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#21
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And, yes, I do want a seat, preferably near a window, and preferably
upstairs, and preferably not on the sunny side of the bus. Ideally yes, but on a busy service you can surely not expect such luxury? I do not regard, for example, being the 10th person in a queue equating with being the 10th person to get on the bus as a "luxury". I expect it as a matter of course, and am, frankly, surprised that any civilised person would expect to get an advantage in such a situation just because he happened to have pre-paid his ticket. Till I started reading some of the replies on this forum, I had assumed that those who did not observe proper queuing were ill-mannered or simply ignorant. Not for a moment did I think that such people regarded themselves as performing a public service! I now stand corrected (whilst still diagreeing fundamentally with such behaviour). If you were driving a car towards red traffic lights, and there were two available lanes, are you saying you would choose the same lane as the car in front of you for the sake of good manners, or do the sensible thing and choose the lane with fewest vehicles in it (thus maximising the flow through the lights when they change as well as your own progress)? If I were in a queue in the inside lane and spaces were free on the outside lane, I would use the outside lane but only if I felt able to travel at least as fast as the cars I was technically overtaking. If I were driving a bus or van, generally slower-moving, as a matter of courtesy, I would stay in lane so as not to inconvenience faster moving traffic that would be held up by me if I were to change lanes. Marc. |
#22
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Mait001 wrote:
And, yes, I do want a seat, preferably near a window, and preferably upstairs, and preferably not on the sunny side of the bus. Ideally yes, but on a busy service you can surely not expect such luxury? I do not regard, for example, being the 10th person in a queue equating with being the 10th person to get on the bus as a "luxury". I was referring to your expectation that at busy times you would be able to choose a shady window seat upstairs, rather than just getting on the bus. I expect it as a matter of course, and am, frankly, surprised that any civilised person would expect to get an advantage in such a situation just because he happened to have pre-paid his ticket. The problem is that queuing for buses became standard when fares were collected by the conductor after boarding. In those circumstances, it's sensible that the queuing order should determine who boards first and who gets first choice of seats. But now we have some people who have pre-paid and some who need to pay the driver, and without a conductor the boarding process takes longer, thus slowing down the journey. The circumstances have changed. If the bus is near to capacity, then it's up to the driver to decide how many people can get on, and to regulate boarding if necessary. But otherwise, I think it's more civilised for the boarders to get on as quickly as possible. If you are so concerned about sitting in your favourite seat, get a Travelcard or travel outside the peaks. Incidentally, your boarding would be slightly quicker (and your journey cheaper) if you bought a Bus Saver from your local ticket agent instead of handing over cash every time. -- Richard J. (to e-mail me, swap uk and yon in address) |
#23
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The problem is that queuing for buses became standard when fares were
collected by the conductor after boarding. In those circumstances, it's sensible that the queuing order should determine who boards first and who gets first choice of seats. But now we have some people who have pre-paid and some who need to pay the driver, and without a conductor the boarding process takes longer, thus slowing down the journey. The circumstances have changed. Richard, you make valid points. If the bus is near to capacity, then it's up to the driver to decide how many people can get on, and to regulate boarding if necessary. In a rush-hour scramble, it's my experience that drivers are unwilling or unable to exercise any authority over who gets on the bus, except closing the door when the front of the bus (even when there are empty seats etc. upstairs) simply cannot hold any more passengers. But otherwise, I think it's more civilised for the boarders to get on as quickly as possible. If you are so concerned about sitting in your favourite seat, get a Travelcard or travel outside the peaks. Incidentally, your boarding would be slightly quicker (and your journey cheaper) if you bought a Bus Saver from your local ticket agent instead of handing over cash every time. Most of the time I do have a (daily) Travelcard but occasionally, when making a single journey by bus (almost always from Clapham Junction to Fulham by 295 bus) I agree a Saver booklet would be a good idea - but I'd easily lose the booklet after the first couple of journeys. Incidentally, is there a stub that can be kept for tax purposes when all Saver tickets have been used? Marc. |
#24
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#25
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Mait001 wrote:
Most of the time I do have a (daily) Travelcard but occasionally, when making a single journey by bus (almost always from Clapham Junction to Fulham by 295 bus) I agree a Saver booklet would be a good idea - but I'd easily lose the booklet after the first couple of journeys. Incidentally, is there a stub that can be kept for tax purposes when all Saver tickets have been used? You retain the ticket, so I suppose you could produce it as evidence of spending 65p, though there's no indication of date/time/route on it. The Bus Saver (£3.90) consists of a stapled book of 6 cards, each of which looks like this (view with fixed width font such as Courier New): ___ | | | A | |...| / \ / \ \ B / \_____/ where A is the ticket which you retain, and B is the "staff receipt" which you tear off on boarding and hand to the driver/conductor. -- Richard J. (to e-mail me, swap uk and yon in address) |
#26
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Well, you can retain the ticket stubs from the book - but they don't
carry a price on them. They are individually numbered though. I suppose you could ask the Pass agent for a receipt! Incidentally, according to the early publicity for Pay Before You Board you can buy Savers from selected Zone 1 tube stations! Rob. Thanks, Rob. Marc. |
#27
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Neil Williams wrote:
On 30 Jul 2003 15:43:12 GMT, (Mait001) wrote: But what you say is correct: queueing is one of those civilising feratures of British life we ought not to surrender lightly. Where it provides a service improvement, yes. I personally dislike the use of multiple queues in banks, post offices etc - and very much approve of the new electronic systems which are much fairer. I also dislike McD's intentional use of multiple queues as an anti-British-culture thing. I bet large supermarkets (with 30 checkouts or whatever) drive you nuts then. Are Sainsbury's being anti-British by having a separate queue for each heavy-duty checkout? Hmmm. |
#28
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Richard J. wrote:
Mait001 wrote: And, yes, I do want a seat, preferably near a window, and preferably upstairs, and preferably not on the sunny side of the bus. Ideally yes, but on a busy service you can surely not expect such luxury? Just do what I do if you think being unable to board the bus due to it becoming full will be a problem (or you want a specific seat) - walk one stop back up the route. Works for me on the 9 every time. |
#29
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#30
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On Sat, 02 Aug 2003 19:22:13 +0100 John Ray wrote:
} Matthew Malthouse wrote: } } } There are two elements to the boarding question. } } In your view good manners requires a queue and an absolute order of } boarding. For you this has the advantage of increasing the chance that } you will get the seat you wish for. } } In the view of others the priority is rapid loading to minimise wait } times and thus speed the whole journey, improving the lot of everyone } using the service. } } In the view of some others, principally school children, the priority is } rapid loading to minimise their own waiting time and devil take the } hindmost. I doubt if they give any thought to the overall journey time } or, for that matter, "improving the lot of everyone using the service". Yet the effect would be the same irrespective of the kids particular motivations. Matthew -- Il est important d'être un homme ou une femme en colère; le jour où nous quitte la colère, ou le désir, c'est cuit. - Barbara http://www.calmeilles.co.uk/ |
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