Train GraphicClick on the map to explore geographics
 
I need help
FAQ
Emergency
About .
No recent travel & transport from BBC stories as at 13:15 27 Apr 2024
Read about the forum [here].
Register [here] - it's free.
What do I gain from registering? [here]
 22/05/24 - WWRUG / TransWilts update
02/06/24 - Summer Timetable starts
17/08/24 - Bus to Imber
27/09/25 - 200 years of passenger trains

No 'On This Day' events reported for 27th Apr

Train RunningCancelled
27/04/24 13:51 Worcester Foregate Street to Bristol Temple Meads
13:52 St Erth to St Ives
14:06 St Ives to St Erth
Short Run
27/04/24 11:38 Bristol Temple Meads to Worcester Foregate Street
12:02 Westbury to Gloucester
12:46 Avonmouth to Weston-Super-Mare
27/04/24 12:49 Worcester Foregate Street to Bristol Temple Meads
12:52 London Paddington to Worcester Foregate Street
12:57 Exmouth to Paignton
14:10 Gloucester to Frome
27/04/24 14:38 Bristol Temple Meads to Worcester Foregate Street
27/04/24 15:38 Bristol Temple Meads to Worcester Foregate Street
17:43 Bristol Temple Meads to Salisbury
18:12 Salisbury to Cheltenham Spa
18:23 Portsmouth Harbour to Cardiff Central
19:13 Salisbury to Worcester Shrub Hill
Delayed
11:12 Salisbury to Worcester Foregate Street
13:00 Bristol Temple Meads to London Paddington
15:59 Cardiff Central to Taunton
An additional train service has been planned to operate as shown 20:57 Bristol Temple Meads to Cardiff Central
PollsThere are no open or recent polls
Abbreviation pageAcronymns and abbreviations
Stn ComparatorStation Comparator
Rail newsNews Now - live rail news feed
Site Style 1 2 3 4
Next departures • Bristol Temple MeadsBath SpaChippenhamSwindonDidcot ParkwayReadingLondon PaddingtonMelksham
Exeter St DavidsTauntonWestburyTrowbridgeBristol ParkwayCardiff CentralOxfordCheltenham SpaBirmingham New Street
April 27, 2024, 13:25:45 *
Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.

Login with username, password and session length
Forgotten your username or password? - get a reminder
Most recently liked subjects
[97] Labour to nationalise railways within five years of coming to ...
[50] access for all at Devon stations report
[32] Who we are - the people behind firstgreatwestern.info
[11] Bonaparte's at Bristol Temple Meads
[2] Lack of rolling stock due to attacks on shipping in the Red Se...
[1] Cornish delays
 
News: the Great Western Coffee Shop ... keeping you up to date with travel around the South West
 
   Home   Help Search Calendar Login Register  
Poll
Question: Which of the following would you agree with (batch 1)  (Voting closed: July 10, 2023, 13:35:29)
Ticket offices reform IS overdue, but fare systems and alternatives for all should be deal considered first - 22 (20.2%)
Reduction or removal of help, including ticket sales, at a fixed point at a station is a barrier to the timid traveller - 25 (22.9%)
By using ticket machines, customers may end up paying more than they need - 24 (22%)
All staff (not just the former ticket clerks) will need to know all about the fares system - 22 (20.2%)
Although most current users will be able to cope, new users will be put off trying the train - 16 (14.7%)
I agree with none of the above - 0 (0%)
Total Voters: 35

Linked Events
  • TWSW online - Ticket Offices: July 11, 2023
  • TWSW online - Ticket Offices: July 12, 2023
  • TWSW online - Ticket Offices: July 14, 2023
  • Consultation EXTENDED: July 26, 2023
  • Ticker Office Consultation end: September 01, 2023
  • Ticket Office outcome: October 31, 2023
Pages: 1 ... 8 9 [10] 11 12 ... 19
  Print  
Author Topic: Ticket Office Closure Consultation  (Read 30198 times)
IndustryInsider
Data Manager
Hero Member
******
Posts: 10119


View Profile
« Reply #135 on: July 26, 2023, 15:27:54 »

