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#11
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On Apr 5, 9:26*am, Chris wrote:
Body parts could be spread across all six tracks if a person is hit at 125mph.....it could also be a crime scene and the line would have been closed by the BTP until they are satisfied with their investigations. Then Network Rail has to clear all the body parts by bringing in the Emergency Services. Only then can they start opening lines up. If I get caught up in this sort of disruption, I usyally expect it to last at least two hours - so try & find out from staff etc what time the lines were closed & then work out my options. It can take over an hour, sometimes two to organise coaches - hence why it usually isn't worth it from Padd - by the time they are organised and ready for loading, plus the travel time to Reading - the lines are usually open - so best to wait for the trains to start running. TOCs have to get you to your destination if you arrive in good time for a train that would have taken you there...so there's NO risk of getting dumped overnight *providing* you don't wander away from the station for too long - you might miss the only train to go to where you want to be. REfreshments withinn the station are fine. Personally, my sympathies are with the driver of the affected train, along with track & emergency personnel who have to pick up the bits - not a nice job. It's something the travelling public have to accept.... Buses to Reading, for those missing last trains to S Wales, Plymouth etc) might be part of the answer? |
#12
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On 05/04/2011 08:59, Hils wrote:
Roland Perry wrote: In message , at 08:13:21 on Tue, 5 Apr 2011, Graeme Wall remarked: This is very sad - but why so many at Southall anyway? It does seem to be a regular occurance. One theory I've seen is that many of the suicides are Asian women escaping the torments of arranged marriages. And for cultural reasons they may well find it much harder to seek help. Southall, of course, having a large population of British Asians. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/967153.stm "Asian women are three times more likely to commit suicide than the rest of the population." "One study found that the suicide rate in women aged 16-24 years was three times higher in women of Asian origin than in white British women. [...] Asian men appear to be far less vulnerable to suicide than young men from white British backgrounds." (The suicide rate among white British women is lower than in the general population. The suicide rate among men is more than three times that among women.) Actually the male suicide rate is three times that of women, not more than three. "[The] risk of suicide in unemployed men is two to three times higher than in the general population." http://www.mind.org.uk/help/research...ion_strategies Odd how we read more about Asian [sic] women being "victims" than about unemployed men. Admittedly only a quick read but I see no reference to 'victims' in that article. -- Graeme Wall This account not read, substitute trains for rail. Railway Miscellany at www.greywall.demon.co.uk/rail |
#13
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Hils wrote:
Roland Perry wrote: In message , at 08:13:21 on Tue, 5 Apr 2011, Graeme Wall remarked: This is very sad - but why so many at Southall anyway? It does seem to be a regular occurance. One theory I've seen is that many of the suicides are Asian women escaping the torments of arranged marriages. And for cultural reasons they may well find it much harder to seek help. Southall, of course, having a large population of British Asians. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/967153.stm "Asian women are three times more likely to commit suicide than the rest of the population." "One study found that the suicide rate in women aged 16-24 years was three times higher in women of Asian origin than in white British women. [...] Asian men appear to be far less vulnerable to suicide than young men from white British backgrounds." (The suicide rate among white British women is lower than in the general population. The suicide rate among men is more than three times that among women.) "[The] risk of suicide in unemployed men is two to three times higher than in the general population." http://www.mind.org.uk/help/research...ion_strategies Odd how we read more about Asian [sic] women being "victims" than about unemployed men. I suspect that it isn't odd at all, but predetermined by our selection of what we read. Moreover, the women of Asian heritage who are driven to take their lives often have been victims of abuse from an identifiable abuser, whereas someone who is unemployed has rarely been victimised by one person, unless you are going to lay the blame for their state at the door of the person who puts the figures in the spreadsheet. -- ..sig down for maintenance |
#14
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Neil Williams wrote:
On Apr 5, 9:31*am, bob wrote: It's not just a question of "damn the crime scene, get the trains running", there are other railway lines and other ways of getting there (eg via Waterloo, coaches). And a passenger is ill-advised to act outside staff advice at that time of night, as if they're then stranded you can be sure "it's your own fault" will be the answer. So there needed to be staff to decide what to do and to confirm it to passengers. Until those investigating at the scene have actually said, "okay, we've finished now" all rail staff can do is offer guesses, though. Information about alternative routes home could also be overtaken by events - e.g. people being directed to H&C line trains by fGW staff could find them cancelled because of overcrowding. It's very hard to come up with a one-size-fits-all answer in these circumstances, apart from "keep calm and carry on". -- ..sig down for maintenance |
#15
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On Apr 5, 11:12*am, Chris Tolley (ukonline
really) wrote: Until those investigating at the scene have actually said, "okay, we've finished now" all rail staff can do is offer guesses, though. What they can do is offer the ability to say "we were told to do that". Which can be very useful when someone gets stuck further down the line. They can also reassure people that they aren't being ignored. The LUL requirement for a "we are being held at a red signal" announcement after N minutes (N=2?) is a good example. It does not provide useful information, but it does provide reassurance that someone gives a monkeys about the passengers and they are not just an operational inconvenience. It's very hard to come up with a one-size-fits-all answer in these circumstances, apart from "keep calm and carry on". And reassurance. The human factor is very important, but often neglected. Oddly, said human factor can sometimes be provided via technology. I find LM's Twitter feed very good for this. Neil |
#16
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Neil Williams wrote:
