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#11
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Paul Corfield wrote
Presumably the research didn't include those I see on almost every bus journey who signal the bus too late (either with a V sign or an angry fist) as it sails straight pass compulsory bus stops where people obviously *were* waiting to board. In such situations the driver is not conforming to the policy. Last month I had a 111 fail to stop in such a marked manner that the driver of the following 515 (non-TFL), which did stop on being hailed, asked if I disliked red buses - ![]() -- Mike D |
#12
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In message , at 00:47:24 on
Wed, 9 Mar 2011, Richard remarked: London buses have this too - it's now incorporated into the iBus information display. People seem to think that it's an invitation to press the button again... Us Nottingham folk seem to be able to work out that if the sign is lit up there's no need to ring again. When getting on the bus, it's not so clear-cut. A Berlin bus driver once got quite irate at my wave. Nobody else minds. Perhaps a theatrical extraction of change or ticket, or lunge towards the bus stop pole is a compromise. Eye contact with the driver can work as well, and ensure a suitable position for the front doors, where that's the done thing. Again, here in Nottingham what people do is stick out an arm, and the bus puts on its left indicator - if it hasn't done so already as a result of dropping someone off. I wonder whether Roland's experience of Geneva was more about timetable adherence than any rules about stopping, at least that's what it seemed like to me when I was in Zurich. In off-peak periods there are a couple of places that my Nottingham buses are sometimes clearly waiting for the timetable to catch up, but the Geneva ones treat each bus stop the way you are supposed to approach a "Stop" road junction. ie come to a halt for a split second, then immediately move off (assuming its safe). Avoiding getting ahead of the timetable can be done by driving slower between stops. The roads there are clear enough (or there are bus priority measures) so there's little conflicting traffic to worry about most of the time. -- Roland Perry |
#13
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In message 01cbdde1$8fc4a380$LocalHost@default, at 02:22:21 on Wed, 9
Mar 2011, Michael R N Dolbear remarked: One reason to ring the bell on country bus routes is that standing up or moving before the bus actually stops can be unsafe, especially if one is not very secure on ones feet. So expecting the driver to notice only works when the passenger feels it safe to move when the bus isn't stationary. That depends how far away the bells are. If this is an issue, then the buses here have about half the seats within reach of the bell without getting up. -- Roland Perry |
#14
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This is the most recent response I have received (albeit almost two
years ago now) on this topic .... "Thank you for contacting London Buses, regarding a route 345 bus driver, who failed to stop for you at 0822 hours at the end of Coldharbour Lane, heading towards Camberwell on 17 March 2009. "All drivers trained by London General undergo a thorough and intensive training programme, which includes a strong emphasis on customer care. Carrying passengers to their destinations is, after all, the very nature of the service that we provide and we expect our staff to do so in a safe, courteous and caring manner. "During training, drivers are instructed to stop at all white compulsory stops and to be fully alert and aware of passengers wishing to board at red request stops. I am sorry you have had reason to report the contrary on this occasion." The implication appears to be that the distinction between compulsory and request stops remains, despite its absence from any TfL publicity. But there is clearly no enthusiasm from TfL to enforce it. Writing letters of complaint elicit a polite reply, like the one above, followed by an assurance that action has been taken, but nothing ever changes. peter |
#15
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Presumably the research didn't include those I see on almost every bus
journey who signal the bus too late (either with a V sign or an angry fist) as it sails straight pass compulsory bus stops where people obviously *were* waiting to board. In such situations the driver is not conforming to the policy. It is common for the 410 not to stop at East Croydon northbound in the evening peak (and to a lesser extent at other locations at other times of day) despite there being waiting passengers, presumably because the driver believes the bus is full (although the waiting passengers can often see that actually it isn't, it is just crowded at the front). Once wonders what the policy is in that instance. I always hail buses and ring the bell if no one else has. However this is because I've long since lost confidence that drivers would actually stop at compulsory stops otherwise. I know I am by no means alone in doing this. It seems to me that to some extent TfL have changed the regulations to match the behaviour of passengers who were responding to the failure to adhere to the old regulations. I think it is actually perfectly reasonable to have just one type of bus stop and to request passengers indicate to the driver that they wish to board or alight. It would be a courtesy to their passengers to advise them what they policy now is, especially as those who are most familiar with the concept of compulsory and request stops are likely to have been using the bus services for the longest time. |
#16
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On Mar 9, 10:53*pm, "Graham J" wrote:
Presumably the research didn't include those I see on almost every bus journey who signal the bus too late (either with a V sign or an angry fist) as it sails straight pass compulsory bus stops where people obviously *were* waiting to board. In such situations the driver is not conforming to the policy. It is common for the 410 not to stop at East Croydon northbound in the evening peak (and to a lesser extent at other locations at other times of day) despite there being waiting passengers, presumably because the driver believes the bus is full (although the waiting passengers can often see that actually it isn't, it is just crowded at the front). *Once wonders what the policy is in that instance. I always hail buses and ring the bell if no one else has. *However this is because I've long since lost confidence that drivers would actually stop at compulsory stops otherwise. *I know I am by no means alone in doing this. It seems to me that to some extent TfL have changed the regulations to match the behaviour of passengers who were responding to the failure to adhere to the old regulations. I think it is actually perfectly reasonable to have just one type of bus stop and to request passengers indicate to the driver that they wish to board or alight. *It would be a courtesy to their passengers to advise them what they policy now is, especially as those who are most familiar with the concept of compulsory and request stops are likely