Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Privatization

From a report made by a rail construction company in the UK:

The move to privatisation resulted in a massive loss of skill and expertise at all levels in the rail industry. In many cases, the people who were lost were the people who set the standards that form the basis of what is in place today. When these people moved on they took with them the
corporate memory which formed the decision making criteria of what was done and why. The corporate memory issue is further compounded by the disaggregation brought about by privatisation with no one body holding all the information.

So much for the idea that privatization always makes things more efficient. And this coming from a company that almost certainly benefited significantly from it. For more on this, see The Navigators, a movie about the impact of privatization on railway workers.

Tuesday, May 5, 2009

A pleasant surprise from the MBTA

By far the most ill-conceived transportation project in Boston was Phase 3 of the Silver Line, a proposal to link Phase 1 (a silver-painted bus down Washington St) to Phase 2 (the bus tunnel from South Station to the waterfront), for no particular reason that was obvious to anyone other than that these two completely unrelated projects were called "Silver Line". Building a bus tunnel would have cost over a billion dollars required tearing up part of the Boston Common and demolishing an out of service Green Line tunnel that coincidentally goes to the same general place, and has the advantages of being a train tunnel and already being there. And nobody ever made a very convincing case that there would be any significant ridership from Dudley to the South Boston Waterfront (as opposed to, say, Park Street). Well, there's some good news.


The MBTA and the state government have officially endorsed a different extension of the Silver Line, a much cheaper and more useful proposal to extend the Washington St. Silver Line to a surface terminal at South Station and convert the #28 bus into another Silver Line-branded bus rapid transit line. While still not ideal (doing both routes as Green Line branches would have been better), this project is at least both useful and within the means of the MBTA to actually build, and is a huge step in the right direction for the MBTA planning process. Now all they have to do is admit that light rail is in fact sometimes better than a bus :)