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4:10pm Friday 17th February 2012 in Hampshire Business
By Keith Hamilton, Shipping & Heritage Reporter
Southampton-based Cunard has categorically denied new reports that the company is to operate transatlantic voyages from the Mersey.
Cunard, which operates Queen Mary 2, Queen Elizabeth and Queen Victoria from Southampton, is angry over what it says is totally false information.
In a terse statement the company said: “Cunard Line would like to clarify that they have no plans for transatlantic voyages from Liverpool to New York in 2012, 2013 or in the future.
“Cunard will continue to operate its successful transatlantic voyages from its home port of Southampton.’’
Many believe the reports are just another element of Liverpool’s campaign to persuade the Government that the northern port should be allowed to become a “turn-around’’ base for cruise ships.
It is now also being claimed in Liverpool this long-standing row has been “resolved’’, opening the way for cruise ships to operate from the city.
In fact the Government has made no decision and the EU, which supplied part of the public funding, is also taking a close look at Liverpool’s plans.
The long running wrangle centres around Liverpool’s attempts to use a multi-million pound handout of public money to develop and expand dockside facilities.
Southampton and other UK docks, which rely purely on private investment, are demanding Liverpool pay back all of the public funding so competition between the ports is on a “level playing field’’.
Comments(53)
Dasal
says...
4:37pm Fri 17 Feb 12
southy
says...
5:09pm Fri 17 Feb 12
arizonan
says...
5:34pm Fri 17 Feb 12
arizonan
says...
5:43pm Fri 17 Feb 12
MerseyMart
says...
6:59pm Fri 17 Feb 12
phil maccavity
says...
8:01pm Fri 17 Feb 12
MerseyMart
says...
8:47pm Fri 17 Feb 12
loosehead
says...
9:31pm Fri 17 Feb 12
MerseyMart wrote:Do you not think people coming on here boasting about the return of transatlantic sailings from Liverpool,your council leader saying it & your press supposedly saying it (according to posts on here) this could actually backfire on you?
I actually listened to that Radio Merseyside interview Phil and go along with the 'ifs, buts and maybes' interpretation. However, the 'ifs, buts and maybes' are at odds with the statement by Keith Hamilton (quoting no sources) that Cunard have 'categorically denied' that they will run transatlantic services from Liverpool.
Peter Elson (sic) quotes two sources - Peter Shanks - Cunard Line President and David Dingle - Chief Executive of Carnival Line UK so it is a bit more than just idle speculation.
As for the Liverpool Echo 'pulling the story' well, I copied the article from the LiverpoolNews site today so it is clearly available.
The planning application for the temporary facility on Princes Dock has just gone in. It is right by the landing stage and might I remind you that Heathrow Airport started off with a row of tents along the Bath Road.
ronn12
says...
10:06pm Fri 17 Feb 12
ronn12
says...
10:12pm Fri 17 Feb 12
loosehead
says...
8:07am Sat 18 Feb 12
ronn12 wrote:You like blowing your own trumpet don't you?
Oh another thing I would like to mention, I recently seen a artical in this paper regarding your failed attempts to celebrate the titanic , well you should see Liverpools plans, world class it will be telivised around the world .... Leave Liverpool to celebrate the 100 years of titanic Southampton will you please ha because you haven't got a clue what you are doing !!!!!
phil maccavity
says...
10:55am Sat 18 Feb 12
ronn12 wrote:Ronn
Liverpool has been granted turnaround status , whether the people from Southampton like it or not , get over it and concentrate on improving your town centre , because there is no attractions what so ever , I am from Liverpool and have been to Southampton and believe me when I say this there is no comparison , Liverpool blows Southampton right out of the water in regards to what it has to offer to a tourist , the ships are increasing each year to Liverpool from demand , in regards to Cunard sticking with southampton well personally I think is a load of rubbish , cunard is a business looking to make money , and lots more of it and it would be daft to not to use Liverpool . Liverpool will increase and open up a new market in the north of the uk , and in regards to the recent comment regarding tempary baggage facility at Liverpool well that is correct , tempary it is . Wait until you see the new plans .
phil maccavity
says...
11:54am Sat 18 Feb 12
X Old Bill
says...
12:15pm Sat 18 Feb 12
Condor Man
says...
2:48pm Sat 18 Feb 12
Fatty x Ford Worker wrote:Ken Dodd? that tax dodger who got out of a jail sentence due to a dodgy ticker? well enough now to perform on stage.
Bring back Ken Dodd and the Diddy men from Knotty Ash!
arizonan
says...
