Workingman wrote:I am against HS2 because it does not benefit the Midlands or North or Scotland, it mainly benefits London. If the same money was spent linking Liverpool, Manchester, Sheffield, Leeds and Birmingham it would be money well spent.
In modern times there is no reason for companies to have their HQs in London... except for the address and phone number. M&S is a Leeds Co, why is its HQ in London? The same applies to many other companies.
It would be money wasted because it would not have the links to the high population centres and so would be totally underused.
26 million people live in London and the southern counties. That is almost half of England. Now if you look at the money spent, it's not half. These are tax payers and relatively high tax payers too. What would you do? Deny them the benefit of the taxes they pay?
The solution, as always, is to create the opportunity and then encourage people to go there. With current rail links, you can be in Brussels from Kings Cross about 20 minutes after you would have arrived in Manchester. Ditto Paris. Add to the fact that UK rail prices are going through the roof and you can just about live in Paris and work in London instead of the North of England.
If we want investment and people in the North, then we need transport links commensurate with that wish. HS2 would have brought a high speed link out of London to a west coast rail and air hub. It will then cost a slight fraction of the cost of another rail link out of London to hub to the Midlands and North from Birmingham. Granted I'd rather see a HS3 up the East Coast main line but, let's face it, Birmingham and Manchester are main cities with international air hubs. If we are going to make high speed links then we need to make them where the people are travelling to.
If you think about it, HS2 could easily replace Heathrow runway 4 or a fifth London airport. HS2 would be almost as fast from Birmingham to London as the Arlanda Express is from Stockholm Arlanda Airport to the city. That is a massive opportunity. Not taking it is tantamount to saying you don't want to expand outside of the south and London.
I recall when the 125's started running on the east coast lines. There was a big buzz, Newark was 55 minutes from Kings Cross, it was almost commutable, people would move out of the south and start living in the midlands...
Roll forward 30 years and. Newark is 1h5 minutes from London on the "225". The service is so expensive nobody would consider commuting on it. Cities on the way up that line remain what they were, small, provincial and lacking in the kind of services offered in the cities in the south. HS2 is not just an expensive project. It's vital to get people out of the south and distributed more evenly around the country.
Opportunities lost.
All it takes is a bit of lateral thinking.