And, if you haven't got one, will they let you on to the platform to .. ahem .. "get to the ticket machine"?
True
And, if you haven't got one, will they let you on to the platform to .. ahem .. "get to the ticket machine"?
Is that your sister on the Liverpool forum?
Nice idea for the home fans, but how will that work for away fans arriving in town with just a paper ticket ?
One failure is undoubtedly the Travel Voucher scheme. No-one seems to be moaning about it, because no-one is being penalised for not buying a voucher. But it's certainly not working as it was intended to work.
Enforcing the scheme isn't the answer, either - because the reason it's not working is that it's impossible to enforce. It is a fundamentally bad idea to expect some people to pay for a whole year's worth of travel in one go and then let other people travel for nothing, because the transport staff don't have the resources (time or incentive) to intervene and stop free travel happening. It is impossible to check every passenger's ticket on a train journey that takes as little as 6 - 9 minutes when there are 400+ people travelling.
And it really makes no sense to allow people with senior citizens' bus passes to travel free on Park & Ride buses and football specials, apart from removing a group of passengers from an enforcement regime that isn't working anyway. Their travel isn't being paid for by anyone, apart from - presumably - the Club, who I guess are paying the transport operators a fixed sum, irrespective of who is travelling and what sort of ticket they have.
Would it not be better to go back to the old Withdean system of the travel cost being included in the cost of a season ticket and a match ticket? Sure, I suppose the club wanted to give a headline season ticket figure of below £400, but presumably this will be a one-season figure only, so long as we keep our Championship position, but I would not have objected to a North Stand ticket of £420, and presumably WSU people paying that figure wouldn't either. I regularly catch the 28 or 29 from Lewes to Falmer, and I am usually the only one using a travel voucher - most are paying the driver (costing themselves £3.70). Also, they used to collect travel vouchers at Preston Park. When I have come by train, yes I have been asked for the voucher at the first station, but never at Falmer.
Moans? Very few really, apart from not enough Gents toilets in the North Stand, but I think it's the same in WSU. They could also organise the queuing for the kiosks better, perhaps with winding queues rather than straight back to the wall from the kiosk, at the same time as there is a large amount of wasted space between the kiosks and the turnstiles. This makes it hard to get past those queuing. And, I cannot understand why so many people in the North Stand are still using cash, rather than putting credit on their season tickets. These are minor points though really. From the transport point of view, I have had no trouble at all. The 10.02 bus back after the Gillingham game was rather a squeeze, but the 10.32 in the week was no problem at all.
MOST stations inside the Travel Voucher zone have no working barriers. Most importantly, Falmer doesn't.
The VAT/Non-VAT confusion doesn't apply now that they've put a value on the travel voucher. The one-off travel voucher costs £2 (£1 each way), therefore if you were to pay (for the sake of argument and to keep the maths simple) £25 for a ticket with an inbuilt travel voucher that breaks down as:They changed it being included in the ticket for VAT reasons. It's annoying that when it was included I didn't need to use and now it's extra I do.
One failure is undoubtedly the Travel Voucher scheme. No-one seems to be moaning about it, because no-one is being penalised for not buying a voucher. But it's certainly not working as it was intended to work.
Enforcing the scheme isn't the answer, either - because the reason it's not working is that it's impossible to enforce. It is a fundamentally bad idea to expect some people to pay for a whole year's worth of travel in one go and then let other people travel for nothing, because the transport staff don't have the resources (time or incentive) to intervene and stop free travel happening. It is impossible to check every passenger's ticket on a train journey that takes as little as 6 - 9 minutes when there are 400+ people travelling.
And it really makes no sense to allow people with senior citizens' bus passes to travel free on Park & Ride buses and football specials, apart from removing a group of passengers from an enforcement regime that isn't working anyway. Their travel isn't being paid for by anyone, apart from - presumably - the Club, who I guess are paying the transport operators a fixed sum, irrespective of who is travelling and what sort of ticket they have.
I am a bit hacked of about the vouchers, paid for mine on the 3rd of August & still not arrived through the post. People are getting free trave while i have parted with £30.00.
Would it not be better to go back to the old Withdean system of the travel cost being included in the cost of a season ticket and a match ticket?
Bus driver on the 25 after Sunderland was refusing people with out vouchers got swore at a couple of times but stood his ground fair play to him
One failure is undoubtedly the Travel Voucher scheme. No-one seems to be moaning about it, because no-one is being penalised for not buying a voucher. But it's certainly not working as it was intended to work.
What I find strange about the non-collection of tickets at Falmer is that Southern are generally obsessed with checking tickets. I commute to London and have to go through barriers at the start and end of journey as well as having my tickets checked on the train - sometimes twice. It's so un-Southern like to be lax on this.
The old system wasn't very fair on people who walked or cycled to the ground. At Withdean the club tried to obfuscate the issue by saying the travel was 'free' and that the vouchers were 'valueless'. Neither was true (the club paid the travel companies and the vouchers, like any paper currency, could be exchanged for a service) but it enabled the whole package to be sold at a single price.Not very fair on the people who walk or cycle though. The Withdean situation was different as it was one of the conditions for using the stadium. There's no such requirement at Amex.
The club should be encouraging people to walk or cycle to the ground. Adopting measures that seek to discourage walking and cycling is scarcely going to help us get planning permission for an increased capacity from a Green-led council.
Not very fair on the people who walk or cycle though. The Withdean situation was different as it was one of the conditions for using the stadium. There's no such requirement at Amex.
The club should be encouraging people to walk or cycle to the ground. Adopting measures that seek to discourage walking and cycling is scarcely going to help us get planning permission for an increased capacity from a Green-led council.
That must feel tough, if you do board at Haywards Heath.
I travel to and from Glynde (which is outside the Travel Voucher zone and has no barriers) and I have NEVER had my ticket inspected. MOST stations inside the Travel Voucher zone have no working barriers. Most importantly, Falmer doesn't.
With Bennetts Field producing a much better performance this week and the week on week sucess of the SU shuttle, transport now appears to be on-board with the stadium, team, pies, ale and everything else.
My afternoon and evening match routine is now pretty much sorted. In fact, getting to the ground earlier and leaving a little later makes for a far more chilled experience.
Aside from the 1901 man who simply could not wait an "unacceptable" 5 minutes for a spent coffee pot to be refilled, anyone have any remaining issues? Come on, someone must.
the other thing that remains untested is sharing the train queue with fans from Millwall, or West Ham, or Palace, or Leicester, or Pompey, or Cardiff