I bet they go ahead with it anyway!
In london something like 80% of buiesnness and 70% of residents said no to the western zone, and yet red ken went ahead with it anyway!
I was delighted to hear the news.
The amount charged and area affected would have been increased if it got voted yes.
I feel very proud of my fellow Mancunians.
I am so really not going to get into an argument over this but I think it's a shame it didn't get through (easy fer me to say not living in Manc I know).
But this problem really does need a carrot and stick approach.
The carrot - improved public transport - will only work if:
1. It is used fully and
2. Buses are not stuck in traffic jams
So, how do you achieve that?
Well the only way is to get people out of their cars (the stick), especially in the rush hours - at least get the ones who don't have to use them (and there are plenty I can assure you - I was one once but I use public transport now mostly).
But we do love our cars and it does take something extraordinary to persuade the average punter leave it behind in the drive.
If you accept that time is money and that people queueing on roads is a waste of time then you could conclude that the space they are occupying on the road - holding everybody else up - is worth something. If it is worth something then you can put a value on it and you should be prepared to pay for it. This would encourage more people to use public transport and then bingo the essential road traffic moves more smoothly and the public transport becomes more viable.
OK so nobody wants to pay for something that is free so far but if the investment goes into public transport then there is some sort of payback. Just investing in public transport without encouraging people out of there cars will have some benefit but is unlikely to work in the grand scheme of things as. It is important to be careful to target the locations and times when the roadspace is most valuable i.e. on busy roads at the rush hour - otherwise it is unfair.
It is not perfect - as with all things in life - and there will be winners and losers but in theory it makes sense.
I must stress that I am not saying this about the Manchester scheme because I honestly don't know all the detail. So what I say above is generalised theory, which often is lost in the maelstrom of emotion surrounding the subject.
It is true that the benefits of the London scheme have dissipated over time but that I think that is due to there being up to now a growing economic situation ( people can and will pay whatever the charge). It'll be interesting to see if that changes over the next couple of years.
For anyone sharpening their pencil right now - I repeat I am NOT going to get into an argument on this I just wanted to put a statement of the theory behind it all.
I hope I have made sense.
.
Loads of people in Liverpool travel to Manchester
for work.
Liverpool isn't the same size therfore it's a smaller pond than Manchester.
If Manchester did vote Yes then many people would of been forced on one of the most overcrowed Train Connections in Europe.
So people would of have to of paid the Charge & after this just be living to pay the bills.
No Hoildays, No Clothes, No Pub even No money for Internet.
More people would of ended up on the Jobseeker's Allowance or debt or even Homeless.
It was a silly time to ask people if they wanted give money away when everyone is feeling it bad.
From a Scouser, well done Manchester.
Thing is with Road Tax/Road Fund Licence/Vehicle Excise Duty is that it no longer is anything to do with the roads as such but a tax on how high/low the emissions are on the vehicle in question....
I suspect it was changed due to the uproar by the public as the money wasn't being spent on road improvements....
As has been said......Just another tax....
if the council want it ,the next time there will be no referendum,it will just happen right after an election, while they have a few years grace,and the money`s in the bank.
So you pay Congestion charge NOW and there is an upgrade to the public transport system in the FUTURE.
And 21% of the voters actually believed this?????
Come on - no-one in their right mind believes that any govt will honour their 'promises'.
Apart from anything else - this lot of money grabbers will be out at the next election and the next lot of money grabbers will do their own thing, mostly evidenced by a policy of overturning all changes introduced my the last lot - and so it goes on, and on, and on.