bay transit wrote:The Gawler Line is undergoing a major,major upgrade for 7 months in preparation for the upgrade to electrification-this is the second stage for this line-surely you must understand that there is no other way to do it-this is commonsense.
These 50+ ex O-Bahn rigid and articulated buses have already been used on the Noarlunga line.Our service providers don't have 50 spare new buses with air-conditioning and are low floor lying idle to service rail upgrades-if you or the public don't like this set up you have the alternate of normal route service buses i.e. 224/228/500/502 or 502X,or the car.
Anyway this is all off topic as we are talking about Transfields Light-City Buses problems!
How about maintaining the line properly in the first place so that it did not deteriorate to the point where it had to be totally replaced?
While it might seem OT, it is just an example of the same sort of inability to manage a transport undertaking.
ie, it answers the question:
"Is the Transfield problem just an isolated case of a stuff up that can happen to anyone anywhere, or is it the symptom of a system where people simply do not know what they are doing?"
While I am not convinced one way or the other, the more examples I see, the more I am inclined to think that the Transfield problem is systemic, and unless the government moves to increase its operational and technical competence, then this is just a sign of things to come. ie the Transfield problem needs to be addressed by not only getting the contractor to do the work, but also for government to get the competence so that it can micromanage them if need be. (Note I am not saying that government should need to micromanage the
whole system, but have enough people with bus transit operational and technical skills to be able to target contractors' weak points when things turn pear shaped somewhere or other). Similarly, it needed people with the technical skills to say five or six years ago: "Start major maintainance of track and relays by sections at such and such points."