2:50pm Sat 18 Feb 12
phil maccavity wrote:A sad reflection on the decline of the UK if that many people have to leave a major city.
btw it appears that the rebuttal from Cunard may well have been picked up initially by a lady journo, Lauren Riley, who works for a Liverpool on- line newspaper 'Click Liverpool'.
Talking to people in the trade there appears no way a big ship (especially a Cunarder) will be happy processing passengers and baggage through a tent.
Apparently Southampton spent £30m on its new terminal. With a grant of £5m+ to pay back and a further investment on a 'proper' terminal where is the money coming from to finance this on the Mersey , from 'occasional calls' at a time when Liverpool CC are announcing £50m of budgetary cuts this year, and beyond, and the grant money tree has dried up?
Also the Peel Ports, Liverpool Waters , scheme is, by their own admission 20-30 years away.
Perhaps the 200,000 or so people, like at least one regular poster on here, who have moved out of Liverpool is the past 40 years or so might like to dobb in £150 to repay the grant and provide proper terminal facilities. Problem solved.
ronn12
says...
6:08pm Sat 18 Feb 12
phil maccavity wrote:Wrong ! Peel have announced building their new terminal within 4 years in the first phase along with shangi tower skyscraper and offices and apartments !!!
ronn12 wrote:Ronn
Liverpool has been granted turnaround status , whether the people from Southampton like it or not , get over it and concentrate on improving your town centre , because there is no attractions what so ever , I am from Liverpool and have been to Southampton and believe me when I say this there is no comparison , Liverpool blows Southampton right out of the water in regards to what it has to offer to a tourist , the ships are increasing each year to Liverpool from demand , in regards to Cunard sticking with southampton well personally I think is a load of rubbish , cunard is a business looking to make money , and lots more of it and it would be daft to not to use Liverpool . Liverpool will increase and open up a new market in the north of the uk , and in regards to the recent comment regarding tempary baggage facility at Liverpool well that is correct , tempary it is . Wait until you see the new plans .
I am sure Liverpool will get turnround status but it is not a done deal as yet
The Independent inspector has yet to report back on the amount of grant money LCC have to repay.
Also the Govt may well not favour the LCC offer of 'we will pay the money back out of revenue'!!
And there still remains the possibility of the EU looking to recoup some part of their Grant money
So it could take some time to resolve completely.
Meanwhile LCC are providing a tent on the new quayside for the passengers to embark through.
Apparently this will only be there for part of the year due to prevailing weather conditions on the Mersey.
I agree that Liverpool is far more of an attractive proposition than Soton as a visitor attraction.
This may not have been the case though 20 years ago when, despite many grand old buildings, Liverpool was rather rundown in parts
Since then Merseyside has received £2 billion in State aid to make it a vibrant and interesting city centre
Just a small proportion of this would have paid for the rejuvenation of Southampton
Finally you say that the cruise ships into Liverpool are increasing.
Interestingly the original PR campaign,. when the grant money was first allocated, called for 25 calling cruises by 2009 and a doubling by 2012.
The cruise call figures have never been above the 16 mark (!!) but it is interesting the PR blurb from Liverpool will state more than this as they count in visiting Royal Naval ships which normally are accomodated FOC
phil maccavity
says...
8:55pm Sat 18 Feb 12
loosehead
says...
9:11pm Sat 18 Feb 12
MerseyMart
says...
11:54pm Sat 18 Feb 12
ronn12
says...
1:44am Sun 19 Feb 12
loosehead
says...
7:24am Sun 19 Feb 12
ronn12 wrote:Ronn all your comments seem to be from a bitter person I read what Merseymart & Tom say & I can see they can see both sides of the argument but then I read your posts what a difference?
Southampton just can't get over liverpool can it !!!!
Your paper , mp, people are obsessed and won't let it be .
You will never have what liverpool has got , your stupid backward uneducated remarks from the 80's which you are stuck in , Liverpool is a great city believe me , and in regards to handouts I think not? U have a cheek , look closer to home , London dominates this country in regards to public money and investment and the hard working people of the north are fed up with it, like Scotland who wants out of the uk now and I don't blame them . I think the people of the north should start to conplain about the muppets in the backward south
phil maccavity
says...
8:31am Sun 19 Feb 12
loosehead
says...
11:16am Sun 19 Feb 12
phil maccavity wrote:I hope the people who post on here from Liverpool read this & can accept it's not us being anti Liverpool & read the points you've made
The argument all comes down to this.
Liverpool was provided with grants for £17m specifically for a calling cruise facility. All other UK ports were basically Ok with this as it complemented rather than adversely affected their existing cruise business.
