Just a few minutes at a well-known station in North-west England yielded this impressive crop of verbal mayhem:
"Platform 1 for the xx.xx (insert train operator here) service to xxx, calling at xxx and xxx. This train is formed of x coaches." (repeated multiple times per train scheduled)
"The next train to arrive at Platform 6 will be the xx.xx train to xxx, calling at xxx and xxx. This train is formed of xx coaches. The onboard shop is in coach X."
"24 hour CCTV monitoring is in use at this station for the purposes of safety and security."
"This is a security message. If you see something that doesn't look right, text the British Transport Police on 61016. We'll sort it. See it, say it, sorted."
"The next train to arrive at Platform 6 will be the xx.xx train to xxx, calling at xxx and xxx. This train is formed of xx coaches. You can find the shop in coach C for delicious hot and cold refreshments."
"For your safety and comfort, this station operates a no-smoking policy."
"We are sorry that the xx.xx train to xxx is delayed. We apologise for the disruption to your journey today and any inconvenience caused."
"Please do not leave your luggage unattended on the station. Luggage left unattended may be removed without warning, or destroyed or damaged by security services."
"In the interests of customer safety, please stand clear of the platform edge and behind the yellow line until the train comes to a complete stand, and allow customers to alight, before trying to board. Thank you."
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Interesting contrast to a visit just before Covid to a similar sized Dutch railway station where the only announcements were for the occasional delayed train. Of course they have the benefit of a timetable that uses the same platform for any particular destination every time it departs.
That's a lot of announcements but how many would we actually remove with Shapps' plans?
Passengers would still want to know which platform their train departed from, they'd want to know if it'd be delayed, they'd want to know intermediate stations - I don't think that those would be scrapped
I think it's good customer service to let people know how long it's expected to be (at a station like Crewe where the Manchester service could be two coaches or eleven coaches - less of an issue on Merseyrail - but we'd have shorter dwell times if we could encourage passengers to be spread along the platform in advance, rather than waiting for the train to arrive and then either all crowd round the doors near the footbridge or dash along to the far ends - either way you'd be better off having passengers confident enough to spread out along the platform in advance)
We could drop the apologies for things being late but that wouldn't be great customer service - we live in a culture where we expect apologies for everything, even buses are "sorry" for not being in service these days (I see football fans on Twitter complaining that a certain player hasn't tweeted their apology to fans half an hour after the final whistle, when they are probably in an ice bath or getting physio treatment)
Warnings about luggage being destroyed are annoying but organisations need to be seen to be vigilant and warn people - there'd be a lot of arguments if someone's suitcase was removed by staff without any warning - same with someone being told off for smoking if there wasn't an occasional warning
We are experienced travellers, but there are a lot of occasional passengers out there who seek reassurance from knowing that they are protected by CCTV if anything goes wrong (as well as potentially deterring opportunist thieves)
Warning people about the danger of standing too close to an approaching train seems sensible - trying to reduce dwell times by reminding people how to let people get off first seems well intended
Maybe some of the messages that don't directly relate to particular trains should be less frequent but I honestly don't see any of those being completely removed
It's the same at Reading. It never shuts up. Recently my son enquired why do they keeping saying random stuff that everybody already knows. It's a sad reflection on society that grown adults have to be told (or at least the railway thinks they have to be told) things that a five year old considers obvious.
That's the environment that the railway has to inhabit though.
I'm not saying that people in this country are stupid, but people in this country can and will complain/sue if something goes wrong, so you need to have demonstrated that you warned them in advance - I'm not saying I agree with it but I've mentioned upthread that coffee cups have warnings that the contents will be hot - we expect a packet of peanuts to warn us that "this product contains nuts" - making a thousand announcements about slippery stairs or uneven paving is easier/cheaper than having one person fall over and claiming that they were unaware - this is a country where the Smoking Ban meant we had to put up "No Smoking" signs in places like churches where smoking had never been permitted, just so that people knew that it wasn't allowed there - not the railway's fault but the railway has to reflect this kind of culture, and I don't see Shapps suggestions actually changing that (which I suspect Shapps knows, but he doesn't care, he's just trying to generates some cheap and positive publicity to take heat away from his boss, and it seems to have worked)
This is easy to answer; Only make an announcement when there has been a change of the trains expected arrival time of 2 minutes. In my example this would of reduced the number of announcements from 5 to 2, a 60% reduction. Simples.
That's fair enough, but someone needs to take that decision and it needs to be a national decision since we need a consistent approach to such matters, otherwise we'll just end up with complaints that nobody told me my southbound train home this evening would be a minute late yet they kept me informed of any expected changes when it took my northbound train this morning
It's fine for people with access to Real Time websites on their phones, who can track the arrival of the service, to the nearest thirty seconds, but we need a coherent policy that covers all passengers when it comes to announcements
But, as
@Annetts key says, the platform information is only as good as the "Real Time" information that it's getting (and we know that a service can fluctuate between being a minute early and a minute late and back again in a fairly short space of time, depending on block lengths), so it's hard
But it’s also the same railway that has to remind passengers to lock a toilet door while they use it
True - you know how to use a train toilet, I know how to use a train toilet but (as someone who used to commute by Voyager, which generally meant "standing for forty five minutes at the end of the carriage, within wafting distance of the toilet door") I know that a significant proportion of passengers can't read the fairly simple instructions - so we need to give them the occasional reminder about the fact that stairs might be slippery in wet weather etc - got to deal with the reality of the situation rather than assuming everyone else can be trusted without having to reminded