And the ‘organisers’ blaming everyone but themselves.  The operators will be far too scared of upsetting the apple cart to fight back I suspect.
Logged

To view my GWML (Great Western Main Line) Electrification cab video 'before and after' video comparison, as well as other videos of the new layout at Reading and 'before and after' comparisons of the Cotswold Line Redoubling scheme, see: http://www.dailymotion.com/user/IndustryInsider/
grahame
Administrator
Hero Member
*****
Posts: 40835



View Profile WWW Email
« Reply #136 on: July 26, 2023, 15:43:17 »

GWR (Great Western Railway) Press release

Quote
More time for public to have their say as ticket office consultation deadline extended

Following feedback from passengers, the rail industry has given more time for the consultation on changes to ticket offices. The consultation will now close on Friday 1 September, 2023.

Input from passengers and independent watchdogs will help shape final proposals, so all rail users are supported as the railway responds to generational shifts in passenger buying habits.

The consultation is happening as part of an industry-wide set of proposals that would mean ticket office staff would work on station platforms and concourses where they can be closer to customers. Subject to consultation, ticket offices could be phased out over a number of years.

Ticket office staff would be freed up to work in other areas of the station where they are closer to customers and better placed to help, in line with models already in place at some Great Western Railway stations such as Newbury or Reading Green Park.

A new role, based on the existing station multi-skilled roles already in place on the GWR network since 2007, would be created to allow staff to help more customers with a wider range of issues. Instead of being confined to just one area, these roles would be able to help customers in many more ways – including those with additional accessibility needs - wherever they are on the station.

It is a way of working already in place at some Great Western Railway stations, including Newbury and Reading Green Park stations.

Customers’ use of online and digital ticketing has accelerated over the past four years, and today, just 14.5% of GWR tickets are sold at ticket offices. The changes would align the rail industry with many other retailers, including banks, which have offered counter-free services for over a decade.

The Passenger Assist programme – which helps disabled and mobility-impaired customers navigate stations and board trains – will not be affected by the changes. In fact, the proposals are designed to increase staff trained and available to help customers at stations across the network, including those with additional accessibility needs.

A spokesperson for GWR said:

“Digital tickets and mobile phones means our ticket office staff are helping around half the number of people they did in 2019.  It makes sense to move staff where they can be more help to more customers, and provide more training to help with a wider range of issues– like assisting those with reduced mobility through stations and onto our trains.

“This consultation is designed to allow the public to test and examine our proposals, and make sure our plans are compliant with the safeguards put in place at privatisation so that the needs of customers will still be met.”

Those who wish to have a say should visit: www.GWR.com/haveyoursay and follow the links to either Transport Focus or London TravelWatch, who are independently running the consultation,  by Friday 1 September.

Who benefits from these changes?

A key benefit of these changes is that they greatly improve the ability to make staff available at the right place and time to help customers face-to-face, rather than being restricted to just selling tickets from behind a glass window.

The plans would move staff to a new role, based on the principles of the station multi-skilled role – in place at GWR since 2007. This would allow staff to help more customers with a wider range of issues, including helping them to buy tickets, wherever they are on the station.

The changes also ensure a more visible staff presence around the station during staffed hours, on ticket concourses and on platforms where staff can also help deter anti-social behaviour.

I have a disability and can’t use ticket machines. Will I still get help at the station?

Yes. There will be more staff with more training on platforms and station concourses, helping passengers to plan journeys and use digital and self-service ticketing machines.

Two-thirds of GWR stations already operate without ticket offices, which means they have well-established arrangements that allow customers to travel without a ticket before buying on board trains or at their destination station if there is no other option.

The approach would help bring station retailing up-to-date from 1996, when the rules on how to sell tickets were set and before the invention of the smartphone. Back then, 82% of all tickets were sold at ticket offices nationally, compared to less than 15% on average today. Bringing staff out from offices would allow the railway to respond to the generational shift in customer behaviour, in common with many other industries and organisations that have long since done so such as Transport for London, most airlines and many banks and supermarkets.
Logged

Coffee Shop Admin, Acting Chair of Melksham Rail User Group, Option 24/7 Melksham Rep
chuffed
Hero Member
*****
Posts: 1502


View Profile
« Reply #137 on: July 27, 2023, 09:36:01 »

My observation FWIW (for what it's worth)...

