It is really though. The job of the writers in rail magazines, of rail unions and of rail accident investigators is to make rail safer. How safe other activities are isn't particularly relevant. Their interest is how to make rail as safe possible (obviously taking into account cost and other factors ).
I can certainly agree with that.
Yes, and it's the 'other factors' that are at play here. It's one of the many examples of 'safetyism' - something which has a very, very minimal impact or none at all in the real world, but those advocating it push really hard for it. And it's definitely the case that Covidianism has increased it in all areas of life - nearly all the Covid "safety" theatre was extreme safetyism, and it's led to a further increase in the idea that all risk has to be banished, no matter how small that risk is in reality.
I agree with this completely.
"Safetyism" has been on the march for about 150 years, and for most of that time it was undoubtedly a positive. But, over that last 20 or so years, it has gone mad. Banning opening windows on trains (even on heritage laines) is the most extreme example of this. But it will get worse and worse because, depressingly, I can see no end to it. If anything the trend is accelerating, people have to start fighting back or Gawd knows where it will end......
What is very worrying is that if someone makes the point that it is not worth doing "
x" to save, say, one life a year (because it either costs too much or restricts people's freedoms excessively) they are considered selfish, or insufficiently valuing human life, or some other BS.
You can make all of the philosophical arguments that you want. However, they are absolutely irrelevant when set against the fact that TOCs/FOCs are employers and subject to Health and Safety legislation with respect to their employees. Specifically the principle is ALARP ("as low as reasonably possible") sometimes referred to as SFAIRP ("so far as is reasonably practicable"). The principle is that the residual risk shall be reduced as far as reasonably practicable. All of your guff about the risk to potential passengers who drive instead is completely irrelevant.
It is not "guff"and it is most certainly not irrelevant.
Just out of interest, who do you think should pay the millions of pounds it will cost to get rid of HSTs earlier than is actually necessary ?
The passenger through increased fares or reduced service ? I am a passenger and I do not want to do that, train travel (esp flexible ticket train travel) is already far too expensive.
The train crews through reduced wages (or more accurately smaller increases...) ? Can't see that, the unions might complain about "dangerous" HSTs but they would not want their members to pay for it in any way, hypocrites.
The tax payer ? Why should they ? I'd rather any extra subsidy (because that's what it is) went to improving services for passengers, more services, upgraded faster track, reopened lines, even more service desk open selling tickets, I almost missed my train queueing for my ticket the other day !
I am at more risk dying in my shop of a fall or some other accident than a train driver has of dying in a train accident, so, following your logic if the government paid me a far smaller amount (not tens of millions but a mere few hundred grand would suffice) I could shut my shop and reduce that risk to zero.
Back to the HSTs, and it looks like we now have come up with yet another of the multiple justifications that the railway seems fixated with for withdrawing perfectly serviceable stock, and thus never being able to get adequate resources for the demand, because there's always some reason for withdrawing stock "by a certain date".
Good point, and what about the environment ? Scrapping perfectly serviceable trains is environmentally unfriendly. Same with cars and all other consumer products, repair and keep is more environmentally friendly.