T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2045.1 | Tax the way to do it?. | YUPPY::MIDGLEYC | | Mon Mar 22 1993 19:25 | 13 |
| Re:-1
A lot of people have given up their company car, purely because
of the ever increasing tax on a so called perk??.
Surely if the goverment made the tax allowance more attractive
towards company cars, it must stimulate growth in the car industry.
Lets face it, in the not so distant future, all cars will be leased,
company and private??, with the exception of classics?.
Mind you I am glad to see that the list price of a car will now
count towards the tax allowance, instead of engine size. Roll on
april 94?.
Colin.
|
2045.2 | Seen as Perks ! | WELCLU::DREW | Not another marzipan mercenary ! | Mon Mar 22 1993 19:47 | 10 |
|
Keith,
Much as I agree with you ( that our cars are "tools of
the trade" ) they are PERCEIVED as perks by the joe public and thats
what counts. You drive a Astra GSi, I drive an RS Turbo...you try
to prove that these cars arent perks to the average Allegro
driver !!!!!!!
|
2045.3 | | VANGA::KERRELL | but that's not my real job | Tue Mar 23 1993 08:45 | 6 |
| re.1:
As to the government stimulating industry, they haven't bothered over the last
14 years, so why start now?
Dave.
|
2045.4 | Putting on my green hat, putting on my tie... | RDGENG::RUSLING | Dave Rusling REO2 G/E9 830-4380 | Tue Mar 23 1993 09:36 | 22 |
|
The UK has the highest percentage of company cars, that means that an
awful lot of them *are* perks. A lot of this started in the 70s as
a way around pay freezes (both Labour and Tory), this is also why
Digital pays 1 week in arrears and 3 weeks in advance.
Leaving aside the cars that *are* tools of the trade, all the other
company cars are perverting the market. Think of it, they are (on average)
driven too hard (more fuel usage), the milage limits are related to
personal taxation (more fuel usage - fancy driving to Paris to up the
milage?). Lastly my personal bug bear (aside from the use of Disabled
car space used by a perfectly able bodied person - especially when there
are other spaces in the car park) which is that garages rip off lease
companies (and thus lease drivers). All of this is very un-green and
bad for the environment. On the other hand, taxing car owners to death
is *not* the answer (no matter how "green" Lament wanted to appear, he
was merely getting money from the [gullible] tax payers). A decent
set of integrated transport services such as is available in many other
European countries and a plan from getting from the situation we're in
now to this future (nirvana?) would be helpful.
Dave
|
2045.5 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Tue Mar 23 1993 09:47 | 12 |
| > A lot of people have given up their company car, purely because
> of the ever increasing tax on a so called perk??.
> Surely if the goverment made the tax allowance more attractive
> towards company cars, it must stimulate growth in the car industry.
Now there is a strange thought - Just because you don't buy a car
through the company lease scheme, then you don't buy one at all.
Heather - who has always thought the Co. car scheme is to expensive, but
still treats herself to a new car (well ex-demo) every three years.
|
2045.6 | Too wide a statement.... | HEWIE::RUSSELL | So much for Tory promises on taxes! | Tue Mar 23 1993 10:04 | 18 |
| re .3;
>personal taxation (more fuel usage - fancy driving to Paris to up the
>milage?). Lastly my personal bug bear (aside from the use of Disabled
As it happens, I am driving to Geneva next week for a meeting - it is
saving Digital about �450, as I'm sharing with a colleague, and it only
takes about 3 hours extra over flying. The fact my last three flights
back from Geneva were all between two and three hours late have some bearing on
my decision...
I am well over the 2,500 limit, and nowhere near the 18,000.
I wonder - is it greener to drive 1,000 miles, or fly it in a modern Airbus?
Any ideas, anyone?
Besides the above nit pick, I agree with your statments.
Peter.
|
2045.7 | It may not be greener | RDGENG::RUSLING | Dave Rusling REO2 G/E9 830-4380 | Tue Mar 23 1993 10:09 | 9 |
|
re -1, it may not be greener to drive to Paris, but it might be safer!
As for driving being more green in that particular case, then as with
all these arguments, everything we do has an effect on the environment.
In the short to medium term we must reach a position where what we do
isn't hurting the planet and that our lifestyle is maintained from
renewable resources. Ever seen Soyent Green?
Dave
|
2045.8 | Lies, damn lies & statistics | BAHTAT::CARTER_A | Andy Carter..Morph the Borg | Tue Mar 23 1993 10:31 | 2 |
| re-1
Stats show actually safer to fly!
|
2045.9 | | PLAYER::BROWNL | You know what that wants... | Tue Mar 23 1993 11:47 | 6 |
| When this mileage business was introduced, I was working at BT. We had
the situation, I kid you not, where three or four managers, going to
another office for a meeting, would *each* take a car, just to get the
personal mileage up.
Laurie.
|
2045.10 | | SBPUS4::Mark | | Tue Mar 23 1993 12:05 | 3 |
| Outrageous !!!! That'd never happen in Digital !
Hah !
|
2045.11 | | PEKING::SMITHRW | The Great Pyramid of Bloke | Tue Mar 23 1993 13:47 | 24 |
| Flying has got to be greener.
For a start, you're using a couple of miles of concrete instead of
600-odd there and back 8*) (If you took the air taxi from White
Waltham - not as outrageous as you might imagine - it's a thousand
yards or so of grass at this end).
You travel in straight lines, point to point.
You don't drive through towns and villages (Ask the people who live
along the road between Stranraer and the M6 about this).
Jet fuel is unleaded.
It's probably quieter. Seriously. This has just occurred to me.
Okay, jet aircraft are noisy, but only near the ground. When they're
seven miles up, nobody hears them. If you take the hundred-odd people
out of the passenger cabin and put them all in cars, it's got to add up
to a lot more noise...
I could go on all day...8*)
Richard
|
2045.12 | Car fleet V BAA | WELCLU::OVERELL | | Wed Mar 24 1993 08:53 | 8 |
| re:last
Their are some good points here, but just because we are not aware of
the noise pollution etc. dosen't mean that this is greener. When these
aircraft take-off surely their exhaust gases and the pollution carried
along with them must get scattered over a wide area. Anyway who's
suggesting that DEC do away with car fleet and hand it over to BAA:-)
|
2045.13 | It might all be a moot point, anyway! | HEWIE::RUSSELL | So much for Tory promises on taxes! | Wed Mar 24 1993 09:08 | 12 |
| I've just learned that my travel is off, due to some UK travel restriction
regarding European Travel - if it's not for a direct customer/revenue thing,
it's cancelled. Since this was for an internal meeting, it seems I can't
travel.
My colleague (who works for an Area group, but is UK based) will probably
now have to fly, at increased overall cost to Digital, and also at increased
personal hassle, as he was going on holiday direct from the meeting in FYO.
I'll try and sort it out tomorrow, when the relevant managers are around.
Peter.
|
2045.14 | Deeper and deeper ... | MARVIN::WALTER | | Thu Mar 25 1993 13:04 | 3 |
| >> as he was going on holiday direct from the meeting in FYO.
Isn't this another (taxable) perk? :-)
|