The money would not have been given if turnrounds had been mentioned AND LIVERPOOL COUNCIL KNEW THIS.
Within a very short time span LCC had approached the, then, Labour Govt (who had initially granted the UK cash) for permission to change the terms of the grant. This was rightly refused. They tried again under the Tory regime and got a provisional thumbs up which has been challenged by other UK cruise ports (led by Soton) none of whom have been able to use public money for their facilities and are crying foul.
Liverpool have offered to pay back part/all of the £7m grant but ONLY IF THE CRUISE SHIPS CALL.
Bearing in mind the original business case for the £17m calling cruise terminal hasd proved to be rather 'creative' to say the least, LCC are not really playing by the normal business rules
Oh and, of course, there is the attrempt to get Portsmouth as a 'major south coast cruise port' to support the initial application for a change of use. Interestingly they are now against the idea as it could potentially harm their own trade.
No one is against Liverpool having a nice, shiny cruise terminal but only if it is provided on the same risk based financial terms as applies elsewhere in the UK
southy
says...
12:53pm Sun 19 Feb 12
loosehead
says...
2:52pm Sun 19 Feb 12
southy wrote:Southy when are you going to Liverpool?
You lot do relise why White star/Cunard came to Southampton in the frist place, it was about cost of leaving Liverpool then having to sail into the Channel to visit a french port to pick up passengers, With that French port not recieving many passengers ships any longer, because its to easy to travel from one place to another, its no wonder that Cunard is or has thought about Liverpool again, it might be a no this time but it will come up again in the future.
southy
says...
3:02pm Sun 19 Feb 12
loosehead wrote:Loosehead I am a realist, it dont matter what city you love or where you live and you can spend all the money you like to try and keep firms here, but it will all ways boil down to one thing where would they make the biggest profit and lest amount of running cost, you can not force a company like Cunard, they will do what they want its about profit not the wellbeing of a city, they do not care what happens so long they make the biggest amount of profit margins.
southy wrote:Southy when are you going to Liverpool?
You lot do relise why White star/Cunard came to Southampton in the frist place, it was about cost of leaving Liverpool then having to sail into the Channel to visit a french port to pick up passengers, With that French port not recieving many passengers ships any longer, because its to easy to travel from one place to another, its no wonder that Cunard is or has thought about Liverpool again, it might be a no this time but it will come up again in the future.
You can't stand this city & most people would say go it's your time so why not go & write posts in Liverpools local paper & get them telling you to go!
You say that Southampton should be for Southampton people. You say we should go back to the heavy manufacturing base we had? When?
then you come out with pro Liverpool statements?
If the only way your TUSC can get votes is if we're all on the dole then give up & go
southy
says...
3:08pm Sun 19 Feb 12
MerseyMart
says...
9:21pm Sun 19 Feb 12
phil maccavity wrote:No Phil, the argument comes down to this. Liverpool has received public money certainly but that money has not given the port any advantage over Southampton, it has merely removed a disadvantage. Since when did liners at Soton have to tie up in mid-river and be served by tender vessels?
The argument all comes down to this. Liverpool was provided with grants for £17m specifically for a calling cruise facility. All other UK ports were basically Ok with this as it complemented rather than adversely affected their existing cruise business. The money would not have been given if turnrounds had been mentioned AND LIVERPOOL COUNCIL KNEW THIS. Within a very short time span LCC had approached the, then, Labour Govt (who had initially granted the UK cash) for permission to change the terms of the grant. This was rightly refused. They tried again under the Tory regime and got a provisional thumbs up which has been challenged by other UK cruise ports (led by Soton) none of whom have been able to use public money for their facilities and are crying foul. Liverpool have offered to pay back part/all of the £7m grant but ONLY IF THE CRUISE SHIPS CALL. Bearing in mind the original business case for the £17m calling cruise terminal hasd proved to be rather 'creative' to say the least, LCC are not really playing by the normal business rules Oh and, of course, there is the attrempt to get Portsmouth as a 'major south coast cruise port' to support the initial application for a change of use. Interestingly they are now against the idea as it could potentially harm their own trade. No one is against Liverpool having a nice, shiny cruise terminal but only if it is provided on the same risk based financial terms as applies elsewhere in the UK
loosehead
says...
9:42pm Sun 19 Feb 12
MerseyMart wrote:MerseyMart for one you know you applied for those grants for a visiting facility but had no intention what so ever to honour it as before you had applied you already had the appeal written out to change it's use.
phil maccavity wrote:No Phil, the argument comes down to this. Liverpool has received public money certainly but that money has not given the port any advantage over Southampton, it has merely removed a disadvantage. Since when did liners at Soton have to tie up in mid-river and be served by tender vessels?
