And how Southern spin it: http://www.southernrailway.com/sout...update/?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=twitter
Wow! Horton 'cleared his diary'! What a hero.
And how Southern spin it: http://www.southernrailway.com/sout...update/?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=twitter
An accident happens, a disabled person needs assistance, there is a problem on board like the smoke alarm going off etc
Wow! Horton 'cleared his diary'! What a hero.
But the RMT accepted, seemingly without objection, other services permanently not having a second member of staff on board.
They really can't have it both ways.
Is this so unreasonable?
1. Southern has guaranteed that every train which has a conductor today will have a conductor or on board supervisor in the future. However, on trains where the driver has full control of train, if for any reason an on board supervisor is unavailable we want the flexibility to still run the train for the benefit of our passengers.
2. An example of when we might run without a second person would be at times of disruption if an on-board supervisor was delayed on an inbound train and couldn’t get to his next train on time. In this circumstance we might let the train leave with the no second person, and arrange for an on-board supervisor to join part way through journey at an intermediate station. The RMT would expect us to cancel the train entirely, unnecessarily inconveniencing hundreds of passengers.
You better speak to Network Rail who have refused SASTA permission to run DOO trains elsewhere on the network then
That's all very well, but considering they don't employ, enough in the first place that will be 10-20% of their services. What happens as [MENTION=1416]Ernest[/MENTION] says, there is a disabled person on board one of these trains needing to get off at an unmanned station? The smoke detector goes off? It has a much bigger knock on effect with even more delays. What they are proposing is not overall Customer Friendly.
Same for me for the the just over 1 in 3 who voted for Brexit.
Is this so unreasonable?
1. Southern has guaranteed that every train which has a conductor today will have a conductor or on board supervisor in the future. However, on trains where the driver has full control of train, if for any reason an on board supervisor is unavailable we want the flexibility to still run the train for the benefit of our passengers.
2. An example of when we might run without a second person would be at times of disruption if an on-board supervisor was delayed on an inbound train and couldn’t get to his next train on time. In this circumstance we might let the train leave with the no second person, and arrange for an on-board supervisor to join part way through journey at an intermediate station. The RMT would expect us to cancel the train entirely, unnecessarily inconveniencing hundreds of passengers.
3. There is a full and fair offer on the table that most workers would love to have – a guaranteed job for five years, above-inflation pay increases for the next two years and guaranteed overtime.
No proof them , just the usual loudmouths spouting off rubbish
So if a disabled person requires assistance on-board or at either station during scenario 2 what should they do? Are Southern going to advise them to get another train, bearing in mind they've required 24 hours advance notice of the trains such a passenger intended to catch? If so, how?
You better speak to Network Rail who have refused SASTA permission to run DOO trains elsewhere on the network then
So... it's now all down to the publicly-funded Judicial Review to sort this shit out once and for all and force the relevant hotshots in GTR and DfT to air their very dirty laundry in public. Won't be pretty. Looking forward to the high-level resignations already. Hopefully with a bit of tarring and feathering as they're run out of town on a replacement bus service.
Same response I'm afraid: how is it done on the full-on no-second-person-on-board DOO services that the RMT allowed to be introduced?
There's something I don't understand and I've never seen explained.
If Southern are claiming that who closes the doors is such a minor matter, then why are they insisting on the driver doing it? If there's a conductor on board, why shouldn't they be allowed to do it?
So... it's now all down to the publicly-funded Judicial Review to sort this shit out once and for all and force the relevant hotshots in GTR and DfT to air their very dirty laundry in public. Won't be pretty. Looking forward to the high-level resignations already. Hopefully with a bit of tarring and feathering as they're run out of town on a replacement bus service.
You termed Southern's offer as "full and fair", I assumed you'd have looked into the above before making such a statement.