Robertj21a
On Moderation
- Joined
- 22 Sep 2013
- Messages
- 7,540
I know it's not the 'right' answer but has consideration been given to withdrawing these trains after, say, 7pm on Fridays and Saturdays ?
Yes, that's why security were introduced as there was a threat of traincrew "blacking" the line beyond 6pm around a decade ago.I know it's not the 'right' answer but has consideration been given to withdrawing these trains after, say, 7pm on Fridays and Saturdays ?
I once had my train impounded at Worksop for around an hour after two females got into a physical altercation which resulted in hair being ripped from the scalp in clumps and blood spraying up the floor, windows, seats and ceiling.Mansfield people aren’t like that, are they? (Note, not ‘we’!)
That's fine in theory....but once they've staggered through the (probably open) barriers, down onto the platform and plonked themselves down in the train, you'll have a hell of job to move them. If you decide to tell them that the train ain't going to move until they either settle down or leave the train, the chances are that the fighting will start earlier and the rail staff will be the targets. I have vivid memories of similar - and sometimes worse - behaviour on the West Coastway line between Brighton and Lancing on Friday and Saturday evenings back in the 1980s. You're damned if you do and you're damned if you don't. Best hide in the back cab until you have to open the doors.Probably the best solution to this is to get the troublemakers to leave the train and or deneuve them boarding.
If some passengers can't behave the railway shouldn't have to transport them.
I'd vote for you. Cull the low-life scumbags at source and stop the "**** breeds ****" ever more self-perpetuating decline as to what's acceptable in public.Short of just shooting them
I agree it’s not the young ones. It is people in their 30’s, 40’s and 50’s and often the women are far worse than the men. The problems on the Saturday early evening trains are people who have been drinking in Nottingham all afternoon and then are going back to places like Kirkby in Ashfield, Mansfield and Shirebrook to get even more drinks in before the pubs close.On Saturday night as I pulled out I was treated to a woman in her 30s who had had far too much drink in Nottingham catching an elderly lady's suitcase in the crossfire as she spewed across the platform at Mansfield whilst her boyfriend heaved over the fence.
Hopping over puddles of sick in the train all over the heaters, walls and windows when you do your empty stock check is standard but it's almost a mercy because that usually means they're too drunk to be fighting.
I'm not sure why anyone would expect any different though - degenerate behaviour on a night out is a British past time all over the country, why should the railway escape it.
Rarely is it the kids either. In that part of the world it's usually people in their 30s, 40s and 50s. That or the feral children at the North end of the route threatening traincrew and other passengers. Not enough law enforcement spread far too thin.
Isn't it time this anti-social behaviour digression was diverted to its own thread? EMR aren't alone with this problem though it seems one route is particularly bad for them.
Maybe, the British are just pigs. But I have to say that in my many years of travelling around this country, I found no place more hostile and threatening than this area. I felt much safer in Glasgow, which I feel has had a bad press over the years.
It’s possible that the poor frequency of trains and early Saturday end of service concentrates the idiots on to a small number of trains?This sort of ASB does seem curiously centred on small to medium-sized towns. You don't get it to that extent in London either - the late evening Tube is quite quiet and civilised compared to these provincial "vomit comets", and even the south WCML services (Saturday evenings after about 2200) that get that moniker aren't that bad, just a little noisy.
There does seem to be a correlation between people in dead-end jobs with no prospects in towns in a similar position and alcohol abuse, which shouldn't really surprise us and could do with being resolved at source.
There's some reductions taking place from Monday but that's due to Covid/Omicron, the Sunday timetable remains the same as the strike timetable but with Norwich services running as part of the same reduction. The services which should have been added back into the timetable are also staying removed, and a diagram is taken out on the London side.Glad to see progress ahs been made on the reginal side. It appears the strike page on the website has been removed yet a strike timetable is still in place today. Last time I checked it was only until the 2nd??
Intercity/Connect Train Managers voted to reject company proposals on multiple working of class 360s.