The argument all comes down to this. Liverpool was provided with grants for £17m specifically for a calling cruise facility. All other UK ports were basically Ok with this as it complemented rather than adversely affected their existing cruise business. The money would not have been given if turnrounds had been mentioned AND LIVERPOOL COUNCIL KNEW THIS. Within a very short time span LCC had approached the, then, Labour Govt (who had initially granted the UK cash) for permission to change the terms of the grant. This was rightly refused. They tried again under the Tory regime and got a provisional thumbs up which has been challenged by other UK cruise ports (led by Soton) none of whom have been able to use public money for their facilities and are crying foul. Liverpool have offered to pay back part/all of the £7m grant but ONLY IF THE CRUISE SHIPS CALL. Bearing in mind the original business case for the £17m calling cruise terminal hasd proved to be rather 'creative' to say the least, LCC are not really playing by the normal business rules Oh and, of course, there is the attrempt to get Portsmouth as a 'major south coast cruise port' to support the initial application for a change of use. Interestingly they are now against the idea as it could potentially harm their own trade. No one is against Liverpool having a nice, shiny cruise terminal but only if it is provided on the same risk based financial terms as applies elsewhere in the UK
Had we been given a new terminal free of charge, then your claims would have some justification - but we don't have a new terminal at present and, as you have rightly pointed out, when we do get it it will most likely be a marquee - in the short term at least.
Are you really expecting us to believe that Liverpool signed up to an agreement that IN NO CIRCUMSTANCES would they apply for turnaround facilities? (In other words, they would have to build a completely new terminal should they want to develop turnarounds).
Repaying the grant money as and when cruise ships make use of the turnaround facilities makes total sense. If cruise companies don't want to use Liverpool for turnarounds, then the terms of the initial agreement would not have been compromised.
Also, the claim that Southampton has not been given public money for their facilities beggars belief. We have identified some £60m of public investment in road and rail infrastructure that has directly benefited the port of Southampton and enabled it to compete well into Liverpool's hinterland.
Surely the question you should be asking about Portsmouth is why they supported Liverpool - have they had similar experiences with Soton?
loosehead
says...
9:49pm Sun 19 Feb 12
southy wrote:Okay Husbands was a ship repairers hardly heavy industry.
Also do Fords, H and W, Vospers, Avo, Supermarine, Hovercraft, Husbands and thats just to name a few Heavy Industrys that was base here.
southy
says...
12:46pm Mon 20 Feb 12
loosehead wrote:They are all class as heavy Industry, all produce stuff on mass that was not for Domestic use.
southy wrote:Okay Husbands was a ship repairers hardly heavy industry.
Also do Fords, H and W, Vospers, Avo, Supermarine, Hovercraft, Husbands and thats just to name a few Heavy Industrys that was base here.
Supermarine built Spitfires not heavy industry.Fords assembles Transit vans production line not heavy industry.
or are you going to include BAT & Martini in your heavy industry?
these were light industry.
Vospers built & repaired ships but even when they had permission to expand the yard the chance of getting big bucks in the housing boom era( Labours) they jumped city to cheaper Royal Navy yards .
When was the last large Hovercraft built in Southampton?
Pirelli's was the only heavy industry I can think of that we lost & then Eastleigh lost so we will never get that back China's to cheap so why do you knock tourism?
southy
says...
1:03pm Mon 20 Feb 12
loosehead
says...
3:23pm Mon 20 Feb 12
southy wrote:Southy Steel mills are classified as Heavy industry the companies you have mentioned are light industry.
Tourism do not benefit ordinary working class people, tourism is very cheap labour wages, long hours, poor working conditions, these type of corporations many are only small corporations dont like employing local people because they will have to pay them the NWL, so they employ overseas workers so the wages are below the NWL, and the idea of off brinning overseas work force is to break the NWL and national agreement, I am one off those that would pass a law enforcing all companys to pay overseas work force the NWL, and to agree on the national agreement for them also.
Tourism might sound alot incoming revenue but compair that with industral industary it peanut money, The locals put a lot more money into a local economy than a tourist
loosehead
says...
