(13/01/2021 13:50)Raawwwrrr! Wrote: [ -> ]The Mid-Cheshire line is unable to go to half-hourly. I can’t remember the exact reason off the top of my head but Network Rail have decided that a 2tph for the full day operations is impossible without improvements taking place to the route.
The original excuse was they wanted no more services in and out of Manchester following problems created in May 2018 but that didn't mean the Mid-Cheshire couldn't get additional services if other services got reduced or re-routed or if there were infrastructure changes.
There was a proposal for a Chester to Altrincham service as an interim alternative but Network Rail objected to that on the basis that some farm level crossings needed upgrades (which I understand has since happened) and there had concerns about traffic at Mickle Trafford, even though a service 30 minutes after the existing Mid-Cheshire service wouldn't have conflicts and a conflict with the existing Mid-Cheshire and the Leeds-Chester services are more likely if there's late running.
Anyway the point is the demand for 2tph was there in normal times, so why Northern have decided they can provide 1/4 of what was specified as being required is being bizarre. If it was a route which only got 1 train an hour and had very few passengers even normally then it would make sense but that isn't the case.
Quote:The reason why those lines are dropped is that they are the rural lines where in general there are higher levels of income from jobs that most people will be working from home doing (offfice based) and car ownership is also generally higher.
Have you ever seen the Longridge part of Knutsford, Lostock Gralam, Northwich or Greenbank? They are just as much working class areas as Wythenshawe. Much less posh than some areas retaining a more frequent service like Marple, Prestbury, Alderley Edge etc.
One of the problems with that generalisation is it overlooks the fact Knutsford has very few buses, so even though it's only a small market town it gets as much rail usage as some of the densely populated areas just outside Manchester.
Quote:Schools being closed also will not help the situation either.
Schools aren't closed. They remain open for certain children e.g. those who have parents in certain occupations, those with special needs and those without access to facilities for learning from home. They are also generally taking a lot more pupils than under the first lockdown with some schools saying they urgently need the government to reduce the number of pupils allowed to attend as they aren't going to be able to cope if COVID causes staffing shortages. In Cheshire the majority of schoolchildren who live within 2 miles of a station and attend a school near a station on the same line travel to school by train, unlike in Greater Manchester where there are still a high number of designated school buses.
Under the first lockdown Knutsford Academy decided their 188 service could be suspended as no-one needed it, this time it's running and getting quite a few schoolchildren using it.
Quote:It’s not that Northern have simple decided to become ‘anti-Manchester’ there are service cuts across the entire network as ordered by the DfT and Manchester happens to be one of the largest areas that northern operate, with some of the highest frequencies
The routes which didn't return to their full service at the December 20 timetable change are mainly Manchester routes because according to Northern it is the area where COVID has caused the most challenges to their driver training programme.
As you know from what you said earlier in your own post some of the Manchester services have a very high frequency of a whole 1 train per hour and Northern are even cutting those back further. It's nothing to do with how high the frequency is or isn't.