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Do platform tickets still exist for (i) tube and (ii) overground please?
Sorry if this has been asked and answered but I couldn't find the
answers in this group or elsewhere. Platform tickets are still mentioned in http://www.tfl.gov.uk/assets/downloa...e_May_2009.pdf in Section 9: "If you are in a compulsory ticket area you must have a ticket or Oyster card that is valid and available for the whole of the journey you are making. If you are not making a journey and you do not hold a ticket or Oyster card that is both valid and available for travel you must buy a Platform ticket where it is possible to do so. Otherwise you will be liable to pay a Penalty fare or you may be prosecuted." What I cannot find is when/where they are and are not available; how one buys a platform ticket where they are available;and the price. It does not help that there is no mention of them in other publications for the tube and overground (eg http://www.tfl.gov.uk/assets/downloa...-zones1-6.pdf). Also, is a platform ticket *always* available when barriers are in use? If not, how am I supposed to access the platform without using my Oyster PAYG and so incurring the cost of a one zone journey when touching in and out at the same station? -- R |
Do platform tickets still exist for (i) tube and (ii) overground please?
In message , at
13:08:01 on Sat, 4 Jul 2009, neverwas remarked: Sorry if this has been asked and answered but I couldn't find the answers in this group or elsewhere. Platform tickets are still mentioned in http://www.tfl.gov.uk/assets/downloa...e_May_2009.pdf in Section 9: "If you are in a compulsory ticket area you must have a ticket or Oyster card that is valid and available for the whole of the journey you are making. If you are not making a journey and you do not hold a ticket or Oyster card that is both valid and available for travel you must buy a Platform ticket where it is possible to do so. Otherwise you will be liable to pay a Penalty fare or you may be prosecuted." What I cannot find is when/where they are and are not available; how one buys a platform ticket where they are available;and the price. It does not help that there is no mention of them in other publications for the tube and overground (eg http://www.tfl.gov.uk/assets/downloa...-zones1-6.pdf). As far as I can tell, they are almost completely extinct. Also, is a platform ticket *always* available when barriers are in use? If not, how am I supposed to access the platform without using my Oyster PAYG and so incurring the cost of a one zone journey when touching in and out at the same station? I expect people would say "why do you want to do that?" It might be possible to get the fare refunded at the ticket office, if you had a plausible excuse as to why you decided to abandon your 'journey'. -- Roland Perry |
Do platform tickets still exist for (i) tube and (ii) overground please?
I expect people would say "why do you want to do that?"
Perhaps I should have said that even in these days of suitcases with wheels there are people who appreciate help with them - especially at stations which are not step-free. (Two I have direct experience of are Homerton and Bromley-By-Bow. And yes, that's no doubt what I deserve for living in Hackney.) -- R |
Do platform tickets still exist for (i) tube and (ii) overground please?
In message , at
13:31:02 on Sat, 4 Jul 2009, neverwas remarked: I expect people would say "why do you want to do that?" Perhaps I should have said that even in these days of suitcases with wheels there are people who appreciate help with them - especially at stations which are not step-free. I know that's a "reasonable excuse" in some people's eyes. But they don't allow it, for example, at airports, where you could make the excuse of helping an elderly person up the stairs into the plane. Restrictions are constantly nibbling away at what we are allowed to do, and lack of platform tickets are but one recent example of this. -- Roland Perry |
Do platform tickets still exist for (i) tube and (ii) overground please?
In article ,
(neverwas) wrote: Sorry if this has been asked and answered but I couldn't find the answers in this group or elsewhere. Platform tickets are still mentioned in http://www.tfl.gov.uk/assets/downloa...Guide_May_2009. in Section 9: "If you are in a compulsory ticket area you must have a ticket or Oyster card that is valid and available for the whole of the journey you are making. If you are not making a journey and you do not hold a ticket or Oyster card that is both valid and available for travel you must buy a Platform ticket where it is possible to do so. Otherwise you will be liable to pay a Penalty fare or you may be prosecuted." What I cannot find is when/where they are and are not available; how one buys a platform ticket where they are available;and the price. It does not help that there is no mention of them in other publications for the tube and overground (eg http://www.tfl.gov.uk/assets/downloa...-zones1-6.pdf). Also, is a platform ticket *always* available when barriers are in use? If not, how am I supposed to access the platform without using my Oyster PAYG and so incurring the cost of a one zone journey when touching in and out at the same station? At Cambridge I ask and am let through the barriers without a ticket every time. -- Colin Rosenstiel |
Do platform tickets still exist for (i) tube and (ii) overground please?
wrote in message ... In article , (neverwas) wrote: Also, is a platform ticket *always* available when barriers are in use? If not, how am I supposed to access the platform without using my Oyster PAYG and so incurring the cost of a one zone journey when touching in and out at the same station? At Cambridge I ask and am let through the barriers without a ticket every time. -- Colin Rosenstiel I have often had to help an elderley relative on and off the train at Reading and I ask at the barrier and am given a laminated permit to go on the platform for a temporary period which I then hand back when I leave the platform. I do show my priv card, whether that makes a difference I don't know, Lawrie |
Do platform tickets still exist for (i) tube and (ii) overground please?
"Lawrie" wrote:
I have often had to help an elderley relative on and off the train at Reading and I ask at the barrier and am given a laminated permit to go on the platform for a temporary period which I then hand back when I leave the platform. I do show my priv card, whether that makes a difference I don't know. They aren't usually given out at Reading for people who want to watch/photograph trains, only for people who have a demonstrable need to meet/greet or see off a relative/friend. |
Do platform tickets still exist for (i) tube and (ii) overground please?
|
Do platform tickets still exist for (i) tube and (ii) overground please?
|
Do platform tickets still exist for (i) tube and (ii) overgroundplease?
On Jul 5, 8:23*pm, Tony Polson wrote:
wrote: In article , (Tony Polson) wrote: "Lawrie" wrote: I have often had to help an elderley relative on and off the train at Reading and I ask at the barrier and am given a laminated permit to go on the platform for a temporary period which I then hand back when I leave the platform. *I do show my priv card, whether that makes a difference I don't know. They aren't usually given out at Reading for people who want to watch/photograph trains, only for people who have a demonstrable need to meet/greet or see off a relative/friend. No vouchers at Cambridge but I've had no problem accessing the platforms for watching/photographing trains as well as for helping a departing relative. It's a particular problem at Reading. *Gone are the days when you would see trainspotters on the platform ends. *Nowadays, the only spotters or Photographers you see are people who are starting or ending their journeys at Reading, or changing trains. I used to enjoy whiling away an hour or two at Reading station, having a coffee or a drink from the bar or even a burger and chips from Casey Jones on Platform 4 (if I recall correctly). *Now the station is about as easy to get into as Fort Knox, and it is staffed by the unusually hostile and ignorant knuckle-dragging Neanderthals that First Great Western seem to employ in so many key positions ... You could pay a quid for a ticket to Reading West, of course. -- John Band john at johnband dot org www.johnband.org |
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