3:33pm Mon 20 Feb 12
MerseyMart wrote:Merseymart in the beginning this was all started by a Liberal run Liverpool council,Portsmouth is a Liberal run council I guess the reason they backed this idea was down to that fact & by doing so they were hoping to keep control of Liverpool & win the seat in the general election.
phil maccavity wrote:No Phil, the argument comes down to this. Liverpool has received public money certainly but that money has not given the port any advantage over Southampton, it has merely removed a disadvantage. Since when did liners at Soton have to tie up in mid-river and be served by tender vessels?
The argument all comes down to this. Liverpool was provided with grants for £17m specifically for a calling cruise facility. All other UK ports were basically Ok with this as it complemented rather than adversely affected their existing cruise business. The money would not have been given if turnrounds had been mentioned AND LIVERPOOL COUNCIL KNEW THIS. Within a very short time span LCC had approached the, then, Labour Govt (who had initially granted the UK cash) for permission to change the terms of the grant. This was rightly refused. They tried again under the Tory regime and got a provisional thumbs up which has been challenged by other UK cruise ports (led by Soton) none of whom have been able to use public money for their facilities and are crying foul. Liverpool have offered to pay back part/all of the £7m grant but ONLY IF THE CRUISE SHIPS CALL. Bearing in mind the original business case for the £17m calling cruise terminal hasd proved to be rather 'creative' to say the least, LCC are not really playing by the normal business rules Oh and, of course, there is the attrempt to get Portsmouth as a 'major south coast cruise port' to support the initial application for a change of use. Interestingly they are now against the idea as it could potentially harm their own trade. No one is against Liverpool having a nice, shiny cruise terminal but only if it is provided on the same risk based financial terms as applies elsewhere in the UK
Had we been given a new terminal free of charge, then your claims would have some justification - but we don't have a new terminal at present and, as you have rightly pointed out, when we do get it it will most likely be a marquee - in the short term at least.
Are you really expecting us to believe that Liverpool signed up to an agreement that IN NO CIRCUMSTANCES would they apply for turnaround facilities? (In other words, they would have to build a completely new terminal should they want to develop turnarounds).
Repaying the grant money as and when cruise ships make use of the turnaround facilities makes total sense. If cruise companies don't want to use Liverpool for turnarounds, then the terms of the initial agreement would not have been compromised.
Also, the claim that Southampton has not been given public money for their facilities beggars belief. We have identified some £60m of public investment in road and rail infrastructure that has directly benefited the port of Southampton and enabled it to compete well into Liverpool's hinterland.
Surely the question you should be asking about Portsmouth is why they supported Liverpool - have they had similar experiences with Soton?
southy
says...
4:25pm Mon 20 Feb 12
loosehead wrote:steel mills are heavy industry is right, but they are not heavy industral industry,
southy wrote:Southy Steel mills are classified as Heavy industry the companies you have mentioned are light industry.
Tourism do not benefit ordinary working class people, tourism is very cheap labour wages, long hours, poor working conditions, these type of corporations many are only small corporations dont like employing local people because they will have to pay them the NWL, so they employ overseas workers so the wages are below the NWL, and the idea of off brinning overseas work force is to break the NWL and national agreement, I am one off those that would pass a law enforcing all companys to pay overseas work force the NWL, and to agree on the national agreement for them also.
Tourism might sound alot incoming revenue but compair that with industral industary it peanut money, The locals put a lot more money into a local economy than a tourist
Tourism is low wages? your living on cloud cuckoo land!
Have a look at job adverts, try going to a temp agency, These jobs are either £6 an hour or for shift work it's £7 an hour.
have a look at BMW,Honda & Toyota plants & see how many eastern europeans work there.
My sister works at the Grand Harbour she puts in a lot of hours but enjoys her job.
The problem is Southy to many people in this country want the money but don't want to work for it.
Tell some of the unemployed they would have to get up & work shifts for more than their dole money but not a lot more than there tax credits.They would tell you to forget it.
you really are in the land of fairies maybe you should go & live in the Land of the Diddy men?
phil maccavity
says...
8:15pm Mon 20 Feb 12
southy wrote:Southy
Tourism do not benefit ordinary working class people, tourism is very cheap labour wages, long hours, poor working conditions, these type of corporations many are only small corporations dont like employing local people because they will have to pay them the NWL, so they employ overseas workers so the wages are below the NWL, and the idea of off brinning overseas work force is to break the NWL and national agreement, I am one off those that would pass a law enforcing all companys to pay overseas work force the NWL, and to agree on the national agreement for them also.
Tourism might sound alot incoming revenue but compair that with industral industary it peanut money, The locals put a lot more money into a local economy than a tourist
MerseyMart
says...
8:22pm Mon 20 Feb 12
phil maccavity
says...