Has anyone considered the following scenario.....



A blind person arrives at a station where the ticket offices are closed. He/she cannot see anyone on the concourse and is approached by someone who claims to be a uniformed member of staff and asks 'Can I help you?'.



The reply is 'I wish to buy a ticket to X from the machine.' He/she is escorted to the machine and the assister punches the details which just happen to be a first class return journey to the furthest point on the network. He then asks the blind person for their card, guides their hand over the keypad and watches as they tap in their pin number. In a very short period of time, the assister pockets the printed ticket.... and the card with the pin number...leaving the blind person with no ticket and no card with the pin number having been divulged.



This may be an extreme example, but it raises the question of just how secure a vulnerable person would be without a designated ticket office. Perhaps a machine in a booth with a shelter should be designated with a member of staff manning it ......isn't that just what the proposal is trying to get rid of ?



I do hope my illustration highlights the very real concern I feel about the closure of ticket offices.
Logged
TaplowGreen
Transport Scholar
Hero Member
******
Posts: 7800



View Profile
« Reply #138 on: July 27, 2023, 10:05:47 »

What generally happens in your scenario currently whereby a blind person arrives at a station where the ticket office is closed/doesn't exist?
Logged
Red Squirrel
Administrator
Hero Member
*****
Posts: 5219


There are some who call me... Tim


View Profile
« Reply #139 on: July 27, 2023, 10:59:46 »

What generally happens in your scenario currently whereby a blind person arrives at a station where the ticket office is closed/doesn't exist?

That is a very good question! According to the RNIB» (Royal National Institute for the Blind - about), 3% of blind and partially-sighted people are able to use ticket vending machines. These machines are not designed for accessibility.
Logged

Things take longer to happen than you think they will, and then they happen faster than you thought they could.
Marlburian
Hero Member
*****
Posts: 692


View Profile
« Reply #140 on: July 27, 2023, 15:19:27 »

I'm trying to work out how the closure would affect Tilehurst Station, which survives being unstaffed in the afternoon and night. In the mornings will the nice lady lurk outside her closed office helping passengers to use the machine - when it's working?  Or, as I suspect, will the station become completely unpersonned?

On the matter of blindness, though still legal to drive, I have trouble reading the screen when the sun is in a certain position. And, approaching senility as I am, I have trouble becoming familiar with new IT. (I keep on promising myself that I'll try the new self-service check-outs at Waitrose down the road but ... I did try the new machines at the Coop in Overdown Road, only to find that their sequence was different to those at the Coop in Theale, which I can use with aplomb.)

Will being dazzled and near-senile count as excuses explanations for  travelling without a ticket?
Logged
Bmblbzzz
Transport Scholar
Hero Member
******
Posts: 4256


View Profile
« Reply #141 on: July 27, 2023, 17:03:32 »

I have a friend who's registered blind – and deaf. She's partially sighted and, erm, partially "hearinged", so is able to use screens with suitable modifications, which she has at home (font size, contrast, choice of colours, etc) but can't be done to a ticket machine. So she prefers to buy tickets online and either get them posted or pick them up from a machine, depending how much far in advance she's purchased. She doesn't like to use ticket offices because her hearing impairment makes communication difficult (station concourses can be a noisy environment as well).

But that's her, each person with sight or hearing disabilities will be slightly different.
Logged

Waiting at Pilning for the midnight sleeper to Prague.
IndustryInsider
Data Manager
Hero Member
******
Posts: 10119


View Profile
« Reply #142 on: July 28, 2023, 12:32:27 »

I'm trying to work out how the closure would affect Tilehurst Station, which survives being unstaffed in the afternoon and night. In the mornings will the nice lady lurk outside her closed office helping passengers to use the machine - when it's working?  Or, as I suspect, will the station become completely unpersonned?

Well, the documentation from GWR (Great Western Railway) states that the staffing levels are to remain unchanged, but the ticket office will close.

