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On 12 Nov, 20:06, Arthur Figgis wrote:
Mizter T wrote: So here are my comments on this... Since beginning of this year all point-to-point *non-season* tickets - i.e. single and day returns - for journeys wholly within London (i.e. zones 1-6) have had their prices set on a zonal basis (although they are still issued on a named origin and destination basis and validity). At the time we were told that season tickets would also eventually also be priced on this bases. Southern seem to have annual seasons priced on a zonal basis. I buy an annual season for a journey entirely in one zone, so rather than buy a ticket for the trip I actually do most days, I buy a season ticket between the last stations within the zone, so if I ever need to go to them it costs me nowt extra. The first time I bought such a ticket the staff seemed a bit surprised, but they weren't this year and I guess it must be pretty common by now - you'd be daft not to. I've also found a bit of a validity loophole, which the staff accept is valid, but I'm keeping quiet on that one :-) I believe Southern have been pricing all their tickets, season or otherwise, on a zonal basis since January 2005. When I realised that's what they were doing I certainly saw the potential for doing exactly what you do - i.e. making the most of your money by getting in as much trackage on your season ticket as possible. If such zonal pricing is adopted on a London-wide basis I'd expect many other people to clock on to this possibility as well! Regarding routes in south London - there is certainly a lot of potential for getting as much "extra validity" as possible when it comes to choosing a season ticket. I have to say you have piqued my interest with whatever cunning scheme you've come up with! (So please feel free to email me off-group to share it on a totally confidential basis!) The main thing that the report lacks clarity on is whether rail-only season tickets are to be withdrawn completely and commuters moved over on to Travelcard seasons, or whether rail-seasons might continue to exist, albeit priced on a zonal basis. A couple of years or so ago they abolished single zone annual seasons, so anyone needing say a z5 annual travelcard had to get a z4-5 (or z5-6) instead, which meant a massive increase in price. At that point I switched to a point-to-point rail only season instead. A single zone travelcard was worth the extra cost for the "free" bus and tram use, but a two-zone travelcard was so much more expensive it was only worthwhile for very frequent travellers. Yes. There wasn't a great deal of complaint about that change, less so than I would have thought. I guess that the number of people who previously had a single zone Travelcard was perhaps not that great. Of course for some people PAYG has become an option worth considering even for commuting purposes. Reading between the lines the report would appear to presume the former course of action - i.e. withdrawal of rail-only season tickets altogether. OTOH, if the Evening Standard reported that the moon was made of rock, I would get a second opinion from a cheese expert. Well, they need to sell their papers somehow I suppose. But one does become somewhat accustomed to the shock horror Evening Standard headline that transmutes overnight into something far milder by the time it reaches the morning papers! |
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