8:47pm Mon 20 Feb 12
MerseyMart wrote:re your comment about ..'when did liners in Soton have to tie up in mid river...?
phil maccavity wrote:No Phil, the argument comes down to this. Liverpool has received public money certainly but that money has not given the port any advantage over Southampton, it has merely removed a disadvantage. Since when did liners at Soton have to tie up in mid-river and be served by tender vessels?
The argument all comes down to this. Liverpool was provided with grants for £17m specifically for a calling cruise facility. All other UK ports were basically Ok with this as it complemented rather than adversely affected their existing cruise business. The money would not have been given if turnrounds had been mentioned AND LIVERPOOL COUNCIL KNEW THIS. Within a very short time span LCC had approached the, then, Labour Govt (who had initially granted the UK cash) for permission to change the terms of the grant. This was rightly refused. They tried again under the Tory regime and got a provisional thumbs up which has been challenged by other UK cruise ports (led by Soton) none of whom have been able to use public money for their facilities and are crying foul. Liverpool have offered to pay back part/all of the £7m grant but ONLY IF THE CRUISE SHIPS CALL. Bearing in mind the original business case for the £17m calling cruise terminal hasd proved to be rather 'creative' to say the least, LCC are not really playing by the normal business rules Oh and, of course, there is the attrempt to get Portsmouth as a 'major south coast cruise port' to support the initial application for a change of use. Interestingly they are now against the idea as it could potentially harm their own trade. No one is against Liverpool having a nice, shiny cruise terminal but only if it is provided on the same risk based financial terms as applies elsewhere in the UK
Had we been given a new terminal free of charge, then your claims would have some justification - but we don't have a new terminal at present and, as you have rightly pointed out, when we do get it it will most likely be a marquee - in the short term at least.
Are you really expecting us to believe that Liverpool signed up to an agreement that IN NO CIRCUMSTANCES would they apply for turnaround facilities? (In other words, they would have to build a completely new terminal should they want to develop turnarounds).
Repaying the grant money as and when cruise ships make use of the turnaround facilities makes total sense. If cruise companies don't want to use Liverpool for turnarounds, then the terms of the initial agreement would not have been compromised.
Also, the claim that Southampton has not been given public money for their facilities beggars belief. We have identified some £60m of public investment in road and rail infrastructure that has directly benefited the port of Southampton and enabled it to compete well into Liverpool's hinterland.
Surely the question you should be asking about Portsmouth is why they supported Liverpool - have they had similar experiences with Soton?
phil maccavity
says...
9:14pm Mon 20 Feb 12
MerseyMart wrote:Soton has 4 cruise terminals which cost between £40- £50m to provide
I know that we go round in circles with these arguments but one matter that has not really been discussed is the grounds for Southampton's objection to the landing stage at Liverpool.
Soton would have a case if it could prove that Liverpool had been given a commercial advantage by the investment of public money in its landing stage. If that were the case, then what is that advantage?
The whole thrust of Keith Hamilton's argument is that Liverpool has got for free what other ports, including Southampton have to pay for using private money. So what is the equivalent facility at Soton to the floating landing stage at Liverpool and how much did it cost?
southy
says...
2:07am Tue 21 Feb 12
phil maccavity wrote:Well they have some thing to offer, Southampton don't its been screwed up, and then again just across the way you got one of the major car manufaturers that employs more people than fords do has its own dock for car shipping, has a container port also thet the guys there are on better pay then here in Southampton, still has workable dry docks, they still have some ship building repairs but that looks like it dieing out now, same problem there as here, they can not dry dock any of these new large container or passenger ships.
southy wrote:Southy
Tourism do not benefit ordinary working class people, tourism is very cheap labour wages, long hours, poor working conditions, these type of corporations many are only small corporations dont like employing local people because they will have to pay them the NWL, so they employ overseas workers so the wages are below the NWL, and the idea of off brinning overseas work force is to break the NWL and national agreement, I am one off those that would pass a law enforcing all companys to pay overseas work force the NWL, and to agree on the national agreement for them also.
Tourism might sound alot incoming revenue but compair that with industral industary it peanut money, The locals put a lot more money into a local economy than a tourist
Your comments always me smile(generally with despair)
I guess you are not aware that the main thrust of Liverpool's argument for the £17m of grant aid for the cruise terminal was that it would increase tourism to the city.
They have used massive UK and EC grants to restructure their economy to focus on tourism and, to be fair, have been pretty successful at it.
Presumably TUSC in Liverpool don't share your view!!
southy
says...
2:11am Tue 21 Feb 12
loosehead
says...