I suspect in this case and with the many other small stations with similar layouts, the existing ticket office room will be kept as it provides the only welfare accomodation, and I doubt Costa will be interested!  It's the only sensible place for a member of staff to be located (all passengers pass by or through it to access the station) barring the unlikely event they might be able to assist elsewhere.  The only change will be the removal of the ticket issuing equipment - which of course is very useful to deal with enquiries, do refunds and change of travel excesses and the many other things TVM (Ticket Vending Machine)'s are currently unable to do.
Logged

To view my GWML (Great Western Main Line) Electrification cab video 'before and after' video comparison, as well as other videos of the new layout at Reading and 'before and after' comparisons of the Cotswold Line Redoubling scheme, see: http://www.dailymotion.com/user/IndustryInsider/
JayMac
Data Manager
Hero Member
******
Posts: 18923



View Profile
« Reply #143 on: July 28, 2023, 14:56:29 »

Opinion piece from Gaby Hinsliff in The Guardian:
Quote
Rejoice, rejoice: the railway ticket office may yet be saved for the nation. Or more likely, it’s at least earned a brief reprieve. After a public outcry against plans to shut booths staffed by real live humans, train operators have relented and extended what was a suspiciously short three-week consultation.

Passengers will now have until September to make their point, shifting the exercise from a seemingly done deal to something at least vaguely pretending to be an open question, and hopefully allowing the voices of anxious disabled passengers in particular to be heard. It’s a victory, too, for anyone still foxed by the mad complexities of British train ticketing or forced by the general chaos, cancellation and delay towards the battle-scarred veterans of the ticket office, invariably the only people in the station who seem to know what’s actually happening. But beyond that, it sheds some light on how we all might like to be treated in an age of rapid automation.

The railways are hardly the only industry in which humans are steadily giving way to machines, with painful consequences for anyone who either can’t or won’t scan a QR (QR Code - Quick Response code) code, email a bot, or risk a parking fine because they’ve failed to figure out one of the endless apps and automated systems taking over from the old-school habit of feeding coins into a slot.

Galling as it clearly is for Nigel Farage to find himself shunned by Coutts, the drama over whether one man’s bank account should have been closed, or what the bank should have subsequently disclosed about his private finances, is arguably not the most pressing access issue in a world where 5,695 high street bank or building society branches have closed in little over eight years.

Confidentiality in banking obviously very much matters, as does political impartiality. But still, it would be nice to see Downing Street taking the same level of anxious interest in pensioners who can’t get the hang of internet banking, or people who for whatever reason don’t have access to mobile phones.

The days when everyone had to queue up to pay in cheques (gen Z readers, ask your grandparents) or get money out over the counter are obviously long gone, giving banks the chance to save a fortune by shutting down staffed branches. It’s second nature now for millions of us to move money around by banking app, to the point where we rarely even touch hard cash, just as it is to buy and store train tickets on a mobile phone.

But what if you’re in your 80s, with cataracts, and don’t want to struggle with doing everything on a blurry screen, worrying all the time that you’ve hit the wrong button or might be being conned? What if you find the whole thing confusing and frightening, and just want to talk to a real person face to face rather than sit on hold endlessly to a call centre, or attempt to explain yourself to a chatbot?

For anyone young enough to regard an actual live telephone call as an act of unpardonable violence, organising your life through the medium of a screen may be fine; for their grandparents, perhaps not so much.

The same is true of supermarkets, where most of us are now perfectly used to swiping our own barcodes in return for skipping the checkout queue. But watching the pool of human cashiers shrink to a token handful, while what was once an equally token handful of self-service tills expands to fill most of the floor space, triggers a very particular kind of guilt. How must it feel to see that army of machines physically advancing towards your job, week by week? And what about all the lonely, shuffling shoppers for whom a friendly chat at the conveyor belt might be the only human contact they get in a week?

When I was at home on maternity leave with a tiny, howling baby, there were times when exchanging pleasantries with a stranger in Sainsbury’s was pretty much the social highlight of the day. Though the pandemic has accustomed us to a more antiseptic culture of doing everything online, the suffering of so many who found themselves painfully isolated in lockdown should also have taught us a salutary lesson.