On Apr 5, 11:12*am, Chris Tolley (ukonline really) wrote: Until those investigating at the scene have actually said, "okay, we've finished now" all rail staff can do is offer guesses, though. What they can do is offer the ability to say "we were told to do that". Which can be very useful when someone gets stuck further down the line. They can also reassure people that they aren't being ignored. The LUL requirement for a "we are being held at a red signal" announcement after N minutes (N=2?) is a good example. It does not provide useful information, but it does provide reassurance that someone gives a monkeys about the passengers and they are not just an operational inconvenience. Well, I'd certainly agree that an announcement every so often saying "Unfortunately we do not have any firm information about when trains will be able to leave" would convey the idea that somebody was interested in the passengers, but I can't see what else could be said when there is no information to convey. Some of the more strident comments in this thread seem to assume that managers on the scene would somehow be able to convey information that was not otherwise being conveyed. It's very hard to come up with a one-size-fits-all answer in these circumstances, apart from "keep calm and carry on". And reassurance. The human factor is very important, but often neglected. That may be a by-product of compensation culture. In the past, I reckon there was much more of a "we're all in this together" attitude, whereas nowadays, there's a prevalent, "whose fault is this and how much can I screw them for?" Oddly, said human factor can sometimes be provided via technology. I find LM's Twitter feed very good for this. So I gather from your previous postings. The only time I've bothered with Twitter (not railway related) I haven't found anything sufficiently interesting to persevere with it. -- ..sig down for maintenance |
#17
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In message , at 08:59:10 on Tue, 5 Apr
2011, Hils remarked: "Asian women are three times more likely to commit suicide than the rest of the population." .... Odd how we read more about Asian [sic] women being "victims" than about unemployed men. Perhaps they have less dramatic/public ways of doing it. Although some believe that quite a few fatal road accidents may in fact be suicides, but rarely reported as such (modulo Ufton). -- Roland Perry |
#18
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On Apr 5, 11:12*am, Chris Tolley (ukonline
really) wrote: Neil Williams wrote: On Apr 5, 9:31 am, bob wrote: It's not just a question of "damn the crime scene, get the trains running", there are other railway lines and other ways of getting there (eg via Waterloo, coaches). And a passenger is ill-advised to act outside staff advice at that time of night, as if they're then stranded you can be sure "it's your own fault" will be the answer. *So there needed to be staff to decide what to do and to confirm it to passengers. Until those investigating at the scene have actually said, "okay, we've finished now" all rail staff can do is offer guesses, though. Information about alternative routes home could also be overtaken by events - e.g. people being directed to H&C line trains by fGW staff could find them cancelled because of overcrowding. It's very hard to come up with a one-size-fits-all answer in these circumstances, apart from "keep calm and carry on". The problem is the railways are not following a "keep calm, carry on" approach, they are following a "pack up and go home" approach, leaving passengers stranded. There should be contingency plans for how to deal with the closure of key points on the network, ready to act on with half an hour's notice. It should be clear to management within half an hour whether the situation is a "open again in a few minutes" or "closed for the rest of the evening" situation. For management to just sit on that information and neither pass it on, nor advise passengers (who may have train-specific non flexible tickets) how to go about getting home, nor give them advice on alternative routes that are available, is bad management. Just sticking a "we're really sorry, your train is cancelled" message on the information display is not a contingency plan, and it's not keeping calm and carrying on. Robin |
#19
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On Tue, 5 Apr 2011 01:26:43 -0700 (PDT)
Chris wrote: Body parts could be spread across all six tracks if a person is hit at 125mph.....it could also be a crime scene and the line would have been closed by the BTP until they are satisfied with their investigations. Thats the trouble with the police in this country - every accident is a crime scene until proven otherwise no matter how trivial or how much distruption it causes. In europe you need a bloody good reason to close an entire motorway or main rail line for hours but in this country it just needs one jobsworth plod and thats it for the day. In spain last year I drove past 2 trucks that had collided head on. In this country plod would have closed the entire stretch of road for a day - in spain the police were just waving drivers past as they got on with their job. B2003 |
#20
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On Apr 5, 11:44*am, Chris Tolley (ukonline
really) wrote: Well, I'd certainly agree that an announcement every so often saying "Unfortunately we do not have any firm information about when trains will be able to leave" would convey the idea that somebody was interested in the passengers, but I can't see what else could be said when there is no information to convey. That's roughly the same as the Tube one. It might also be worth suggesting alternatives that are known to exist as others have posted and cross-ticket acceptance arranged where sensible. But such an announcement does have value - or LU clearly believe so! And reassurance. *The human factor is very important, but often neglected. That may be a by-product of compensation culture. In the past, I reckon there was much more of a "we're all in this together" attitude, whereas nowadays, there's a prevalent, "whose fault is this and how much can I screw them for?" I disagree. It may well be that the railway used to leave people stranded or ignore them through its own self importance. That doesn't mean to say they should now. Airlines are atrocious at this, I find, the railway is rather better. Is that not a good thing? FWIW, I do not claim Delay Repay money from the railway in an event causing delay that is beyond its control, such as the one this thread is discussing; that would seem unreasonable to me. But it does seem reasonable to me that regardless of the cause of the delay the railway should assist the passengers and provide them information, even if that information is "we haven't forgotten you, but by the way there is no information". It might similarly mean that the railway isn't in a position to pay for hotel accommodation, but will assist you in finding it, for instance, or might even pay for it out of goodwill, or park a train in the platform to let people kip on there (as I believe Eurostar have done once or twice). It's not about who is strictly liable, it's about a company's moral responsibility to its customers. So I gather from your previous postings. The only time I've bothered with Twitter (not railway related) I haven't found anything sufficiently interesting to persevere with it. I haven't found a use for it other than transport information. But it does pretty well at that if the TOC do their job. I have LM, VT and Chiltern on there, and while they differ in how they work, all of them are useful. Vastly more up to date and relevant than the Nexus Alpha sites, or the now uselessly out of date NRE site. Neil |
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