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#1
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Ok last saturday my friend and I hopped on a bendy bus outside
Selfridges to go a few stops down Oxford Street to Poland street (She had a bad leg we're not just lazy!) However when we got to Oxford circus the rest of the street was blocked off and the bus was sent on a diversion down Regent street. Fine we thought we'll get off at the next stop. However three stops later and no sign of the bus stopping my friend started getting very anxious (This is when I found out she was a bit claustrophobic) Anyway she asked the driver if we could get off at the next stop but he refused saying he wasnt allowed to stop at any stop on the diversion. She was then joined by heavily pregnant woman who also needed to get off but still the driver said he couldnt let anyone off and he said he had disabled the emergancy door releases. After a lot more harranging he eventually opened the doors on Shaftsbury Avenue about twenty minutes after the diversion had started. Now I know drivers cant let people off anywhere other than the official stops but surely thats not applicable where a bus is on diversion? Basically we were forced to stay on the bus againest our will for twenty minutes as it had got caught up in the regent st traffic. I got off the bus feeling very self rightous but what are peoples thoughts on this? |
#2
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kytelly wrote:
Ok last saturday my friend and I hopped on a bendy bus outside Selfridges to go a few stops down Oxford Street to Poland street (She had a bad leg we're not just lazy!) However when we got to Oxford circus the rest of the street was blocked off and the bus was sent on a diversion down Regent street. Fine we thought we'll get off at the next stop. However three stops later and no sign of the bus stopping my friend started getting very anxious (This is when I found out she was a bit claustrophobic) Anyway she asked the driver if we could get off at the next stop but he refused saying he wasnt allowed to stop at any stop on the diversion. She was then joined by heavily pregnant woman who also needed to get off but still the driver said he couldnt let anyone off and he said he had disabled the emergancy door releases. After a lot more harranging he eventually opened the doors on Shaftsbury Avenue about twenty minutes after the diversion had started. Now I know drivers cant let people off anywhere other than the official stops but surely thats not applicable where a bus is on diversion? Basically we were forced to stay on the bus againest our will for twenty minutes as it had got caught up in the regent st traffic. I got off the bus feeling very self rightous but what are peoples thoughts on this? Each diversion seems to have its own rules. I've also got stuck on a bus using that diversion, which is frustrating when you're sitting in traffic and realise that you could have walked past the diversion more quickly. Other times, drivers *are* allowed to serve stops on diversion; this happened with the Battersea Bridge closure when some 49s were diverted via Wandsworth Bridge, and when Broad Sanctuary in Westminster was closed for roadworks and buses were diverted along Artillery Road. My guess at the reasoning behind this is that on central London streets with a lot of bus services and multiple stops per location, the confusion in dropping off and picking up passengers can compound traffic congestion and cause further delays to undiverted buses. The driver was right to say he couldn't let you off because those were the direction he had been given by TfL via his bus company. However, I'm not sure about disabling the emergency door releases - that sounds a bit drastic (because what if there were an emergency...?). -- Dave Arquati Imperial College, SW7 www.alwaystouchout.com - Transport projects in London |
#3
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The driver was right to say he couldn't let you off because those were
the direction he had been given by TfL via his bus company. However, I'm not sure about disabling the emergency door releases - that sounds a bit drastic (because what if there were an emergency...?). Is it actually possible - not only does such a button actually exist, but even if it does, can he/she *legally* do it? -- The presence of this signature shows that this message has been scanned for misplaced apostrophes by the common sense scanner. However, some apostrophes may not be included where required due to boredom, gross negligence, budget cuts, incompetence, stupidity or just plain laziness. http://www.railwaysonline.co.uk |
#4
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![]() Dave Arquati wrote: kytelly wrote: Ok last saturday my friend and I hopped on a bendy bus outside Selfridges to go a few stops down Oxford Street to Poland street (She had a bad leg we're not just lazy!) However when we got to Oxford circus the rest of the street was blocked off and the bus was sent on a diversion down Regent street. Fine we thought we'll get off at the next stop. However three stops later and no sign of the bus stopping my friend started getting very anxious (This is when I found out she was a bit claustrophobic) Anyway she asked the driver if we could get off at the next stop but he refused saying he wasnt allowed to stop at any stop on the diversion. She was then joined by heavily pregnant woman who also needed to get off but still the driver said he couldnt let anyone off and he said he had disabled the emergancy door releases. After a lot more harranging he eventually opened the doors on Shaftsbury Avenue about twenty minutes after the diversion had started. Now I know drivers cant let people off anywhere