Compared to rail, water is a less pressing issue.
They are both pressing issues, which is why Jeremy Corbyn was right in his intention to renationalise both regardless of the cost. Worldwide rail is state owned, long proven to be the only way a country can have rail. Even those arch privateers the Americans have admitted defeat and have Amtrak, their own form of state run rail. And only a mad person like Thatcher would put water, one of the three fundamentals of life, into foreign hands.
Water had for too long been far too cheap, so we as a country have been wasting it. Within only a generation ago we used to have weekly baths, now many are showering daily, even two or even three times a day in some instances. We now have cars which we obsessively wash far more often than necessary. We've covered the country with golf courses using vast quantities of water to keep their greens pristine, so our rivers and reservoirs run dry.
The answer is very simple, take water back into public ownership and make it very much more expensive to stop the public's waste and cut the leakage waste by then having the money for the repairs.
As Ken Livingstone so successfully showed in London, big apparently insoluble problems require radical answers like the above one, and the courage to apply them.
Rail needs the opposite radical answer, take it back into public ownership, then apply Ken's logic and make it very cheap to use and frequent, while making car use very much more expensive by such as mileage charging to subsidise those rail fares. An added benefit of this radical change in policy would be making our green targets for air pollution much easier to reach.
The Spanish have done this. Their old, slow, creaky rail was in the doldrums and dying, so seemingly illogically they used huge sums to build high speed rail lines affordable to travel on. Now those new fast trains are popular and well used by the public, transforming rail's image in that country.
There's a hint for the UK in that. Instead of moaning about HS2 cost and cutting back on it., just go ahead flat out with HS2, HS3 and HS4. Then make them cheap to use and introduce annual car mileage charges and tolls for private cars on motorways to pay for those trains. London's hugely successful policies applied nationally.
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