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Unread 17th June 2012, 12:56   #91
ushawk
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This is just going round in circles and going absolutely nowhere. Passengers should follow what train crew say, or wait for assistance from rail staff and/or emergency services. Just walking along a railway line without any assistance from rail staff/emergency services will just require more staff to go along the line to see if they are fine.

I cant believe how people can defend how these people acted. By all means leave the train, but move AWAY from the fire (IE remain where the passengers on the bridge were, as this was a good distance away - and wait for assistance), NOT walk along a line PAST THE FIRE ITSELF, without any assistance from staff and ignoring the single staff member who told passengers to just move down the train away from the fire. Some passengers may not of heard the driver, but it doesnt mean you "follow the flock" and walk up the line.

Pathetic these days how a minority of passengers, the majority of which have no training of rail practices, think they know better than rail staff and emergency services and just go and do what they want. It means assistance needs to be diverted to those walking along the line and will just slow the "rescue" of the remaining passengers, who have done the right thing by waiting.

Of course this may not of happened if the train had a guard, but there is no way of being certain. DOO simply cant be reversed due to the high costs involved.
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Unread 17th June 2012, 13:38   #92
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While I don't condone aimlessly wondering around the line, I can't actually fault the passengers for evaquating themselfs. It's seems like rational expectation of what human beings would do in such circumstances.
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Unread 17th June 2012, 14:05   #93
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Originally Posted by tsr View Post
This is especially so with fire service campaigns claiming that three breaths of smoke can kill.........
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It is estimated that 50–80% of fire deaths are the result of smoke inhalation injuries
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smoke_inhalation
Not only that, but just breathing the fumes of a burning carrier bag can cause illness.
Was anyone from here actually involved in the incident ? Can anyone say for sure just how far the smoke and fumes from the fire had spread through the train. I don't know which way the wind was blowing on that particular day so I can't predict how far the smoke travelled in the vicinity of the train.

Are the RAIB investingating this one ? If so, wouldn't it be better to wait for some conclusive findings rather than condemning people who may well have acted according to their survival instincts ?
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Unread 17th June 2012, 15:15   #94
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It sounds like there were some idiots who may have walked back beside the fire, but did all of them do it?

Did everyone actually get off the train?

I don't know the answers to this, but I do see from 'eye witness' reports that we had some people saying they were told what to do and some weren't. Maybe due to a problem with the PA system.

So, I really do hope the RAIB is investigating as this will almost certainly investigate all of these things, so the TOCs can shoulder the blame for things they may have failed to do (have working safety systems, sufficient notices etc) and passengers can take the blame for what they did, or didn't do.

If you had a 4, 8 or 12 car train that was extremely busy or stock with no through gangways, even a guard could have done very little. If the driver was incapacitated in an incident, the guard would be doing all the safety things a driver would do - still leaving passengers alone for a time.

What we'd need would be a member of cabin crew in each coach in an ideal world, to give information to passengers and help with any evacuation or safe movement to another part of the train. That's obviously not going to happen, even on Intercity services that have more crew.
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Unread 17th June 2012, 16:09   #95
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ushawk View Post
I cant believe how people can defend how these people acted. By all means leave the train, but move AWAY from the fire
Who says this didn't happen? Were you there?

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NOT walk along a line PAST THE FIRE ITSELF
Perhaps the fire was out by then? Why are you assuming that the passengers did something stupid?

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without any assistance from staff and ignoring the single staff member who told passengers to just move down the train away from the fire.
We have one report that the driver advised some passengers to move down the train. It is not clear if this was via the PA or whether it was in person. We have many reports that there were no PA announcements. It is apparent that there was limited communication at best. We don't know how many people, if any, heard the advice and ignored it.

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Some passengers may not of heard the driver, but it doesnt mean you "follow the flock" and walk up the line.
Why not? There is safety in numbers, following a crowd seems a reasonable thing to do.

Quote:

Pathetic these days how a minority of passengers, the majority of which have no training of rail practices, think they know better than rail staff and emergency services and just go and do what they want.
Pathetic how some people assume that passengers are selfish lemmings who are incapable of thinking for themselves and weighing up a set of risks and making a personal decision.

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It means assistance needs to be diverted to those walking along the line and will just slow the "rescue" of the remaining passengers, who have done the right thing by waiting.
Nice rhetoric, but there is no evidence that the rescue was delayed by those actions.

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Of course this may not of happened if the train had a guard, but there is no way of being certain. DOO simply cant be reversed due to the high costs involved.
There have been several posts suggesting that there were off-duty rail staff on board and others have explained that a guard is unlikely to have made a difference. By all means argue against DOO, but I don't think this will support your cause. I think the opposite applies, a busy train catching fire and being safely evacuated whilst being DOO helps to demonstrate that DOO does not affect safety.
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Unread 17th June 2012, 19:41   #96
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Originally Posted by Daz28 View Post
Who says this didn't happen? Were you there
No, im going by all the evidence i have seen over the internet and from what has been said on here and on News articles.