The “chat checkouts” introduced some years back by the Dutch supermarket chain Jumbo, for customers who would actively rather linger over their shopping, were part of a government programme to combat loneliness (with all its associated health and social costs) that could easily be copied here. They might only serve a handful of customers, but they meet a bigger need.

The UN agency Unesco’s warning this week against relying on mobiles and tablets in the classroom, meanwhile, is best interpreted in Britain – where most schools have long since imposed strict rules on phones – as a warning shot against screens being deployed as a cut-price alternative to teachers in the age of artificial intelligence. We are barely in the foothills yet of what AI at work will do to human interaction, which seems all the more reason to put down some markers.

Rail operators insist that only 12% of passengers still buy tickets directly from an office, and that liberating staff from behind their plastic windows means they’ll be free to roam stations dispensing friendly help and advice. (Oddly enough, unions don’t buy that, suspecting the more likely outcome is job cuts.) But even if it were true, that 12% often have reasons that can’t simply be swept aside.

The former Paralympian athlete and crossbench peer Tanni Grey-Thompson warns that it’s people on the ground in stations who effectively make travel for disabled passengers possible (though often barely so). The Labour MP (Member of Parliament) Marsha de Cordova, who is registered blind, says only 3% of people with sight loss can use a ticket machine. And what about up to a million Britons who will soon be living with dementia? In the early stages of Alzheimer’s it’s still possible to live a surprisingly independent life, given the occasional bit of help from a human.

Behind all of these in the queue, meanwhile, trail baffled tourists, people who can’t believe there isn’t a cheaper way of doing this (surprisingly often there is, though the ticket machines don’t tell you), and everyone enraged to find the touchscreen frozen yet again. And yes, eventually ticket offices will probably go the way of steam trains and station porters. But this week should be a salutary lesson to cost-cutting companies (and governments) that hustling everyone through this transition too fast is a false economy. This is one journey where slow and steady beats a cold, heartless rush.
Logged

"Build a man a fire and he'll be warm for the rest of the day. Set a man on fire and he'll be warm for the rest of his life."

- Sir Terry Pratchett.
Bmblbzzz
Transport Scholar
Hero Member
******
Posts: 4256


View Profile
« Reply #144 on: July 28, 2023, 15:53:18 »

Definitely agree about human-to-human face-to-face interaction.

And yes I'm aware of the irony of writing that on the internet.
Logged

Waiting at Pilning for the midnight sleeper to Prague.
TaplowGreen
Transport Scholar
Hero Member
******
Posts: 7800



View Profile
« Reply #145 on: July 28, 2023, 16:23:16 »

Opinion piece from Gaby Hinsliff in The Guardian:
Quote
Rejoice, rejoice: the railway ticket office may yet be saved for the nation. Or more likely, it’s at least earned a brief reprieve. After a public outcry against plans to shut booths staffed by real live humans, train operators have relented and extended what was a suspiciously short three-week consultation.

Passengers will now have until September to make their point, shifting the exercise from a seemingly done deal to something at least vaguely pretending to be an open question, and hopefully allowing the voices of anxious disabled passengers in particular to be heard. It’s a victory, too, for anyone still foxed by the mad complexities of British train ticketing or forced by the general chaos, cancellation and delay towards the battle-scarred veterans of the ticket office, invariably the only people in the station who seem to know what’s actually happening. But beyond that, it sheds some light on how we all might like to be treated in an age of rapid automation.

The railways are hardly the only industry in which humans are steadily giving way to machines, with painful consequences for anyone who either can’t or won’t scan a QR (QR Code - Quick Response code) code, email a bot, or risk a parking fine because they’ve failed to figure out one of the endless apps and automated systems taking over from the old-school habit of feeding coins into a slot.

Galling as it clearly is for Nigel Farage to find himself shunned by Coutts, the drama over whether one man’s bank account should have been closed, or what the bank should have subsequently disclosed about his private finances, is arguably not the most pressing access issue in a world where 5,695 high street bank or building society branches have closed in little over eight years.

Confidentiality in banking obviously very much matters, as does political impartiality. But still, it would be nice to see Downing Street taking the same level of anxious interest in pensioners who can’t get the hang of internet banking, or people who for whatever reason don’t have access to mobile phones.

