Witch
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- Robyn
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The powers that be are very fond of telling us how keen they are to provide every incentive for people to where possible use public transport for their daily commute. If that is really the case, how is the following possible:
We live 19 miles (by road) from my OH's place of work. For the past 6 years he has left the house each morning on foot, walked to the local station (a littkle over 2 miles away - we have no direct bus) got on the train, got off the train and changed to the underground for two stops. He reverses the process in the evening. For this relatively short journey he has been parting with a total of £245 per month. A short time ago and as a pretty much direct result of the inconvenience caused by the last lot of rail strikes, we bought him a car. Nothing grand, just a Citroen C3 diesel, 1.4 engine, hence cheap tax and insurance. 65 miles per gallon. We have carefully worked out the comparative costs, and we astonished to discover that evening including al the depreciation on the car, plus diesel, we are likely to be saving well in excess of £120 per month!
Now I ask you - is there REALLY any incentive for people to get out of their cars? Or have the ever increasing fuel taxes now put driving a car into roughly the same area as smoking - that the government has to be seen to be making a fuss about it, but on the quiet they really want as many people as possible to take it up as the income from it is tremendous?!
We live 19 miles (by road) from my OH's place of work. For the past 6 years he has left the house each morning on foot, walked to the local station (a littkle over 2 miles away - we have no direct bus) got on the train, got off the train and changed to the underground for two stops. He reverses the process in the evening. For this relatively short journey he has been parting with a total of £245 per month. A short time ago and as a pretty much direct result of the inconvenience caused by the last lot of rail strikes, we bought him a car. Nothing grand, just a Citroen C3 diesel, 1.4 engine, hence cheap tax and insurance. 65 miles per gallon. We have carefully worked out the comparative costs, and we astonished to discover that evening including al the depreciation on the car, plus diesel, we are likely to be saving well in excess of £120 per month!

The shootist was on the outside