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Perhaps the fire was out by then? Why are you assuming that the passengers did something stupid?
So that means it cant re-ignite and still isnt a danger ? Hardly a sensible decision doing that.

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We have one report that the driver advised some passengers to move down the train. It is not clear if this was via the PA or whether it was in person. We have many reports that there were no PA announcements. It is apparent that there was limited communication at best. We don't know how many people, if any, heard the advice and ignored it.
No PA announcements were reported (probably down to the loss of power). It would have probably been the driver coming out of the cab into cab 1 at a guess, but we dont know the full details.

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Why not? There is safety in numbers, following a crowd seems a reasonable thing to do.
Oh so because other people do something, others can follow as its perfectly safe ? Sorry, that is a pretty stupid statement. Just because a group of people do something it doesnt make it safe.

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Pathetic how some people assume that passengers are selfish lemmings who are incapable of thinking for themselves and weighing up a set of risks and making a personal decision.
Not all passengers are selfish, i said a MINORITY are, the majority do the right thing. IE those that just evacuated, moved away from the fire and waited for assistance are the passengers who did the right thing.

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Nice rhetoric, but there is no evidence that the rescue was delayed by those actions.
Of course not, i was saying there is a possibility, i mean the tracks would need checking.

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There have been several posts suggesting that there were off-duty rail staff on board and others have explained that a guard is unlikely to have made a difference. By all means argue against DOO, but I don't think this will support your cause. I think the opposite applies, a busy train catching fire and being safely evacuated whilst being DOO helps to demonstrate that DOO does not affect safety.
In all fairness we dont know if a guard would have made a difference - especially as the train was formed of 2 465 units, which dont have corridor connections, so if there was a guard, it wouldnt of helped if they were in the rear of the train. Of course having off-duty staff on board is useful, but it isnt always the case.
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Unread 17th June 2012, 20:53   #97
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ushawk View Post
I cant believe how people can defend how these people acted. By all means leave the train, but move AWAY from the fire (IE remain where the passengers on the bridge were, as this was a good distance away - and wait for assistance), NOT walk along a line PAST THE FIRE ITSELF, without any assistance from staff and ignoring the single staff member who told passengers to just move down the train away from the fire. Some passengers may not of heard the driver, but it doesnt mean you "follow the flock" and walk up the line.
You seem to have overlooked my rebuttal of the "past the fire itself" argument. The fire was quite likely to have been out by the time passengers 'wandered' beyond the fire (not that they would have known precisely where it was) and passengers looked to check on the welfare of the driver - is that really such a bad thing?

For those that continued up this way, it is unlikely they knew where the fire was and even if they did, wind direction and proximity of one station against another probably weighed up to head in the direction they were.

Quote:
Originally Posted by jonmorris0844 View Post
Maybe due to a problem with the PA system.

So, I really do hope the RAIB is investigating as this will almost certainly investigate all of these things, so the TOCs can shoulder the blame for things they may have failed to do (have working safety systems, sufficient notices etc) and passengers can take the blame for what they did, or didn't do.
This is certainly the argument I made/I'd make. The reliability of the PA address is shocking on the networkers. Sitting behind the cab as I often do, you quite often hear the driver making announcements which don't even make it out, let alone in a perfectly audible fashion.
As far as I understand it, on the Underground its part of the train crew's duty in the morning to send out a test message and check its audibility throughout the train; something that ought to be done across the board.

I return to the point made that passengers should remain in situ until instructed others. At what point does one take one's life into their own hands? Two/three hours without any contact. Two/three hours with smoke or hundred degree + heat in rush hour conditions? I do wonder...
If anything, it reflects a lack of trust in the rail industry between passengers and staff members. Surely this needs remedying and pointing the finger of blame at customers the moment they don't act like the sheep rail staff wish they were (incidentally ushawk you are quite critical of sheep like behaviour...) is not going to do anything to improve this relationship which quite clearly is safety-critical.
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Unread 17th June 2012, 23:19   #98
ushawk
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Quote:
Originally Posted by marlon465 View Post
You seem to have overlooked my rebuttal of the "past the fire itself" argument. The fire was quite likely to have been out by the time passengers 'wandered' beyond the fire (not that they would have known precisely where it was) and passengers looked to check on the welfare of the driver - is that really such a bad thing?

For those that continued up this way, it is unlikely they knew where the fire was and even if they did, wind direction and proximity of one station against another probably weighed up to head in the direction they were.
You seem to of totally missed it where i said it could of easily re-ignited, things can happen. Pictures were taken of bits of it still on fire so people were pretty close to it. Chances are they could smell the burning and easily see where the fire was (i mean from the pictures, its not exactly hard to miss) so they would of known where the fire was. Some passengers may of course wanted to check the welfare of the driver, but there is no proof of this and how exactly does this count to walking up a line ?
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Unread 17th June 2012, 23:24   #99
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Oh goodness me.

