Will there still be a ticket office here?
“A 21-day public consultation has been launched to collect passengers' views”. There was more. “Posters have gone up in stations, inviting the public to take part, after which the government will make the final decision on which offices will close. Currently around three out of every five stations has a ticket office, although some are only staffed part time”. Meaning what?
Meaning those stations typically offer ticket office service from around 0600 hours to somewhere between 1230 and 1430 hours. Those ticket offices may open on Saturdays, but will almost certainly remain closed on Sundays. Moreover, stations that offer that level of service do not have any other station staff. So there won’t be anyone else “on concourses to sell tickets”.
And what of those mythical “24 hour ticket counters”? The ones described by Tom Harwood of Gammon Broadcasting™ News (“Bacon’s News Channel”) thus: “there are some ticket booths around the country that sell about one ticket a week … These need to be manned all the time”. There are no “24 hour ticket counters”. Not one. Not even in London. Not anywhere in the UK.
We know this as the Nationalrail website has the details under “Stations”. So, by way of an example, let’s start at Crewe, as it’s a very good place to start. The ticket office is NOT open 24 hours. It opens before 0600 hours (just after 0800 hours on Sundays) and closes at 2000 hours (1900 hours at weekends). But there are staff on the barriers and platforms.
Typically, platform staff are there to dispatch trains. But take a trip on four of the six lines taking you away from Crewe, and the story is very different. Let’s go towards Liverpool. Winsford and Hartford have ticket offices but they close early afternoon. There are no other station staff: trains self dispatch. Go further, to Acton Bridge, and there are no station staff at all.
Will there be one here?
Kidsgrove has a ticket office open during the mornings, but again, not on Sunday. Alsager and Longport are unstaffed. Go towards Shrewsbury and there are no station staff, no ticket offices, nothing. But there are six intermediate stations. Only going towards Chester or Stafford is the first stop a station with both ticket office and platform staff.
So the idea that there are all these stations with superfluous ticket offices, along with station staff with nothing else to do, is just more right-wing claptrap. The railway has already modernised, indeed, this is a process that has been in train for decades, with reductions in station staff coming hard on the heels of the Beeching Report and the subsequent closures.
The Guardian’s take is “Almost 1,000 offices are believed to be targeted for closure under government proposals to cut costs and ‘modernise’ the railway, although ministers have for months shied away from spelling out the extent of the plans, in the face of concern from their own MPs as well as unions and passenger groups”. And remember the view from Crewe.
All those ticket offices would be part of the closure: maybe even Crewe, Chester, Stafford, Wilmslow, Shrewsbury and other major stations. Then remember how intimidating the labyrinthine ticketing system of Britain’s railways can seem to first time users. The station ticket office welcomes the uninitiated. It eases their journey. Its presence encourages repeat travel.
Remember also that the RMT has warned “A process to shut nearly all of Britain’s railway station ticket offices could begin as early as next week”. A process that will be cheered on by the right-wing press, who either don’t travel by train, or when they do, ticket purchase is one of those occasions when they have chaps to do that sort of thing for them.
The Tories will misinform. Their press pals will lie. The public will suffer. Again.
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Apart from sell tickets who is going to sort out routes for those people trying to get to Edinburgh without going on a train with red in its colour scheme? (True, believe it or not!) Or sort out a ticket and route to go, in advance, from Yeovil Junction to Cardiff via Braintree Freeport, return, on Boxing Day? Or put down a wheelchair ramp while the local kids take turns to insult you and the usual ticketless regulars get on and off the train at will while taunting you about how much dosh they make from dealing as you remember that both BTP officers on duty won't even return your calls unless there is actual blood? Who would have all the answers at their fingertips (clue: not those wandering lost souls on the platform)? Who would be able to assist the elderly and the dyslexic in comfort? Who else can sort out the mess those Trainline vermin leave behind?
ReplyDeleteAnd remember, there will have to be TWO members of rail staff present for safety reasons.
Can't imagine what my technophobic, Daily Mail (hack, spit) reading mother will think about this; apparently they are the only paper (ha!) that thinks about the elderly. Repeatedly told her that her beloved ticket office was in grave danger but no, "the tories wouldn't do that".
The tories won't be "happy" until there is a return to Victoriana, feudalism, slavery, workhouses, child labour and no NHS.
ReplyDelete