For some people, a ticket saying London Midland Trains only means they can only use trains that go between London and the Midlands. And to them, that's obviously what it means..
Well they'll just have to learn about the industry structure the hard way won't they. Ignorance of a rule does not provide an excuse to break that rule.
Can anyone who goes on about "learning things the hard way", and "ignorance is no excuse", honestly say that they have not made a mistake in their life? I'm not making a comment about whether the £1000 was right or wrong in this case, btw, but the "assumption of guilt" attitude made in many posts on here really does annoy me.
I completely agree. People who make a mistake should be charged an excess fare. The Virgin Trains Guard clearly agrees as that's what he did.
However the official rule is that a new ticket can be charged.
There is no good reason for that, and I am pleased to see Guards being given the ability to apply a common sense approach.
There is this bizarre situation that if a passenger buys a walk-up return ticket intended for Chiltern and boards Virgin, they are charged an excess (half the difference up to the appropriate fare, railcard discountable) yet if a passenger buys a walk-up return ticket intended for LM and boards Virgin, they can be charged a new full fare ticket, non-discountable.
And before anyone goes on about revenue allocation, that's a red herring as an excess of a "Route via High Wycombe" ticket wouldn't re-allocate the revenue allocation for the original ticket held, and yet if someone goes to Euston ticket office and says they want to go via High Wycombe one way, and via MKC the other way, that is exactly what they'd be sold.
In the case this thread specifically refers to, the passenger was charged an appropriate excess fare and the amount was clearly reasonable.
I have forgotten railcards, for example, in the past - luckily I realised before I bought the ticket, so I bought the full-price no-discount ticket... but if they'd tried to prosecute me for that I would have been exceedingly annoyed, to put it mildly. I'd hope no worse than PF would apply in such cases, but reading some things on here, it appears not.
FCC would have threatened to prosecute you, while some TOCs would merely charge the difference. Some charge a new full fare ticket and allow a refund. And loads of other possibilities. There is no national policy.
Agree completely with this post. I mean, 15:07 peak! How many people finish work at 1445 (guestimate of the latest you could finish to make a 15:07 train - probably more like 1415 to 1430 in London...)
Blame the DfT and their predecessors, as they are the ones who set 1500 as a time that could be considered "peak" for travel out of London. Most Train Companies give us more generous terms.
That said, I do the "Banbury split" thing when travelling up north on XC, to take advantage of the Network card. Recently there was a major incident at Banbury meaning nothing was running through there, and they hadn't organised buses yet - but I asked two separate Virgin staff (one station, one train) at New St whether my split ticket would be valid on VT to London (which they were recommending people travel by). Both said yes - even though I didn't travel through Banbury at all! Don't know if those staff were correct - they may have been given there was an incident - but good on them for their attitude I say
Was ticket acceptance in place? If so, the ticket was valid. If not, it wasn't. I suspect it was!
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I was more objecting to hardline attitudes on the railway in general rather than the specifics of this case....
The vast majority of railway staff do not have a hardline attitude. However some do, and I agree that is a problem that needs addressing. There's an EC guard who is infamous among railway staff in my area for catching them out more than the general public!
A good solution to avoid penalising passengers at terminal stations would be to have proper manned barriers in action all the time. Then the staff could point out the non-validity of a ticket, or lack of railcard, before the passenger gets on the train and possibly gets penalised.
Given that there can be 500+ people on an Inter City train, with departures every few minutes, this would be unbelievably labour intensive. To avoid delays and unsafe conditions, trains would need to be ready earlier, and you'd have to manually individually gate each train separately. This is totally impracticable at stations like King's Cross.
Early ticket checks in trains like the Birmingham case and offering passengers with non-valid tickets the chance to get off the train early (e.g Coventry), and thus only incurring the cost of a Birmingham-Coventry single, would help too.
I agree, though in practice Virgin Trains only tend to check tickets on the expensive part of those services

And to be fair, could a TM go through an entire train between BHM & COV? No..