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#11
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In message , Dowager
writes To add insult to (potential financial) injury, the ticket inspector was apparently pretty damned rude and intransigent, and wouldn't listen to any sort of reasoned argument. Bloody jobsworths... I would have been 100% behind you until they had a random mob handed inspection at my local station the other week. It's Palmers Green and I arrived there about two Mondays ago to find all the regulars I travel with moping about outside the station and looking less than pleased. The reason? Mob handed ticket inspectors. I went through and got my normal train, but it did make me realise how many people routinely avoid paying the fares. So sorry old mate, tell the significant other to buy a ticket before hand. -- Edward Cowling London UK |
#12
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![]() Barry Salter wrote: On Sat, 8 Apr 2006 18:08:29 +0100, Edward Cowling London UK wrote: In message , Dowager writes To add insult to (potential financial) injury, the ticket inspector was apparently pretty damned rude and intransigent, and wouldn't listen to any sort of reasoned argument. Bloody jobsworths... I would have been 100% behind you until they had a random mob handed inspection at my local station the other week. It's Palmers Green and I arrived there about two Mondays ago to find all the regulars I travel with moping about outside the station and looking less than pleased. The reason? Mob handed ticket inspectors. I can do a couple of examples of "mob handed" ticket inspectors for you: First up, we have the inspector who checked a ticket on board a train, which was fine, but he caught a glimpse of the corner of a Permit to Travel in the wallet too, so he asked to see it. Said PTT had been obtained from a station on a totally different TOC, and the punter had a valid ticket for the train he was on, yet the RPI still PFed the punter in question. This needs a bit of explaining. Do you mean that the passenger started the journey the same day on a different TOC and only bought a ticket for the last bit? If there was time to buy a ticket for the last bit, it's a very different situation from if, say, the latter was a season and the passenger had intended to get a ticket for the first bit of the journey at the first station, without time to queue at the interchange. In previous threads, it's been suggested that you can pay up for the PTT at the end of the full journey, even if you have changed TOC halfway. Because my beef with the fragmented system is knowing what to do if you turn up with half an hour to spare at, say, Dunton Green, intending to buy a ticket for a journey to Winchester, knowing that there won't be time to queue at Waterloo, but the office at Dunton Green is closed. Other posters have suggested that a PTT from Dunton Green would work all the way to Winchester. Then we have the one who withdrew a Gold Card a couple of weeks after it had been issued as the passenger didn't produce a photocard to support it and was generally abusive. When the inspector investigated further, it transpired that it wasn't the (male) passenger's Gold Card at all, but a female passenger's. Cheers, Barry -- Barry Salter, barry at southie dot me dot uk Read uk.* newsgroups? Read uk.net.news.announce! |
#13
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"MIG" wrote in message
oups.com... Barry Salter wrote: .... I can do a couple of examples of "mob handed" ticket inspectors for you: First up, we have the inspector who checked a ticket on board a train, which was fine, but he caught a glimpse of the corner of a Permit to Travel in the wallet too, so he asked to see it. Said PTT had been obtained from a station on a totally different TOC, and the punter had a valid ticket for the train he was on, yet the RPI still PFed the punter in question. This needs a bit of explaining. Do you mean that the passenger started the journey the same day on a different TOC and only bought a ticket for the last bit? If there was time to buy a ticket for the last bit, it's a very different situation from if, say, the latter was a season and the passenger had intended to get a ticket for the first bit of the journey at the first station, without time to queue at the interchange. In previous threads, it's been suggested that you can pay up for the PTT at the end of the full journey, even if you have changed TOC halfway. Because my beef with the fragmented system is knowing what to do if you turn up with half an hour to spare at, say, Dunton Green, intending to buy a ticket for a journey to Winchester, knowing that there won't be time to queue at Waterloo, but the office at Dunton Green is closed. Other posters have suggested that a PTT from Dunton Green would work all the way to Winchester. "This permit must be upgraded to a valid ticket at the first opportunity." according to http://www.nationalrail.co.uk/times_...alty_fares.htm On some TOCs at least, a PTT is valid for only 2 hours. -- David Biddulph |
#14
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![]() David Biddulph wrote: "MIG" wrote in message oups.com... Barry Salter wrote: ... I can do a couple of examples of "mob handed" ticket inspectors for you: First up, we have the inspector who checked a ticket on board a train, which was fine, but he caught a glimpse of the corner of a Permit to Travel in the wallet too, so he asked to see it. Said PTT had been obtained from a station on a totally different TOC, and the punter had a valid ticket for the train he was on, yet the RPI still PFed the punter in question. This needs a bit of explaining. Do you mean that the passenger started the journey the same day on a different TOC and only bought a ticket for the last bit? If there was time to buy a ticket for the last bit, it's a very different situation from if, say, the latter was a season and the passenger had intended to get a ticket for the first bit of the journey at the first station, without time to queue at the interchange. In previous threads, it's been suggested that you can pay up for the PTT at the end of the full journey, even if you have changed TOC halfway. Because my beef with the fragmented system is knowing what to do if you turn up with half an hour to spare at, say, Dunton Green, intending to buy a ticket for a journey to Winchester, knowing that there won't be time to queue at Waterloo, but the office at Dunton Green is closed. Other posters have suggested that a PTT from Dunton Green would work all the way to Winchester. "This permit must be upgraded to a valid ticket at the first opportunity." according to http://www.nationalrail.co.uk/times_...alty_fares.htm On some TOCs at least, a PTT is valid for only 2 hours. In other words, despite turning up in plenty of time to get a ticket at the start of the journey, you are forced to either miss the connection at Waterloo or be penalty-fared. And of course, it's nothing to do with SWT that an SET station wasn't staffed. I face similar situations repeatedly, when travelling from south east London to Brighton etc, having turned up at a local station in plenty of time, and instead of a cross-platform interchange at London Bridge, I have a long walk down to a long queue at the pathetically-staffed ticket office there. Until the relevant authorities put at least as much effort into making tickets available as they do into catching people without a ticket, I will never be on the side of RPOs. As far as I am concerned, they should be staffing ticket offices, not blocking entrances and exits at otherwise unstaffed stations. |
#15
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TedJrr wrote:
I've complained to SWT about this, they simply agreed that the situation is inadequate and sent me £20 worth of travel vouchers!! To pay your next penalty fare with? Colin McKenzie |
#16
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What would happen if a non UK citiozen is wrongly accused and didnt
have the PF on them? |
#17
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