The days when everyone had to queue up to pay in cheques (gen Z readers, ask your grandparents) or get money out over the counter are obviously long gone, giving banks the chance to save a fortune by shutting down staffed branches. It’s second nature now for millions of us to move money around by banking app, to the point where we rarely even touch hard cash, just as it is to buy and store train tickets on a mobile phone.

But what if you’re in your 80s, with cataracts, and don’t want to struggle with doing everything on a blurry screen, worrying all the time that you’ve hit the wrong button or might be being conned? What if you find the whole thing confusing and frightening, and just want to talk to a real person face to face rather than sit on hold endlessly to a call centre, or attempt to explain yourself to a chatbot?

For anyone young enough to regard an actual live telephone call as an act of unpardonable violence, organising your life through the medium of a screen may be fine; for their grandparents, perhaps not so much.

The same is true of supermarkets, where most of us are now perfectly used to swiping our own barcodes in return for skipping the checkout queue. But watching the pool of human cashiers shrink to a token handful, while what was once an equally token handful of self-service tills expands to fill most of the floor space, triggers a very particular kind of guilt. How must it feel to see that army of machines physically advancing towards your job, week by week? And what about all the lonely, shuffling shoppers for whom a friendly chat at the conveyor belt might be the only human contact they get in a week?

When I was at home on maternity leave with a tiny, howling baby, there were times when exchanging pleasantries with a stranger in Sainsbury’s was pretty much the social highlight of the day. Though the pandemic has accustomed us to a more antiseptic culture of doing everything online, the suffering of so many who found themselves painfully isolated in lockdown should also have taught us a salutary lesson.

The “chat checkouts” introduced some years back by the Dutch supermarket chain Jumbo, for customers who would actively rather linger over their shopping, were part of a government programme to combat loneliness (with all its associated health and social costs) that could easily be copied here. They might only serve a handful of customers, but they meet a bigger need.

The UN agency Unesco’s warning this week against relying on mobiles and tablets in the classroom, meanwhile, is best interpreted in Britain – where most schools have long since imposed strict rules on phones – as a warning shot against screens being deployed as a cut-price alternative to teachers in the age of artificial intelligence. We are barely in the foothills yet of what AI at work will do to human interaction, which seems all the more reason to put down some markers.

Rail operators insist that only 12% of passengers still buy tickets directly from an office, and that liberating staff from behind their plastic windows means they’ll be free to roam stations dispensing friendly help and advice. (Oddly enough, unions don’t buy that, suspecting the more likely outcome is job cuts.) But even if it were true, that 12% often have reasons that can’t simply be swept aside.

The former Paralympian athlete and crossbench peer Tanni Grey-Thompson warns that it’s people on the ground in stations who effectively make travel for disabled passengers possible (though often barely so). The Labour MP (Member of Parliament) Marsha de Cordova, who is registered blind, says only 3% of people with sight loss can use a ticket machine. And what about up to a million Britons who will soon be living with dementia? In the early stages of Alzheimer’s it’s still possible to live a surprisingly independent life, given the occasional bit of help from a human.

Behind all of these in the queue, meanwhile, trail baffled tourists, people who can’t believe there isn’t a cheaper way of doing this (surprisingly often there is, though the ticket machines don’t tell you), and everyone enraged to find the touchscreen frozen yet again. And yes, eventually ticket offices will probably go the way of steam trains and station porters. But this week should be a salutary lesson to cost-cutting companies (and governments) that hustling everyone through this transition too fast is a false economy. This is one journey where slow and steady beats a cold, heartless rush.

The Banking analogy is an interesting one - I seem to recall some time ago that there was an agreement between the Banks that at least one would remain open in an area where branches were closing, then there were going to be "hubs", but both seemed to be quietly forgotten, and now Post Offices (themselves far harder to find these days) pick up some of the functionality.

Access to F2F Banking is of far more importance to the vast majority of the population than access to a station ticket office - I would say that the number of customers using Bank branches remains higher than the 12%  using ticket offices, notwithstanding online banking, ATMs(resolve) etc..................personally I can't recall the last time I used a cheque.