other than the official stops but surely thats not applicable where a bus is on diversion? Basically we were forced to stay on the bus againest our will for twenty minutes as it had got caught up in the regent st traffic. I got off the bus feeling very self rightous but what are peoples thoughts on this? Each diversion seems to have its own rules. I've also got stuck on a bus using that diversion, which is frustrating when you're sitting in traffic and realise that you could have walked past the diversion more quickly. Other times, drivers *are* allowed to serve stops on diversion; this happened with the Battersea Bridge closure when some 49s were diverted via Wandsworth Bridge, and when Broad Sanctuary in Westminster was closed for roadworks and buses were diverted along Artillery Road. My guess at the reasoning behind this is that on central London streets with a lot of bus services and multiple stops per location, the confusion in dropping off and picking up passengers can compound traffic congestion and cause further delays to undiverted buses. The driver was right to say he couldn't let you off because those were the direction he had been given by TfL via his bus company. However, I'm not sure about disabling the emergency door releases - that sounds a bit drastic (because what if there were an emergency...?). I was in a suburb where a diversion took the buses down the parallel main road to the usual one. My home was between the two main roads (both of which had bus routes) so being let off in either main road would do. But I was forced all the way to the end of the diversion. This was not a busy central London situation with lots of confused tourists, it was just people with heavy shopping being abducted to somewhere difficult to get home from. Not very helpful or considerate. But it's all a bit academic now, since the policy seems to be not to let people on or off at all, in the interests of reliability. |
#5
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Dave Arquati ) gurgled happily, sounding much like they
were saying : However when we got to Oxford circus the rest of the street was blocked off and the bus was sent on a diversion down Regent street. Fine we thought we'll get off at the next stop. However three stops later and no sign of the bus stopping my friend started getting very anxious (This is when I found out she was a bit claustrophobic) Anyway she asked the driver if we could get off at the next stop but he refused saying he wasnt allowed to stop at any stop on the diversion. She was then joined by heavily pregnant woman who also needed to get off but still the driver said he couldnt let anyone off and he said he had disabled the emergancy door releases. Each diversion seems to have its own rules. I've also got stuck on a bus using that diversion, which is frustrating when you're sitting in traffic and realise that you could have walked past the diversion more quickly. Ah, if only there was such a thing as a bus with an open platform you could just hop on and off as required... |
#6
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Joe Patrick wrote:
Is it actually possible - not only does such a button actually exist, No, but (assuming it wasn't a bendy, where I believe the releases aren't just another door button but actually unlock something) the driver could sit there and keep pressing the close button. I've seen this done to stop kids getting on after messing with the release button on the outside. Neil |
#7
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On 15 Aug 2006 02:54:55 -0700, "kytelly" wrote:
Ok last saturday my friend and I hopped on a bendy bus outside Selfridges to go a few stops down Oxford Street to Poland street (She had a bad leg we're not just lazy!) However when we got to Oxford circus the rest of the street was blocked off and the bus was sent on a diversion down Regent street. Fine we thought we'll get off at the next stop. However three stops later and no sign of the bus stopping my friend started getting very anxious (This is when I found out she was a bit claustrophobic) Anyway she asked the driver if we could get off at the next stop but he refused saying he wasnt allowed to stop at any stop on the diversion. She was then joined by heavily pregnant woman who also needed to get off but still the driver said he couldnt let anyone off and he said he had disabled the emergancy door releases. After a lot more harranging he eventually opened the doors on Shaftsbury Avenue about twenty minutes after the diversion had started. Now I know drivers cant let people off anywhere other than the official stops but surely thats not applicable where a bus is on diversion? Basically we were forced to stay on the bus againest our will for twenty minutes as it had got caught up in the regent st traffic. I got off the bus feeling very self rightous but what are peoples thoughts on this? I have been held hostage on one of my local routes (run by Arriva) when a diversion was in place. I was absolutely furious because I had done what the official London Buses posters had told me to - get off the tube one stop early and catch a diverted bus. I immediately rang London Buses, once I was released from my mobile prison, to complain. The LB representative called Arriva Buses and had a radio instruction issued to remind drivers of the ruling. On planned diversions - as yours was because it was advertised on the TfL website in advance - then drivers MUST stop at all stops. The driver in your case was wrong. When an unplanned diversion arises - e.g. police close the road - then drivers do not have to stop at all stops on the diversion but most will be sensible if people wish to alight to continue their journeys on foot. I also wrote to Arriva to ask about how they disseminated information about diversions to their drivers as it was evident that Arriva had not done what they were supposed to do while First and Stagecoach buses that were diverted did stop when requested to do so. I suggest you complain immediately to London Buses Customer Services. Given the large volume of planned diversions on bus and tube services at weekends it is essential that the rules are followed properly at all times otherwise the transport service will descend into more chaos. -- Paul C Admits to working for London Underground! |
