I've overseen a rather strange scenario twice now.
First time, I saw a woman ask the OBS at Haywards Heath if she could buy a ticket on the train prior to boarding, to which the OBS said yes. After the train departed, the OBS asked where she was going, and then proceeded to say "Oh don't worry about it. It's only 15 minutes or so."
Second time, another woman was ticket checked approaching Haywards Heath from Gatwick and said, "I think I owe you some money". Presumably this was travelling beyond the ticket's validity or something similar. The OBS stared at her ticket for a good few seconds before handing it back and telling her "don't worry about it". I didn't see the full situation so it may be that the woman had a valid ticket for the journey after all.
I find this all rather strange. While I understand that staff have discretion, I would assume simple matters like this would normally be attended to. I do wonder if staff aren't too bothered about this, and more keen about people purposely avoiding fares entirely or invalid Railcard discounts, etc (though I've never had my Railcard checked while on GTR, even by RPIs).
Also, most stations on the BML have ticket barriers installed, and those that don't have more recently had On Track contract workers present checking tickets (Balcombe and Wivelsfield). Part of me wonders if some of these passengers will then be caught out from these revenue blocks in place and face penalty fares or reports for prosecution as a result.
This also fits with the general theme of flashing my smartcard at an RPI or OBS and being waved away as they trust someone who uses the railway often enough to have a smartcard is probably using it legitimately.
First time, I saw a woman ask the OBS at Haywards Heath if she could buy a ticket on the train prior to boarding, to which the OBS said yes. After the train departed, the OBS asked where she was going, and then proceeded to say "Oh don't worry about it. It's only 15 minutes or so."
Second time, another woman was ticket checked approaching Haywards Heath from Gatwick and said, "I think I owe you some money". Presumably this was travelling beyond the ticket's validity or something similar. The OBS stared at her ticket for a good few seconds before handing it back and telling her "don't worry about it". I didn't see the full situation so it may be that the woman had a valid ticket for the journey after all.
I find this all rather strange. While I understand that staff have discretion, I would assume simple matters like this would normally be attended to. I do wonder if staff aren't too bothered about this, and more keen about people purposely avoiding fares entirely or invalid Railcard discounts, etc (though I've never had my Railcard checked while on GTR, even by RPIs).
Also, most stations on the BML have ticket barriers installed, and those that don't have more recently had On Track contract workers present checking tickets (Balcombe and Wivelsfield). Part of me wonders if some of these passengers will then be caught out from these revenue blocks in place and face penalty fares or reports for prosecution as a result.
This also fits with the general theme of flashing my smartcard at an RPI or OBS and being waved away as they trust someone who uses the railway often enough to have a smartcard is probably using it legitimately.