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London Transport (uk.transport.london) Discussion of all forms of transport in London. |
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#1
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Basil Jet wrote:
Apparently some deal has been struck but other unions have yet to agree, so it's not all signed, sealed and delivered yet. I was under the impression that the TSSA was the union most opposed to the Night Tube, perhaps because its members have less to gain from it? So the fact that the RMT has agreed may not mean much. |
#2
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![]() On 01/03/2016 22:23, Paul Corfield wrote: On Tue, 1 Mar 2016 21:07:23 -0000 (UTC), Recliner wrote: Basil Jet wrote: Apparently some deal has been struck but other unions have yet to agree, so it's not all signed, sealed and delivered yet. I was under the impression that the TSSA was the union most opposed to the Night Tube, perhaps because its members have less to gain from it? So the fact that the RMT has agreed may not mean much. Yer wot? RMT represent most station staff, a share of train drivers, control room staff plus maintainers and call out engineers. Their acceptance is a significant step. Obviously all the unions have to agree but the RMT staff saying yes makes a go ahead, post Mayoral election, likely. It can't be introduced during purdah which starts on or around 20 March - the Assembly effectively ceases business then until the new Mayor and Assembly are elected on 5 May. Anyway LU will need several weeks / months to finalise rosters and complete arrangements which have been on hold for months. Well, when it does eventually arrive it will be immensely popular. |
#3
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Mizter T wrote:
On 01/03/2016 22:23, Paul Corfield wrote: On Tue, 1 Mar 2016 21:07:23 -0000 (UTC), Recliner wrote: Basil Jet wrote: Apparently some deal has been struck but other unions have yet to agree, so it's not all signed, sealed and delivered yet. I was under the impression that the TSSA was the union most opposed to the Night Tube, perhaps because its members have less to gain from it? So the fact that the RMT has agreed may not mean much. Yer wot? RMT represent most station staff, a share of train drivers, control room staff plus maintainers and call out engineers. Their acceptance is a significant step. Obviously all the unions have to agree but the RMT staff saying yes makes a go ahead, post Mayoral election, likely. It can't be introduced during purdah which starts on or around 20 March - the Assembly effectively ceases business then until the new Mayor and Assembly are elected on 5 May. Anyway LU will need several weeks / months to finalise rosters and complete arrangements which have been on hold for months. Well, when it does eventually arrive it will be immensely popular. Not, it appears, with people who live near LU stations or the surface sections of the Night Tube lines. Perhaps also not with taxi drivers who will lose lucrative business. |
#4
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Paul Corfield wrote:
On Tue, 1 Mar 2016 23:23:40 +0000, Mizter T wrote: On 01/03/2016 22:23, Paul Corfield wrote: On Tue, 1 Mar 2016 21:07:23 -0000 (UTC), Recliner wrote: Basil Jet wrote: Apparently some deal has been struck but other unions have yet to agree, so it's not all signed, sealed and delivered yet. I was under the impression that the TSSA was the union most opposed to the Night Tube, perhaps because its members have less to gain from it? So the fact that the RMT has agreed may not mean much. Yer wot? RMT represent most station staff, a share of train drivers, control room staff plus maintainers and call out engineers. Their acceptance is a significant step. Obviously all the unions have to agree but the RMT staff saying yes makes a go ahead, post Mayoral election, likely. It can't be introduced during purdah which starts on or around 20 March - the Assembly effectively ceases business then until the new Mayor and Assembly are elected on 5 May. Anyway LU will need several weeks / months to finalise rosters and complete arrangements which have been on hold for months. Well, when it does eventually arrive it will be immensely popular. I remain to be convinced but I'm heading towards "old git"hood so I'm not the target demographic. I expect "bright young things" will love it but then they happily spend all night in town doing whatever they do. I suspect the noise issue is going to escalate enormously - Assembly members have been seeking reassurance for months and it's not evident much has been done. I assume this is because the planning horizons are so long that it can't be scheduled quickly. There are also repeated questions about onward transport connections and toilet provision. Much of this remains unanswered and yet they're entirely predictable issues. A recent Guardian feature on similar all night metro services in various cities showed an almost exclusively young clientel and not many other people. I am therefore left wondering just what level of usage it will get. I am also sceptical about the safety aspects given Brits' notorious inability to handle their drink. I suspect it's already awful at "last train" time but the thoughts of groups of incapable people falling down escalators and off platforms doesn't bare thinking about. I also feel sorry for the staff who'll have to handle these people. Yes, on my now very rare excursions on post-midnight Tube trains, there are usually throwing-up-drunk passengers, sometimes incapable of walking unaided. Without the discipline of having to drink up and leave soon after 11pm it's bound to be worse. And, as you mention, if there aren't available toilets, it's going to be even worse. As it happens, the Night Tube services won't serve anywhere near where I live, so I doubt that I'll be a regular user. But I suspect that the suburban minicab offices at Night Tube stations will do well. |
#5
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#6
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#7
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A recent Guardian feature on similar all night metro services in
various cities showed an almost exclusively young clientel and not many other people. Hi from New York, where the unde, excuse me, subway has run 24/7 since 1904. Some services stop running after midnight, but every station has service all night, most with 3tph or better. In NYC there are certainly people coming home late from clubs, since they can stay open until 0400, but there's also a lot of shift workers and ordinary people doing errands they can't do during the day. Everyone in NYC knows the subway always runs, so I expect the way people use it is different from cities where late night service is a recent or sometime thing. |
#8
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On 2016\03\02 03:26, John Levine wrote:
A recent Guardian feature on similar all night metro services in various cities showed an almost exclusively young clientel and not many other people. Hi from New York, where the unde, excuse me, subway has run 24/7 since 1904. Some services stop running after midnight, but every station has service all night, most with 3tph or better. In NYC there are certainly people coming home late from clubs, since they can stay open until 0400, but there's also a lot of shift workers and ordinary people doing errands they can't do during the day. Everyone in NYC knows the subway always runs, so I expect the way people use it is different from cities where late night service is a recent or sometime thing. Is it safe in all parts of the network at 3am? |
#9
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John Levine wrote:
A recent Guardian feature on similar all night metro services in various cities showed an almost exclusively young clientel and not many other people. Hi from New York, where the unde, excuse me, subway has run 24/7 since 1904. Some services stop running after midnight, but every station has service all night, most with 3tph or better. In NYC there are certainly people coming home late from clubs, since they can stay open until 0400, but there's also a lot of shift workers and ordinary people doing errands they can't do during the day. Everyone in NYC knows the subway always runs, so I expect the way people use it is different from cities where late night service is a recent or sometime thing. And, in London, it will be only on two nights of the week, and only on parts of some lines, so nothing like the service you get in NYC. |
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