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#31
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On Jul 21, 2:14 pm, "Recliner" wrote:
Well, Oyster does encourage journeys to start before 7am, after 7pm and after 9:30am. If "encourage" is a euphamism for blatantly ripping people off during morning peak hours then yes. Though this has been going on for years. Presumably its a nice little money spinner screwing extra cash out of tourists and other people without season tickets. Notice how there are no big signs up warning people of the extra cost in the mornings. Poor old Pierre arrives on the early morning eurostar and then gets taken for another ride by LUL before he's even stepped on a train without even knowing it. B2003 |
#32
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On Mon, 21 Jul 2008 14:14:32 +0100, "Recliner"
wrote: Well, Oyster does encourage journeys to start before 7am, after 7pm and after 9:30am. I suppose it could have a more complicated structure that specifically raised zone 1 prices in the peaks, but even fewer people would understand it then. And the nature of Oyster, especially with PAYG, distracts you away from the price anyway, just like post-payment of electricity bills[1] and the likes. [1] I've long thought that one of the best ways to reduce home electricity consumption (to benefit the environment) would be to mandate the use of pre-payment card meters as the only method of payment. Neil -- Neil Williams Put my first name before the at to reply. |
#33
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![]() wrote in message ... On 19 Jul, 02:28, "Jonathan" wrote: Public transport has always been awful; and over the past couple of years I've noticed that more and more often I'm squashed inside a bus or train, with hardly enough room to breathe, because the company decided to cancel earlier buses or trains without notice, and without making any alternative arrangements. If there was a decent tube system in south london some of the pressure would be taken off the overground trains. But the amount of overground lines has always been used as an excuse for not further extending the tube south of the river rather than thinking the services could complement each other. The its-difficult-to-tunnel excuse no longer holds water in the 21st century so I guess the only obstacle now would be money as it ever was - we have tight fisted victorians to thank for the piddly mainline loading gauge meaning we can't have double deck trains , and the frankly farcical loading gauge on the deep level tube lines. B2003 Lots of people I've spoken to about the petition have made lots of seemingly excellent suggestions as to how public transport might be improved in the long term. But this misses the point of the petition, which is that transport operating companies seem to routinely pull trains, buses and tubes out of service, without putting any sort of substitute in place. The net result being that drivers of services after large gaps attempt to solve the problem of the backlog of passengers by cramming as many people into vehicles as possible. Ultimately, changes to the system will have to be made, and someone will have to spend some money upgrading the transport system we have at present. But even if money is spent, unless transport operating companies stop pulling vehicles out of service without notice and without providing a substitute service, then passengers will continue to be frequently jam-packed into carriages to a point where they almost cannot breathe, and cannot exit without extreme difficulty. This is the point of the petition. I believe that that sort of gross-overcrowding situation is dangerous, and will result in people being badly hurt or possibly even killed at some point in the future. -- Jonathan http://petitions.pm.gov.uk/sardines/ |
#34
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On Sat, 26 Jul 2008 04:46:23 +0100, "Jonathan" wrote:
I believe that that sort of gross-overcrowding situation is dangerous, and will result in people being badly hurt or possibly even killed at some point in the future. As some have pointed out, and I will as well, it is unpleasant but not really dangerous. It is true that if something happened to the vehicle concerned more people would be killed than otherwise, but that's just because the vehicle *contains* more people. I don't believe a given person in a train carriage containing 150 in a crush-load would be any more at risk of being killed in such an accident than if it contained 70 all in seats. Indeed, they might be a bit safer, because the crush-load might prevent them being thrown the length of the train in a collision. There is the issue of those who can't stand for long or can't handle the high temperatures you might get, but the best option for them if they know that is to get off and wait for the next one. With your suggestion, realistically that's what they'd end up having to do anyway. Now, I don't think crush-loading is something that should be happening day-to-day as a matter of course, and there are some routes where it is that should be sorted out with more capacity. (There are some such bus routes in Central London which really should get a few more buses per hour taken from other very quiet routes, for instance). But if it is necessary to clear disruption, it isn't harmful and it happens the world over. Neil -- Neil Williams Put my first name before the at to reply. |
#35
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On Sat, 26 Jul 2008 04:46:23 +0100, "Jonathan" wrote:
wrote in message ... On 19 Jul, 02:28, "Jonathan" wrote: Public transport has always been awful; and over the past couple of years I've noticed that more and more often I'm squashed inside a bus or train, with hardly enough room to breathe, because the company decided to cancel earlier buses or trains without notice, and without making any alternative arrangements. If there was a decent tube system in south london some of the pressure would be taken off the overground trains. But the amount of overground lines has always been used as an excuse for not further extending the tube south of the river rather than thinking the services could complement each other. The its-difficult-to-tunnel excuse no longer holds water in the 21st century so I guess the only obstacle now would be money as it ever was - we have tight fisted victorians to thank for the piddly mainline loading gauge meaning we can't have double deck trains , and the frankly farcical loading gauge on the deep level tube lines. B2003 Lots of people I've spoken to about the petition have made lots of seemingly excellent suggestions as to how public transport might be improved in the long term. So what? In almost every case good and improved public transport will create a surge in demand on not only the new service but on parts of the network that feed it. Has the Jubilee Line Extension really eased congestion or has it opened up new corridors and journey possibilities that didn't