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Opinionopinion

HS2 gravy train making high speed waves across the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

It’s never been easier to be in contact 24-7 and in 12 years all kinds of events can devastate the global economy. Knocking half an hour off a train ride from London to Birmingham is not quite in the same league.

Image from the HS2 promotional video

For a project which is not due to be up and running for another 12 years – and 2026 is probably an optimistic date –

In the last week or so we have learnt, through the accounts of HS2 Ltd, the taxpayer-funded firm set up to develop the project, that £300 million has already been spent in less than three years.

Firms already on the (high-speed) gravy train include engineering and design consultancy Arup (paid £68.6 million), engineering consultancy Atkins (£30.8 million), and KPMG (£2.3 million).

The princely sum of £14,400 was also paid as a patronage members fee to

Pollsters Ipsos Mori and consultancy Dialogue by Design were paid nearly £500,000 for research into regions blighted by the route, while £1.2 million was spent on outside public relations and parliamentary lobbying companies.

Almost £10 million has been paid to employment agencies for staff ...the list goes on.

A day or so later, we learn that Network Rail executive Simon Kirby has been hired as HS2’s chief executive of construction on a salary of £750,000 a year, five times more than David Cameron earns for running an entire country.

Mr Kirby’s pay package emerged as the Post disclosed that