse.

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I try to avoid using Royal Mail nowadays. Not only has it got expensive but it’s also got much slower. Like most businesses I prefer sending invoices by email. But sometimes, there’s clients who still insist on doing things the old fashioned way. So, after a day catching up on paperwork I popped down to the postbox, secure in the knowledge that I’d beaten the 17:30 deadline for mail at my local postbox.

Only I hadn’t…

It was only when I’d posted my letters that I read the front of the postbox & realised the collection time had moved. To 9am – the next bloody day! Royal Mail have moved the goalposts (again) and lost me yet another day. Then they wonder why people like me are loathe to use them!

The rot set in a few years ago when I still lived in North London. In those days (probably only about 15 really) Dean, our local postie, used to deliver our mail around 8am. This meant that I had time to pick it up before I left for work and I could deal with it that day. Then RM changed the delivery times. Instead of it coming in the morning, it could come anytime after midday. That meant I lost a day as by the time I got home,it was too late to contact anyone vis a vis bills, or whatever. Then Dean was moved on to another walk & we suffered a series of posties who couldn’t find their own arse with both hands – never mind our letterbox. By this time I was often working from home & my morning routine would take in doing their job for them & dropping all the misdirected mail in at the right addresses.

Now the barstewards have lost me another day. Why? Because even if I’m at home & intercept the (late) afternoon post – I can’t even reply the same bloody day! My letter sits, festering in the damned post box until the next morning!

Damn you Royal Mail. In a world where service gets quicker – you just get slower.

The media froth factor gets worse..

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In the centre of the town I grew up in there was an ugly concrete fountain which was widely disliked except by the towns student fraternity who’d regularly fill it full of detergent. The suds & froth this generated would billow around the fountain until caught by the wind, when they would take off & be carried around the main street.

I’m reminded of this by the past few days media froth over Network Rails financial problems and Hs2, where some journalists have thrown fact & common sense to the wind in order to try & cobble together stories – and I do mean stories. The lazy journalists cliché lexicon has been dusted off and no description of the MPA analysis can be published without the word report being prefaced by ‘damning’..

Take this one for example, from the pen of Daniel Boffey, the Grauniad’s Policy Editor;

http://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2015/jun/28/rairail-projects-financial-crisis-impact-hs2-high-speed?CMP=share_btn_tw

“New fears arise that UK rail financial crisis will hit HS2”

Really? These fears are based on what exactly? Nothing, other than the fact the DfT has spent money on financial revenue modelling & demand modelling. Boffey simply spins this as a bad thing!

Boffey then drags in the fact Network Rail has paused the MML & trans-pennine electrification as further “Concerns over the economic viability of HS2”. How so? Network Rails decisions had nothing to do with long term economic viability & everything to do with with controlling project costs. They’re also nothing to do with Hs2 which isn’t funded by Network Rail. It’s comparing chalk with cheese. Plus, as I’ve described in this blog, there’s a world of difference between rebuilding Victorian infrastructure and building a new railway (just look at Crossrail)

To add to scaremongering, Boffey throws in the MPA reports. The problem is, he doesn’t appear to have read them & is simply rehashing stuff mentioned by the Graun’s Transport Correspondent, Gwyn Topham.

There’s another rather large problem. The reason the MPA haven’t changed Hs2s rating from Amber/Red to amber has nothing to do with economic viability or costs. What the report says is:

“Delivery Confidence Assessment (DCA)

The delivery confidence of the programme/project at this point is:

Amber/Red

For a project of this complexity and magnitude, at this stage of development, the assignment of a meaningful DCA is difficult. The assigned DCA reflects the challenges of the ambitious target to achieve Royal Assent, but also the significant risks that are outwith the direct control of the Project Team. The review team believe that if the external risks that cannot be fully mitigated by the project team were
excluded, the underlying DCA would be Amber”.

Click to access 2012-hs2-mpa.pdf

So, the report blows out of the water Boffeys scaremongering on DfT spend on Hs2 financial revenue modelling & demand modelling as it makes it clear this is prudence called for by the MPA!

The report also makes it clear that the MPAs concerns about Hs2 have nothing to do with the projects finances & everything to do with the Parliamentary timetable & external factors.

If anything, reading through the MPA report gives more, not less confidence in Hs2 delivering the project. It also exposes some of the ridiculous lies the anti hs2 mob have tried to get away with, remember their claim that it was ‘rumoured’ (ie, they made it up) the report said Hs2 would cost £150bn?

Sadly, rather than doing any decent analysis. Boffey has cobbled together & rehashed a few stories & unconnected events (NR’s problems & Hs2) to produce this load of tosh, aided & abetted by a well known Transport Journalist who should know better but who’s pursuing his own agenda (step forward London mayoral candidate Christian Wolmar).

So much for the days of investigative journalism. Now it seems Fleet St’s finest spend more time rehashing each others copy & quoting one another.

Lets be clear. The problems Network Rail have are nothing to do with Hs2, which is unaffected – and no amount of scaremongering & spin from Fleet St trying to tar Hs2 with the Network Rail brush can change that.

Porterbrook unveil the Class 144e Pacer refurbishment

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Yesterday the rail press and other interested parties gathered at the RVEL engineering works in Derby to see Porterbrook leasing unveil their prototype refurbished Pacer, the 144e. The timing couldn’t have been better as the previous day the Transport Minister had been forced to announce delays to some important rail electrification schemes.

Over the next weeks you’ll be able to read in-depth articles on the vehicles so I’m only going to give you a few basics here. First, I want to stress that this is a prototype. It’s showcasing what could be done to a Pacer (or any 150xxx series DMU), not necessarily what will be done. It’s a menu of options, which includes new seats, internal trim and a toilet module that makes the vehicle PRM-TSI compliant. Porterbrook have gone further and fitted 144012 with wifi, a vastly improved Passenger Information System (PIS) and a TV screen that shows either adverts of passenger information. They’ve also fitted a rather clever inbuilt ramp to assist with wheelchair access. The vehicles centre of gravity has been lowered by the removal of a large water tank (the new toilet requires far less water) and the luggage racks, so you should expect a better ride.

When you have a look at the pictures you’ll see it’s unrecognisable as a pacer. My RAIL colleague Richard Clinnick described it as looking like an Electrostar on the inside.

There’s one other important thing about the 144e – it would cost around a third of the price of a new DMU (& even less if you took some of the frills out). 144012 will enter service with Northern within the next month or so. When it does, why not check it out for yourself?

144012 sports a new livery. It also sports a new dot-matrix destination screen and a forward facing camera in the left-hand windscreen.

144012 sports a new livery. It also sports a new dot-matrix destination screen and a forward facing camera in the left-hand windscreen.

The interior seen from the two wheelchair spaces.

The interior seen from the two wheelchair spaces.

The toilet module is more Star Wars than BR built Pacer!

The toilet module is more Star Wars than BR built Pacer!

New flooring & less clutter will make it easier to keep the vehicles clean

New flooring & less clutter will make it easier to keep the vehicles clean

You can see a full range of pictures on my Zenfolio website here.