Letter: Tram rip-off

The question of whether we should spend another £100 million, assuming that is sufficient, to produce a very shortened tramline or to quit when we are £440m down is becoming urgent (your report, 12 May).

Some time ago I pointed out that if prices of our public projects were similar to those in the rest of the world (making a particular comparison with Australian projects) the full original scheme should have cost no more that 105m. So spending more than that extra to get, if everything goes without hitch, a truncated version is poor value.

Perhaps politicians and contractors could explain why our government projects cost up to 13 times what they do in the rest of the world, something they sadly did not do after the parliament building fiasco or in relation to the Forth crossing.

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If, as I suspect, it is mainly due to government bureaucracy they could then try reducing it.

I have never heard a reasonable explanation of why trams, which are inherently less flexible than buses and in the case of double-deck buses, seat fewer people per square foot, are better at reducing congestion.

You don't have to dig up roads for buses.

Neil Craig

Woodlands Road

Glasgow

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