7:34am Tue 21 Feb 12
southy wrote:At least 21 of those years we had a Labour/socialist council in the last 4 years we've had more built & jobs created than in those 21 years & even the new shopping malls we had built were signed sealed & delivered by the council before the 25 years your talking about & that was a Tory council & it's a Tory council now.
the trouble with the council we been having for the last 25 years don't have any vision for the future, they are trying to make Southampton a rich man play ground.
and if you seen these sort of areas any where around the world they look nice on tv and in the main tourise area, but got out side on the edges and you really see what it means with slums and poverity and all the problems that come with it.
Rollo56
says...
1:13pm Fri 24 Feb 12
loosehead
says...
4:02pm Fri 24 Feb 12
Rollo56 wrote:Rollo you've got it all wrong! Liverpool was once known as this countries second city but since the war the population has been going down.
"A sad reflection on the decline of the UK if that many people have to leave a major city."
They didn't have to and didn't want to, they were forced out by the Tories boundary changes bringing in Runcorn, Skelmersdale and Warrington. The same is happening now, large swathes of empty land in big cities yet the Tories want to alter 'Planning'????
Who's laughing now
says...
12:10pm Sat 3 Mar 12
phil maccavity wrote:Liverpool cruise liner terminal funding agreed
ronn12 wrote:Ronn
Liverpool has been granted turnaround status , whether the people from Southampton like it or not , get over it and concentrate on improving your town centre , because there is no attractions what so ever , I am from Liverpool and have been to Southampton and believe me when I say this there is no comparison , Liverpool blows Southampton right out of the water in regards to what it has to offer to a tourist , the ships are increasing each year to Liverpool from demand , in regards to Cunard sticking with southampton well personally I think is a load of rubbish , cunard is a business looking to make money , and lots more of it and it would be daft to not to use Liverpool . Liverpool will increase and open up a new market in the north of the uk , and in regards to the recent comment regarding tempary baggage facility at Liverpool well that is correct , tempary it is . Wait until you see the new plans .
I am sure Liverpool will get turnround status but it is not a done deal as yet
The Independent inspector has yet to report back on the amount of grant money LCC have to repay.
Also the Govt may well not favour the LCC offer of 'we will pay the money back out of revenue'!!
And there still remains the possibility of the EU looking to recoup some part of their Grant money
So it could take some time to resolve completely.
Meanwhile LCC are providing a tent on the new quayside for the passengers to embark through.
Apparently this will only be there for part of the year due to prevailing weather conditions on the Mersey.
I agree that Liverpool is far more of an attractive proposition than Soton as a visitor attraction.
This may not have been the case though 20 years ago when, despite many grand old buildings, Liverpool was rather rundown in parts
Since then Merseyside has received £2 billion in State aid to make it a vibrant and interesting city centre
Just a small proportion of this would have paid for the rejuvenation of Southampton
Finally you say that the cruise ships into Liverpool are increasing.
Interestingly the original PR campaign,. when the grant money was first allocated, called for 25 calling cruises by 2009 and a doubling by 2012.
The cruise call figures have never been above the 16 mark (!!) but it is interesting the PR blurb from Liverpool will state more than this as they count in visiting Royal Naval ships which normally are accomodated FOC
loosehead
says...
9:00pm Sat 3 Mar 12
Who's laughing now wrote:“the development of turnaround cruising will undoubtedly assist in taking the city one step further as a tourist destination?
phil maccavity wrote:Liverpool cruise liner terminal funding agreed
ronn12 wrote:Ronn
Liverpool has been granted turnaround status , whether the people from Southampton like it or not , get over it and concentrate on improving your town centre , because there is no attractions what so ever , I am from Liverpool and have been to Southampton and believe me when I say this there is no comparison , Liverpool blows Southampton right out of the water in regards to what it has to offer to a tourist , the ships are increasing each year to Liverpool from demand , in regards to Cunard sticking with southampton well personally I think is a load of rubbish , cunard is a business looking to make money , and lots more of it and it would be daft to not to use Liverpool . Liverpool will increase and open up a new market in the north of the uk , and in regards to the recent comment regarding tempary baggage facility at Liverpool well that is correct , tempary it is . Wait until you see the new plans .
I am sure Liverpool will get turnround status but it is not a done deal as yet
The Independent inspector has yet to report back on the amount of grant money LCC have to repay.
Also the Govt may well not favour the LCC offer of 'we will pay the money back out of revenue'!!
And there still remains the possibility of the EU looking to recoup some part of their Grant money
So it could take some time to resolve completely.