to have been using the bus services for the longest time. There seems to be a common misconception here that all bus drivers regard passengers as something other than a mere inconvenience in their plight to get from starting point to destination as quickly as possible, and with as few interruptions (i.e. passengers) as they possibly can. Inspectors are frequently of the same mindset: how else would they explain turning short two packed Northbound 295 buses at Fulham Brodway (Jerdan Place) on Tuesday morning at 8.30a.m., churning the passengers out onto a dangerously small pavement that was being dug up (the bus stop itself was actually fenced off for pavement works around it). The new T.F.L. regime quoted at the beginning of this threat is truly incredible, and shows that they regard passengers as mere cattle, like so many drivers. Why not just have a SIMPLE system: one design of bus stop, with "REQUEST" written on it, and make the SIMPLE rule that anyone wishing to board or alight the must hail the bus as it approaches or ring the bell, respectively? The "new" regime of "COMPULSORY" bus stops that are not compulsory is a recipe for confusion to all concerned! Only idiotically muddled thinking would suggest otherwise! And as for not actually publicising the change in regulations - that truly beggars belief, even for an organisation with such poor concept of "service" as T.F.L.! M.M. |
#17
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In article ,
Graham J wrote: I think it is actually perfectly reasonable to have just one type of bus stop and to request passengers indicate to the driver that they wish to board or alight. That's how it's always worked outside London AFAIK (although the indication was often subtle in the case of boarding). As of a couple of years ago I do now usually put my arm out to hail a bus rather than just subtly looking like I want to board -- formerly (where I grew up in Greater Manchester and more recently in Cambridge) I perhaps took a half-step towards the curb and maybe made eye contact with the driver, and that was a normal way of indicating you wanted to board. (I'd also take a step *back* to indicate I didn't want to board, if it was the wrong bus). But as a result of being told off for signalling late in Cambridge a few years ago by an Eastern European bus driver who'd clearly failed to spot that I wanted to board until I stuck my arm out as a last resort, I reevaluated this. I know the latter is the normal way of hailing a bus in at least some parts of continental Europe so I can understand why some drivers from elsewhere in the EU may expect it, and it just seems simpler to go along with it since it's pretty unambiguous. In case I needed one, I got a reminder that you need to explicitly signal here in London, too, only a couple of weeks ago when a bus sailed past despite the fact that I thought I was looking like I wanted to board. I'm new to London, though - what was the traditional practice at request stops? Hold your arm out, or a more subtle indication? -roy |
#18
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On 11/03/2011 00:00, Roy Badami wrote:
But as a result of being told off for signalling late in Cambridge a few years ago by an Eastern European bus driver who'd clearly failed to spot that I wanted to board until I stuck my arm out as a last resort, I reevaluated this. I know the latter is the normal way of hailing a bus in at least some parts of continental Europe so I can understand why some drivers from elsewhere in the EU may expect it, and it just seems simpler to go along with it since it's pretty unambiguous. Last year I had a bus driver in Germany get very rude in two languages because I had put my arm out. But with a bus every 30 min, at night in the rain, I didn't fancy the risk of it not stopping. admittedly she then had a go at another passsenger for something else, so it might have been just her! When I was little in Hull, ringing the bell to get off was considered what would now be called anti-social behaviour. You were supposed to go and stand by the door waiting to get off (no middle exit). -- Arthur Figgis Surrey, UK |
#19
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Arthur Figgis wrote on 11 March 2011
07:00:58 ... On 11/03/2011 00:00, Roy Badami wrote: But as a result of being told off for signalling late in Cambridge a few years ago by an Eastern European bus driver who'd clearly failed to spot that I wanted to board until I stuck my arm out as a last resort, I reevaluated this. I know the latter is the normal way of hailing a bus in at least some parts of continental Europe so I can understand why some drivers from elsewhere in the EU may expect it, and it just seems simpler to go along with it since it's pretty unambiguous. Last year I had a bus driver in Germany get very rude in two languages because I had put my arm out. But with a bus every 30 min, at night in the rain, I didn't fancy the risk of it not stopping. admittedly she then had a go at another passsenger for something else, so it might have been just her! When I was little in Hull, ringing the bell to get off was considered what would now be called anti-social behaviour. You were supposed to go and stand by the door waiting to get off (no middle exit). So, what was the bell for? -- Richard J. (to email me, swap 'uk' and 'yon' in address) |
#20
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On 9 Mar, 08:42, peter wrote:
This is the most recent response I have received (albeit almost two years ago now) on this topic .... "Thank you for contacting London Buses, regarding a route 345 bus driver, who failed to stop for you at 0822 hours at the end of Coldharbour Lane, heading towards Camberwell on 17 March 2009. "All drivers trained by London General undergo a thorough and intensive training programme, which includes a strong emphasis on customer care. Carrying passengers to their destinations is, after all, the very nature of the service that we provide and we expect our staff to do so in a safe, courteous and caring manner. "During training, drivers are instructed to stop at all white compulsory stops and to be fully alert and aware of passengers wishing to board at red request stops. I am sorry you have had reason to report the contrary on this occasion." The implication appears to be that the distinction between compulsory and request stops remains, despite its absence from any TfL publicity. * But there is clearly no enthusiasm from TfL to enforce it. *Writing letters of complaint elicit a polite reply, like the one above, followed by an assurance that action has been taken, but nothing ever changes. peter That is the same reply I've had in the past and no doubt the one I'll get when this complaint eventually gets dealt with, but as you say nothing ever changes. In my experience the problem is far worse in Central London than in the suburbs although I don't know why that should be. Surely the rule should be that drivers should stop at all stops where passengers are waiting, and if in doubt stop anyway, and passengers should be required to press the bell for ALL stops. So nobody at or near the stop and no bell and the driver needn't stop. |
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