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Simon Lee December 13th 05 04:50 PM

Piccadilly Line Northbound Disruption
 
I was heading Northbound on the Piccadilly Line this morning at around
00:10hrs.
The train stopped at Holborn and stayed there for 10 minutes before I heard
an announcement amongst people's conversations regarding a passenger action
causing the delay and we may be there for some time.
As I was only travelling to Kings Cross, I left the train and got a
bus/walked the rest of the distance.
Does anybody know what precisely happened to cause this disruption?



Paul Corfield December 13th 05 08:15 PM

Piccadilly Line Northbound Disruption
 
On Tue, 13 Dec 2005 17:50:19 -0000, "Simon Lee"
wrote:

I was heading Northbound on the Piccadilly Line this morning at around
00:10hrs.
The train stopped at Holborn and stayed there for 10 minutes before I heard
an announcement amongst people's conversations regarding a passenger action
causing the delay and we may be there for some time.
As I was only travelling to Kings Cross, I left the train and got a
bus/walked the rest of the distance.
Does anybody know what precisely happened to cause this disruption?


If memory serves a person fell on to the tracks. They had apparently
been to a hostelry before hand. No trains were involved but obviously
the power had to go off and the person had to be removed and treated by
the emergency services.

Happens rather a lot at this time of year - unfortunately :-(
--
Paul C


Admits to working for London Underground!

Hobbayne December 16th 05 07:50 PM

Piccadilly Line Northbound Disruption
 
yes, and not only during the evening revelries, but during the daytime
as well in the "silly season!"


Endymion Ponsonby-Withermoor December 17th 05 02:21 PM

Piccadilly Line Northbound Disruption
 

"Paul Corfield" wrote in message
...

If memory serves a person fell on to the tracks. They had apparently
been to a hostelry before hand. No trains were involved but obviously
the power had to go off and the person had to be removed and treated by
the emergency services.


If it were up to me, I'd just leave them there to either get themselves
off the track or to get cut-up by a passing train.
Ordinary people should not have to be inconvenienced because some
prat falls onto the track. It's not as if anyone was forcing them to do it.

Richard [in PE12]



Steve December 17th 05 06:26 PM

Piccadilly Line Northbound Disruption
 
On Sat, 17 Dec 2005 15:21:37 +0000, Endymion Ponsonby-Withermoor wrote:


"Paul Corfield" wrote in message
...

If memory serves a person fell on to the tracks. They had apparently
been to a hostelry before hand. No trains were involved but obviously
the power had to go off and the person had to be removed and treated by
the emergency services.


If it were up to me, I'd just leave them there to either get themselves
off the track or to get cut-up by a passing train. Ordinary people should
not have to be inconvenienced because some prat falls onto the track. It's
not as if anyone was forcing them to do it.


Most illnesses are preventable with a decent lifestyle, lets close half
our hospitals too.

Paul Corfield December 17th 05 09:07 PM

Piccadilly Line Northbound Disruption
 
On Sat, 17 Dec 2005 15:21:37 +0000, "Endymion Ponsonby-Withermoor"
wrote:


"Paul Corfield" wrote in message
.. .

If memory serves a person fell on to the tracks. They had apparently
been to a hostelry before hand. No trains were involved but obviously
the power had to go off and the person had to be removed and treated by
the emergency services.


If it were up to me, I'd just leave them there to either get themselves
off the track or to get cut-up by a passing train.
Ordinary people should not have to be inconvenienced because some
prat falls onto the track. It's not as if anyone was forcing them to do it.


While I understand the sentiment behind your remarks would you apply the
same logic to someone having a heart attack on a train, someone who
loses their balance and falls on the track due a stroke or someone
having an epileptic fit? LUL has a duty to operate a safe railway and
while it cannot prevent people's stupidity it does have to act
professionally to "pick up the pieces" from accidents whether self
inflicted or not.

You could argue that society shouldn't deal with the consequences of
traffic accidents and no one should be delayed as a result of those - I
assume you aren't saying that given that you wouldn't want to be left in
a bloody heap by the roadside if someone knocked you down and badly
injured you?
--
Paul C


Admits to working for London Underground!


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