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#21
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In message
, at 07:10:40 on Sun, 11 Nov 2012, Recliner remarked: For someone who becomes 60 today, they'll have to wait until 6 July 2015 to qualify for a national bus pass, assuming they haven't changed the rules again by then. That depends on the issuing council(s). I'm sure Cambridgeshire will be one of the meanest. Are you saying that councils have discretion on when they'll issue the passes? And if so, do they generally exercise it to issue them earlier or later than the "female retirement age" benchmark? They can issue a local pass earlier if they want, as London now does, but the national bus pass scheme starts when someone reaches female retirement age. I don't think English councils can opt out of that. Have any of the shire counties opted-in to provide the .... National bus pas scheme... passes early? http://www.salisburyjournal.co.uk/ne...ds_for_travel/ It's not obvious that the scheme referred to there is a national bus pass. -- Roland Perry |
#22
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On 11/11/2012 12:57, Recliner wrote:
Thanks, yes it's confusing how bits of the Chiltern lines that parallel or share LU lines have 24 availability, but others don't. The only bit that may seem less than obvious at first is South Ruislip - West Ruislip. It's perfectly logical though, as the gates at each end won't know whether you've travelled on Chiltern or the Central Line. And Marylebone - Amersham is an extension of the interavailability of paper tickets. Cheers, Barry |
#23
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Roland Perry wrote:
In message , at 07:10:40 on Sun, 11 Nov 2012, Recliner remarked: For someone who becomes 60 today, they'll have to wait until 6 July 2015 to qualify for a national bus pass, assuming they haven't changed the rules again by then. That depends on the issuing council(s). I'm sure Cambridgeshire will be one of the meanest. Are you saying that councils have discretion on when they'll issue the passes? And if so, do they generally exercise it to issue them earlier or later than the "female retirement age" benchmark? They can issue a local pass earlier if they want, as London now does, but the national bus pass scheme starts when someone reaches female retirement age. I don't think English councils can opt out of that. Have any of the shire counties opted-in to provide the ... National bus pas scheme... passes early? http://www.salisburyjournal.co.uk/ne...ds_for_travel/ It's not obvious that the scheme referred to there is a national bus pass. No, it clearly isn't. Local councils (including London) obviously can't force any others to provide free travel before the national pass age. But they are free to grant it to 60+ (or any other) locals in their own area, as London now does. |
#24
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Barry Salter wrote:
On 11/11/2012 12:57, Recliner wrote: Thanks, yes it's confusing how bits of the Chiltern lines that parallel or share LU lines have 24 availability, but others don't. The only bit that may seem less than obvious at first is South Ruislip - West Ruislip. It's perfectly logical though, as the gates at each end won't know whether you've travelled on Chiltern or the Central Line. And Marylebone - Amersham is an extension of the interavailability of paper tickets. Unfortunately for me, my nearest station is one of the Chiltern ones that doesn't participate in this (even though it has Oyster OSI with a nearby Tube station). |
#26
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In message of Sun, 11 Nov
2012 01:04:24 in uk.transport.london, Paul Corfield writes [snip] My guess, as I don't know how the card has been specified, is that it is coded as a "Permit" just like a Freedom Pass. It has the same London area validity but is not an English Concessionary Pass so it will not have the english rose symbol printed on it. I don't know whether London Freedom Passes are now both Oyster and ITSO compatible but if so then I would expect the 60+ Oyster (your card) to just be Oyster compatible. Permits act like a season ticket within the area, times and modes specified. They are not able to have a PAYG purse working alongside. This question has been raised many times in Mayor's Questions due to the lack of 24 hour availability on National Rail services for Freedom Passes and the answer has always been "your constituent must obtain a separate Oyster PAYG card and pay fares before 0930 M-F". What is the reasoning behind that? Permits should be readable by a ticket office machine operated by a ticket clerk but I am not certain if journey history is displayed if you tap the card at a passenger ticket machine (POM). I think my old TfL Staff Pass could be read at a POM so it's possible the basic (last 10) journey details would be displayed as that's what on the card. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oyster_card says "... Touch screen ticket machines report the last eight journeys and last top-up amount. The same information is available as a print-out from ticket offices, and also on-board London Buses by request. ..." I can get last 8 journeys on Oyster Cards and on my Freedom Pass. I assume the same is true on the 60+ Oyster issued to my better half. A Freedom Pass can't be associated with an Oyster online account. I found it possible, but unreasonably tedious, to get an 8 week printout on paper with a Freedom of Information Act request. -- Walter Briscoe |
