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#1
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Hi there! I have a bus nominee pass for tfl, I live in Grays Essex and travel in to Kings Cross via Fenchurch Street. At one time I only used to pay from Grays to Barking and my Oyster used to work at Fenchurch Street for the rest of the journey as the underground rails ran parallel to the C2C ones. I understand that is now not the case. I assume I will now have to pay to Barking and take the underground into Kings Cross to take advantage of the free tariff, is that correct? I would be very grateful if someone could give me some advice as my season ticket is up for renewal soon!
Kind regards Caz |
#2
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On 10/05/2012 12:56, Paul Corfield wrote:
My understanding is that bus operator and bus operator nominee passes are not valid on any National Rail service. The sole exception is London Overground which counts as a TfL service. (source - TfL staff guide to Fares and Ticketing Jan 2012 edition). Correct. Bus Operator and Bus Operator Nominee passes are *only* valid on LU, the DLR, London Buses, Tramlink and London Overground. They have no validity on any other NR service, even on "interavailable" routes. Cheers, Barry |
#3
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On 10/05/2012 12:56, Paul Corfield wrote:
On Thu, 10 May 2012 08:32:46 +0100, Caz1000 wrote: Hi there! I have a bus nominee pass for tfl, I live in Grays Essex and travel in to Kings Cross via Fenchurch Street. At one time I only used to pay from Grays to Barking and my Oyster used to work at Fenchurch Street for the rest of the journey as the underground rails ran parallel to the C2C ones. I understand that is now not the case. I assume I will now have to pay to Barking and take the underground into Kings Cross to take advantage of the free tariff, is that correct? I would be very grateful if someone could give me some advice as my season ticket is up for renewal soon! My understanding is that bus operator and bus operator nominee passes are not valid on any National Rail service. The sole exception is London Overground which counts as a TfL service. (source - TfL staff guide to Fares and Ticketing Jan 2012 edition). So, nominee Oysters could not be used between Liverpool Street and Tottenham Hale on Anglia? |
#4
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On 10/05/2012 23:52, Paul Corfield wrote:
On Thu, 10 May 2012 22:10:41 +0100, " wrote: On 10/05/2012 12:56, Paul Corfield wrote: On Thu, 10 May 2012 08:32:46 +0100, Caz1000 wrote: Hi there! I have a bus nominee pass for tfl, I live in Grays Essex and travel in to Kings Cross via Fenchurch Street. At one time I only used to pay from Grays to Barking and my Oyster used to work at Fenchurch Street for the rest of the journey as the underground rails ran parallel to the C2C ones. I understand that is now not the case. I assume I will now have to pay to Barking and take the underground into Kings Cross to take advantage of the free tariff, is that correct? I would be very grateful if someone could give me some advice as my season ticket is up for renewal soon! My understanding is that bus operator and bus operator nominee passes are not valid on any National Rail service. The sole exception is London Overground which counts as a TfL service. (source - TfL staff guide to Fares and Ticketing Jan 2012 edition). So, nominee Oysters could not be used between Liverpool Street and Tottenham Hale on Anglia? Correct. *TfL* nominee passes are allowed to use some inter available NR services but LST to T Hale is not such a route. Note that what we were discussing earlier in this thread relates to bus company nominee passes. Fair enough, considering that they are contracted to TfL, rather than an actual part. I would think that TfL nominee passes could be used anywhere where OysterCards are available, however. I know a driver on one of the tube lines, and he tells me that employees of TfL do not receive any sort of discounts when using NR -- not even annual one-off tickets. He is entitled to a 50% discount on E*, however. |
#5
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#6
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On 14/05/2012 18:57, Paul Corfield wrote:
On Mon, 14 May 2012 12:53:58 +0100, David Cantrell wrote: On Sat, May 12, 2012 at 01:27:45PM +0100, wrote: I know a driver on one of the tube lines, and he tells me that employees of TfL do not receive any sort of discounts when using NR -- not even annual one-off tickets. Are you sure about that? I know they used to, and my parents (my dad's a BR pensioner) get cheap tube tickets. Perhaps this is just left over from the days before BR was dismembered and sold off to the worst bidder. BR privatisation is the cut off point for whether TfL employees have privilege facilities or not. Further some TfL employees come from predecessor organisations who have no historical entitlement to privilege ticket facilities. It needs to be said that with the sheer complexity of rail ticketing and advent of cheap advance tickets that the value of the privilege facility has reduced enormously over the years. Do TfL people get FIP travel abroad, like the post-privatisation National Rail types do (but apparently often don't know about)? -- Arthur Figgis Surrey, UK |
#7
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On 14/05/2012 12:53, David Cantrell wrote:
On Sat, May 12, 2012 at 01:27:45PM +0100, wrote: I know a driver on one of the tube lines, and he tells me that employees of TfL do not receive any sort of discounts when using NR -- not even annual one-off tickets. Are you sure about that? I know they used to, and my parents (my dad's a BR pensioner) get cheap tube tickets. Perhaps this is just left over from the days before BR was dismembered and sold off to the worst bidder. Just going on what I have been told. This person has worked on the Tube for about eight years, so that could change things. |
#8
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On 14/05/2012 22:07, Arthur Figgis wrote:
On 14/05/2012 18:57, Paul Corfield wrote: On Mon, 14 May 2012 12:53:58 +0100, David Cantrell wrote: On Sat, May 12, 2012 at 01:27:45PM +0100, wrote: I know a driver on one of the tube lines, and he tells me that employees of TfL do not receive any sort of discounts when using NR -- not even annual one-off tickets. Are you sure about that? I know they used to, and my parents (my dad's a BR pensioner) get cheap tube tickets. Perhaps this is just left over from the days before BR was dismembered and sold off to the worst bidder. BR privatisation is the cut off point for whether TfL employees have privilege facilities or not. Further some TfL employees come from predecessor organisations who have no historical entitlement to privilege ticket facilities. It needs to be said that with the sheer complexity of rail ticketing and advent of cheap advance tickets that the value of the privilege facility has reduced enormously over the years. Do TfL people get FIP travel abroad, like the post-privatisation National Rail types do (but apparently often don't know about)? Don't know, but I once met somebody who worked for Network Rail and joined the organisation before 1997. Besides free rail travel throughout the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, he claimed that he would be able get free rail travel on the continent, though he would have to first write to the relevant agency. Don't know if that privilege included tube and bus, though. |
#9
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On Mon, May 14, 2012 at 06:57:10PM +0100, Paul Corfield wrote:
BR privatisation is the cut off point for whether TfL employees have privilege facilities or not. Ahh, OK, I guess that makes sense. Further some TfL employees come from predecessor organisations who have no historical entitlement to privilege ticket facilities. It needs to be said that with the sheer complexity of rail ticketing and advent of cheap advance tickets that the value of the privilege facility has reduced enormously over the years. My parents make a lot of use of their ration of free 48hr passes, and I suppose the european travel passes (do they still exist?) would be valuable. Back when I were a lad, kiddy priv fares were capped at a pound. I used to travel all over the place for next to nothing. Return from the south coast to Mallaig? Pocket money! -- David Cantrell | Bourgeois reactionary pig Please stop rolling your Jargon Dice and explain the problem you are having to me in plain English, using small words. -- John Hardin, in the Monastery |
#10
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In message , Paul Corfield
writes Nope. The Eurostar discount is the only offer that gets you to foreign soil by rail. There are still some ferry discounts for privilege facility holders. I sometimes look at the ATOC Staff Travel guidance document for NR staff and am mildly jealous. Still I could always go and get a job with a TOC! In 1966 we not only got free passes country wide, (mine were always made out Penzance to Thurso) ordinary travel at .25 of the standard fare and a thing called an international authority card for foreign travel. It cost me 2/6 (two shilling and six pence) to travel from Bristol to Paris. That 2/6 was nothing to do with trains it was port tax charges which the railway didn't own. -- Clive |
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