A debate I watched recently about Bank branch closures featured a representative from the industry who said words to the effect of "how much more would customers be prepared to pay for our services in order to keep branches open?"

Whether rail travellers would be prepared to pay a supplement along similar lines to retain ticket offices is perhaps moot?

I suspect that the supermarkets have similar thoughts in mind when it comes to self service tills - in my branch of Sainsburys there was much moaning when they arrived and long queues at the tills that remained open, however that's definitely changing as (not only) older people become more comfortable with the technology.

The overall message I think is that hard though it may be for some to adapt, this is only going in one direction.
Logged
grahame
Administrator
Hero Member
*****
Posts: 40835



View Profile WWW Email
« Reply #146 on: July 30, 2023, 09:52:22 »

From The Mirror

Quote
Jeremy Hunt complained about railway ticket office closures in his own area the day before Government-backed plans to shut almost every one in England were unveiled.

The Chancellor contacted South Western Railway, which runs services in his South West Surrey constituency, earlier this month to raise concerns about the impact on local passengers. The next day train operators announced they want to close ticket offices at 974 stations across England.
Logged

Coffee Shop Admin, Acting Chair of Melksham Rail User Group, Option 24/7 Melksham Rep
IndustryInsider
Data Manager
Hero Member
******
Posts: 10119


View Profile
« Reply #147 on: August 03, 2023, 16:42:32 »

Objections to the closure plan now at 315,000 with just under a month to go.

https://railnews.mobi/news/2023/08/03-objections-to-ticket-office-closures.html
Logged

To view my GWML (Great Western Main Line) Electrification cab video 'before and after' video comparison, as well as other videos of the new layout at Reading and 'before and after' comparisons of the Cotswold Line Redoubling scheme, see: http://www.dailymotion.com/user/IndustryInsider/
CyclingSid
Data Manager
Hero Member
******
Posts: 1938


Hockley viaduct


View Profile
« Reply #148 on: August 04, 2023, 06:52:57 »

One assumes that the vast majority of those will not be in favour of the idea. Elsewhere that number would be sufficient to get a debate in parliament?
Logged
Electric train
Transport Scholar
Hero Member
******
Posts: 4362


The future is 25000 Volts AC 750V DC has its place


View Profile
« Reply #149 on: August 04, 2023, 08:31:02 »

One assumes that the vast majority of those will not be in favour of the idea. Elsewhere that number would be sufficient to get a debate in parliament?

I have a feeling that there will be some token gesture closures but the plan will be batted into the future past the General Election, MP (Member of Parliament)'s have a weak stomach when it come to things that might upset voters leading up to a General Election
Logged

Starship just experienced what we call a rapid unscheduled disassembly, or a RUD, during ascent,”
Do you have something you would like to add to this thread, or would you like to raise a new question at the Coffee Shop? Please [register] (it is free) if you have not done so before, or login (at the top of this page) if you already have an account - we would love to read what you have to say!

You can find out more about how this forum works [here] - that will link you to a copy of the forum agreement that you can read before you join, and tell you very much more about how we operate. We are an independent forum, provided and run by customers of Great Western Railway, for customers of Great Western Railway and we welcome railway professionals as members too, in either a personal or official capacity. Views expressed in posts are not necessarily the views of the operators of the forum.

As well as posting messages onto existing threads, and starting new subjects, members can communicate with each other through personal messages if they wish. And once members have made a certain number of posts, they will automatically be admitted to the "frequent posters club", where subjects not-for-public-domain are discussed; anything from the occasional rant to meetups we may be having ...

 
Pages: 1 ... 8 9 [10] 11 12 ... 19
  Print  
 
Jump to:  

Powered by MySQL Powered by PHP Powered by SMF 1.1.2 | SMF © 2006-2007, Simple Machines LLC Valid XHTML 1.0! Valid CSS!
This forum is provided by customers of Great Western Railway (formerly First Great Western), and the views expressed are those of the individual posters concerned. Visit www.gwr.com for the official Great Western Railway website. Please contact the administrators of this site if you feel that the content provided by one of our posters contravenes our posting rules (email link to report). Forum hosted by Well House Consultants

Jump to top of pageJump to Forum Home Page