#27
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In message
nternet.com of Sat, 10 Nov 2012 19:18:12 in uk.transport.london, Recliner writes Paul Corfield wrote: On Sat, 10 Nov 2012 16:19:33 -0600, Recliner wrote: [snip] No harm in you tapping your card on an Oyster pad at a POM and seeing what Journey History brings up. Thanks for the info. Do you know what would happen if I tried to use it to enter a NR station before 9:30? Would it open the gate? And what happens It won't open the gate if the travel is not valid. This also happens at London Bridge where most travel by train on these concessionary cards is invalid in the morning peak. When my son went to school, his child was also rejected there. if it's an ungated station with an Oyster reader? You get a rejection bleep. I found this happened at Bowes Park (invalid) after starting a First Capital Connect journey at Moorgate (valid). Having one will certainly change my journey patterns. The Freedom Pass has curiously inconsistent validity. It is valid at Dartford, where Oyster is not. I saw many caught by that on a visit to Dartford. It is invalid at Chafford Hundred Lakeside, Grays, Ockenden, and Purfleet, which are outside the zones, but where PAYG is valid. It seems one is expected to buy a paper extension ticket. -- Walter Briscoe |
#28
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![]() On 11/11/2012 13:45, Paul Corfield wrote: [...] Other sets of interavailabilities / time based restrictions have grown up over the years because of the "early adopters" of PAYG plus the impact of London Overground. The proliferation of discount schemes and the reluctance of the TOCs to participate in them is another factor in burgeoning availability complexity. I dare say a new set will emerge when the Overground extends in a few weeks time where you'll be able to go to Denmark Hill on a LOROL train before 0930 but not on a South Eastern or Southern one! [...] Though you won't be going to Denmark Hill on a Southern train from 9 December onwards, as there won't be any! (Unless a signalman sets the wrong route, and a driver takes it...) [...] I'm assuming the practice will be the same as happens south of New Cross Gate where using LOROL is fine but Southern is not (before 0930 M-F). Agreed, there are posters up to this effect at stations south of NX Gate. |
#29
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![]() On 12/11/2012 14:41, Paul Corfield wrote: On Mon, 12 Nov 2012 11:00:21 +0000, Mizter T wrote: On 11/11/2012 13:45, Paul Corfield wrote: [...] Other sets of interavailabilities / time based restrictions have grown up over the years because of the "early adopters" of PAYG plus the impact of London Overground. The proliferation of discount schemes and the reluctance of the TOCs to participate in them is another factor in burgeoning availability complexity. I dare say a new set will emerge when the Overground extends in a few weeks time where you'll be able to go to Denmark Hill on a LOROL train before 0930 but not on a South Eastern or Southern one! [...] Though you won't be going to Denmark Hill on a Southern train from 9 December onwards, as there won't be any! (Unless a signalman sets the wrong route, and a driver takes it...) Trust me to choose a station without Southern after 9 Dec 2012. Can I swap to Peckham Rye which I assume will keep some Southern service coverage? I am showing up my relative ignorance of the rail network south of the Thames! You can - if there's no Southern service at Peckham Rye from 9 Dec onwards then something will have gone badly wrong with the planning! (Denmark Hill's only Southern service being the 'South London Line' service which shuttles between Victoria and London Bridge, which is of course being withdrawn at the timetable change.) |
#30
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On Sat, Nov 10, 2012 at 04:15:28PM +0000, Lewis wrote:
I'm not too sure if this is the right place to post this but I was wondering if anyone could help me. What is the maximum amount of times you can use your oyster card in a set period of time? I have just produce a list of things that I need to do on Monday and it will require 9 different uses of my oyster card in a two hour period. Will my oyster card work for all thee journies? I heard that there is a cap of the amount of journeys that can be made in a period of time I expect that you're getting confused with the fare cap. If you use your PAYG Oyster card enough in a day that it would have been cheaper to get a one day travelcard*, then you will only be charged for a one day travelcard. * the exact amount will depend on what modes of transport you've used, the time of day, phase of the moon, and what colour tie Boris is wearing today -- David Cantrell | Cake Smuggler Extraordinaire "The whole aim of practical politics is to keep the populace alarmed (and hence clamorous to be led to safety) by menacing it with an endless series of hobgoblins, all of them imaginary" -- H. L. Mencken |
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