exist before? Will London Overground and the ELLX create sublime travelling conditions for orbital journeys for decades or will there be a huge surge in demand within 18-24 months of it opening? I'd suggest it would be latter. But this misses the point of the petition, which is that transport operating companies seem to routinely pull trains, buses and tubes out of service, without putting any sort of substitute in place. The net result being that drivers of services after large gaps attempt to solve the problem of the backlog of passengers by cramming as many people into vehicles as possible. Sorry but things go wrong for a whole pile of legitimate reasons and sometimes due to complete cock ups. This happens to Tesco and Homebase just like it happens to bus and rail companies. The consequence in retail is that you can't buy what you want, you can't pay using your preferred method of payment or else the frozen chicken is a strange shade of green and is climbing out of the freezer. Nonetheless there isn't a contingency range of stock or a secondary debit card payment system. You go somewhere else or pay by cash. Only in the chicken example might you be offered some compensation and a replacement - due to legal issues and the desire to maintain a good corporate image. Bus and train companies just do not have loads of vehicles and drivers just waiting to spring into action to fill gaps. Most of the time there will be no issue at all and certainly not the "safety risk" you seem to imagine is waiting to leap out from behind a hedge and to inflict death and destruction on standing passengers. Have you travelled in the Far East? I have and can tell you that travelling conditions there are far more crushed than here. They have extremely efficient and reliable trains and well run bus networks and yet there is no demand for constraints and restrictions due to safety concerns. It is recognised that travel at peak times will mean a crush and places like Tokyo, Hong Kong and Singapore all have well planned, medium - long term strategies to keep building new lines, extensions, resignalling and to buy more rolling stock. I'm of the opinion that all of their good work will still result in overcrowding because the extra capacity facilitates easier access to work and leisure facilities and thus people travel more. Good and improved public transport also triggers further economic development which creates more reasons for people to travel - it's a viscious cycle but a positive one overall. Ultimately, changes to the system will have to be made, and someone will have to spend some money upgrading the transport system we have at present. Fine - I completely agree with that but first I'd like the country to work out some objectives and priorities for what it wants its transport network to do and an agreed, long term way of delivering those objectives and priorities. Until we do this we'll keep getting our repeated lurches from left to right in our transport policies which gets us nowhere. But even if money is spent, unless transport operating companies stop pulling vehicles out of service without notice and without providing a substitute service, then passengers will continue to be frequently jam-packed into carriages to a point where they almost cannot breathe, and cannot exit without extreme difficulty. Sorry but it's been like this for decades and will continue to be so. As others have mentioned, the Central Line in the peak is as badly crowded now as it was back in the 80s when I first used it and I dare say back several decades before then when it had a bigger catchment area as other tube and rail lines weren't in use. You are demanding a panacea that is undeliverable. The alternative is a fully reserved tube, bus and train service which is a palpable nonsense because it is unmanageable in the context of almost all railway services (TGV and Eurostar being particular exceptions). It would also be hugely unpopular with the public because some people prefer to stand and it would make journey times longer, the service less attractive and also make the cost of any new line or extension unsustainable. The final result would be to worsen safety because people would transfer to the roads and use cars which are less safe than public transport. This is the point of the petition. I believe that that sort of gross-overcrowding situation is dangerous, and will result in people being badly hurt or possibly even killed at some point in the future. You clearly do not understand what the safety regulations say in respect of the (bus and rail) transport industry. There is no requirement to provide seats for everyone - in fact just the opposite is allowed. There is a test of reasonable practicality in terms of safety improvement and that invokes whether it is value for money to spend the money. I have to say that your perception of danger is out of kilter with that of many other people and to try to use such an incorrect perception as the basis of arguing for transport improvement is unlikely to secure any improvement whatsoever. There are loads of other very good arguments for improving public transport - I suggest you employ those instead. -- Paul C Admits to working for London Underground! |
#36
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In message , Jonathan
writes Public transport has always been awful; and over the past couple of years I've noticed that more and more often I'm squashed inside a bus or train, with hardly enough room to breathe, because the company decided to cancel earlier buses or trains without notice, and without making any alternative arrangements. Because I believe that this gross-overcrowding is a serious risk to public health and safety, I've created a petition at http://petitions.pm.gov.uk/sardines/ asking for action to be taken to stop this gross-overcrowding. Therefore, if anyone else here shares my concerns, please co-sign the petition, and if possible, please pass the message along to a few friends. If you're stupid enough to cram yourself on an already full bus or train, you only have yourself to blame - it's not like anyone's stood at the stop forcing you to get on. -- Steve Fitzgerald has now left the building. You will find him in London's Docklands, E16, UK (please use the reply to address for email) |
#37
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![]() On Jul 27, 7:27 pm, Steve Fitzgerald ] wrote: Therefore, if anyone else here shares my concerns, please co-sign the petition, and if possible, please pass the message along to a few friends. If you're stupid enough to cram yourself on an already full bus or train, you only have yourself to blame - it's not like anyone's stood at the stop forcing you to get on. So you don't have to be in work at a certain time? No one would force themselves on a bus or train if they knew the next one was coming 2 minutes later and was almost empty. However thats generally not the case is it. B2003 |
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