#8
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On 15 Aug 2006 02:54:55 -0700, "kytelly" wrote:
Ok last saturday my friend and I hopped on a bendy bus outside Selfridges to go a few stops down Oxford Street to Poland street (She had a bad leg we're not just lazy!) However when we got to Oxford circus the rest of the street was blocked off and the bus was sent on a diversion down Regent street. Fine we thought we'll get off at the next stop. However three stops later and no sign of the bus stopping my friend started getting very anxious (This is when I found out she was a bit claustrophobic) Anyway she asked the driver if we could get off at the next stop but he refused saying he wasnt allowed to stop at any stop on the diversion. She was then joined by heavily pregnant woman who also needed to get off but still the driver said he couldnt let anyone off and he said he had disabled the emergancy door releases. After a lot more harranging he eventually opened the doors on Shaftsbury Avenue about twenty minutes after the diversion had started. Now I know drivers cant let people off anywhere other than the official stops but surely thats not applicable where a bus is on diversion? Basically we were forced to stay on the bus againest our will for twenty minutes as it had got caught up in the regent st traffic. I got off the bus feeling very self rightous but what are peoples thoughts on this? I'd be dropping a strongly worded email to TfL with the bus route number and journey plate number. The *very least* the driver should have done is made an announcement at the last stop that was on the normal route, that the bus was about to divert and passengers would not be able to get off on the diversion. All the bendy buses have the facility for the driver to make an amplified announcement. If I had been abducted in the way you describe with no warning announcement, the emergency exit button would definitely have been tested at the next traffic lights. I don't believe it can be disabled but if it was just pull the door anyway or get some bloke to do it, they're not that strongly closed that you cannot force them open. |
#9
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Paul Corfield wrote:
(OP snipped) I have been held hostage on one of my local routes (run by Arriva) when a diversion was in place. I was absolutely furious because I had done what the official London Buses posters had told me to - get off the tube one stop early and catch a diverted bus. I immediately rang London Buses, once I was released from my mobile prison, to complain. The LB representative called Arriva Buses and had a radio instruction issued to remind drivers of the ruling. On planned diversions - as yours was because it was advertised on the TfL website in advance - then drivers MUST stop at all stops. The driver in your case was wrong. When an unplanned diversion arises - e.g. police close the road - then drivers do not have to stop at all stops on the diversion but most will be sensible if people wish to alight to continue their journeys on foot. I also wrote to Arriva to ask about how they disseminated information about diversions to their drivers as it was evident that Arriva had not done what they were supposed to do while First and Stagecoach buses that were diverted did stop when requested to do so. I suggest you complain immediately to London Buses Customer Services. Given the large volume of planned diversions on bus and tube services at weekends it is essential that the rules are followed properly at all times otherwise the transport service will descend into more chaos. -- Paul C Thanks for the info - I've always been a bit confused about what happens during bus diversions, it always seemed a bit random (to me) whether the bus stops or not. Now I know that buses on planned diversions should stop at intermediate bus stops on request. It'd be great if drivers could give an announcement over the PA system - if available - before a diversion occurs. I've found myself on number 12's going south the two past weekends which have had a short diversion over Lambeth Bridge instead of Waterloo Bridge (closed for roadworks southbound only). A wave of confusion sweeps across the bus when this happens (it's interesting to watch people's faces!) and I find myself explaining to nearby fellow passengers that it's just a diversion. I guess the fact they might be mildly intoxicated doesn't necessarily help! I also find that in a traffic jam or during a diversion a driver will often open the front door for you if you ask politely and - crucially - only ask when it is safe and sensible for someone to jump out the front i.e. the traffic jam isn't about to start moving, the lights aren't about to go green, the bus is fairly near the kerb, there isn't a plethora of bicyclists/motorcyclists coming up on the inside etc. I guess it also helps that I look like I will jump out quickly rather than take loads of time getting out the door. |
#10
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kytelly wrote:
the driver said he had disabled the emergancy door releases. That has to be illegal! If he'd had a heart attack, how would anyone have got off? |
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