Meanwhile LCC are providing a tent on the new quayside for the passengers to embark through.
Apparently this will only be there for part of the year due to prevailing weather conditions on the Mersey.
I agree that Liverpool is far more of an attractive proposition than Soton as a visitor attraction.
This may not have been the case though 20 years ago when, despite many grand old buildings, Liverpool was rather rundown in parts
Since then Merseyside has received £2 billion in State aid to make it a vibrant and interesting city centre
Just a small proportion of this would have paid for the rejuvenation of Southampton
Finally you say that the cruise ships into Liverpool are increasing.
Interestingly the original PR campaign,. when the grant money was first allocated, called for 25 calling cruises by 2009 and a doubling by 2012.
The cruise call figures have never been above the 16 mark (!!) but it is interesting the PR blurb from Liverpool will state more than this as they count in visiting Royal Naval ships which normally are accomodated FOC
Mar 3 2012
LIVERPOOL council’s cruise liner terminal will cost around £500,000 to build but help bring in up to £20m a year.
Planners are expected to give approval to the bid later this month and work could begin on site in April. At yesterday’s cabinet meeting the green light was given to release the funding for the project.
To save costs and make sure the facilities last they will be temporary and will be taken down during the closed season of the winter months.
Derelict land at Princes Dock will be used for baggage-handling, customs checks, coach and bus parking.
It is understood the cost of improving roads which give access to the site will be around £300,000 with the terminal building or marquee and other works costing around £200,000.
But city leaders said the potential income to the city would be huge.
They have estimated that each cruise liner starting or ending its journey in Liverpool will see around £1m pumped into the city economy.
A report that went before cabinet yesterday stated that “the development of turnaround cruising will undoubtedly assist in taking the city one step further as a tourist destination with a particular view to the potential growth of fly-cruising from overseas as well as UK regional departures”.
It adds: “Given the city’s established international profile it is anticipated that in the medium term there is significant growth in this market.”
Council leader Cllr Joe Anderson said: “This is a huge moment for Liverpool and means for the first time in decades we have the prospect of liners starting and ending their voyages in the city.
“Cruising is big business because it means tourists who come here and spend money in the local economy.
“For far too long, holiday makers in the north west have had to travel to and from other ports to start their journeys, and this will return Liverpool to its rightful place as a major cruise port.”
Cabinet member for regeneration Cllr Malcolm Kennedy added: “We are grateful to the government for giving us a fair hearing on this matter and are getting everything in place so we can take advantage of turnaround as soon as this issue is resolved.”
The terminal will be in use for three years before a permanent structure is built.
The council is currently in the process of agreeing how much of the original £9.2m of European funding given towards the cost of the existing cruise terminal will have to be paid back. Some money must be reimbursed because it was built on the condition it would only be used for short stop-offs.
Read More http://www.liverpool
echo.co.uk/liverpool
-news/local-news/201
2/03/03/liverpool-cr
uise-liner-terminal-
funding-agreed-10025
2-30450277/#ixzz1o3T
22Bw7
Who's laughing now
says...
11:45am Sun 4 Mar 12
loosehead
says...
2:15pm Sun 4 Mar 12
Who's laughing now wrote:But you haven't paid up! The EU are looking very closely at this & if the government change the use of this facility are looking at taking their money back so Who's Laughing Now? it's not over by a long stretch of the imagination.
It wont be people from Manchester staying here though will it? People from as far as Scotland will be travelling here,for a day or two I'd imagine.Staying here will encourage many people to come back here though.Liverpool has about 100 miles of coastline,many great beaches and is an hours drive from Snowdonia National Park,the Peak District,the Yorkshire Dales and it's not far from the Lake District,do you think it's an industrial wasteland or something with nothing too see? At the end of the day,you lot cried,we paid up, your gripe has gone, we now have another string to our bow, move on.
Who's laughing now
says...
4:32pm Thu 8 Mar 12
Who's laughing now
says...
4:36pm Thu 8 Mar 12
loosehead
says...
4:43pm Thu 8 Mar 12
Who's laughing now wrote:All you need now are the Costa line ships
Here in the pre launch brochure they have eight cruises listed for next year on the Boudicca
* Norway in May
* Scandinavia and St Petersburg in May and July
* Palaces of Stockholm and St Petersburg in August
* Iberian capitals of Culture in May
* Spain, Gibraltar and Lisbon in August
* The Canaries in April
* Casablanca and The Canaries in July
http://www.cruise.co
.uk/images/Cruise//c
ruise_gallery/1/Pre-
Launch%20Offers%20Br
ochure_0.pdf
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