Getting irate about passengers de-training themselves when they just have to wait and are in no danger is one thing, but condemning people for getting off a train which as far as they were concerned was on fire and therefore dangerous is a bit of a thankless task.

If they'd been killed by their actions then it would be an entirely different argument, but they appear to have rather sensibly (fortunately?) got out on the opposite side to the third rail and out of the way of immediately passing trains.

There's not much to be gained by endlessly repeating how there's a possibility that if things were slightly different they might have been injured, as you have already made that point. And also, they weren't. Thankfully.
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Unread 17th June 2012, 23:54   #100
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The one thing that grates me is that earlier in the thread there were gripes from pax on the service about not finding staff after they had summarily, unilaterally and arbitrarily detrained themselves.

When the safety advice is to stay on a train and/or move to another carriage, and there is only a driver on board who has a responsibility to protect his train by performing his safety critical tasks, there is equally nothing to be gained from pax complaining that there was no staff around to help.

A DOO-train driver has every right to an expectation that his pax will stay on the train unless told to do otherwise. This fire was at the leading edge of the front carriage. Even on SouthEastern, that's still 7 other carriages to evac into. Away from the flames. Unfortunately, as is nearly always the case, people think they know better and do what they like, including walking miles on live track in the dark.

And who gets the blame when someone gets electrocuted then I wonder?
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Unread 18th June 2012, 03:14   #101
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Daz28 View Post
There have been several posts suggesting that there were off-duty rail staff on board and others have explained that a guard is unlikely to have made a difference. By all means argue against DOO, but I don't think this will support your cause. I think the opposite applies, a busy train catching fire and being safely evacuated whilst being DOO helps to demonstrate that DOO does not affect safety.
I'm afraid you rather missed the point. To suggest that the train was 'evacuated safely' implies that passengers were escorted from the train in an orderly and safe manner. That is not the case. What actually occurred was an 'uncontrolled evacuation', a term which speaks for itself. People let themselves out of the train, against the instructions of the sole member of traincrew on board, who was able to do absolutely nothing about it because he was required to carry out his operational duties. This large group of people then seemingly wandered aimlessly around an operational commuter railway line until they were eventually rounded up and escorted to a place of safety. The fact that nobody was electrocuted, fell and injured themselves, got hit by another train or came to grief in some other way during this incident is down to sheer luck and circumstance, and in no way whatsoever proves that DOO is 'safe'.

The railway appears to have had luck on it's side for some years now in that no major incident involving a DOO train has occurred and shown up the obvious issues with this form of operation. However with this increasing trend for people to let themselves off stranded commuter trains of their own accord, it can only be a matter of time before we see a death or serious injury, and it remains the case that a second trained member of staff on board, who is able to stay with the train and deal with the passengers when the Driver cannot, has the potential to stop this happening.
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Unread 18th June 2012, 08:04   #102
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Originally Posted by Michael.Y View Post
This fire was at the leading edge of the front carriage. Even on SouthEastern, that's still 7 other carriages to evac into. Away from the flames.
Technically three others, through narrow passageways that would take quite a considerable amount of time to evacuate a carriage's worth of passengers through - during such a time the smoke would of course travel with the passengers.

Quote:
Originally Posted by ushawk View Post
Some passengers may of course wanted to check the welfare of the driver, but there is no proof of this and how exactly does this count to walking up a line ?
Passenger accounts suggest that they wished to check on the welfare of the driver. This translates into walking thirty metres up the line perhaps because of the risk of re-ignition that you have suggested?
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Unread 18th June 2012, 08:06   #103
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Michael.Y View Post
A DOO-train driver has every right to an expectation that his pax will stay on the train unless told to do otherwise. This fire was at the leading edge of the front carriage. Even on SouthEastern, that's still 7 other carriages to evac into. Away from the flames. Unfortunately, as is nearly always the case, people think they know better and do what they like, including walking miles on live track in the dark.
Given there are no gang ways it would be pretty difficult to evacuate into the rear 4 cars.
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Unread 18th June 2012, 08:25   #104
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Originally Posted by GB View Post
While I don't condone aimlessly wondering around the line, I can't actually fault the passengers for evaquating themselfs. It's seems like rational expectation of what human beings would do in such circumstances.
Couldn't agree more.

Let's remember that passengers are human beings and will not want to stay on the same train as a fire. They are not robots. A rational or indeed irrational sense of self preservation will kick in. I can quite understand people wanting to to get off when there is only a voice on a PA system asking them to stay on in such a situation.


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Unread 18th June 2012, 09:03   #105
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Originally Posted by BestWestern View Post
I'm afraid you rather missed the point. To suggest that the train was 'evacuated safely' implies that passengers were escorted from the train in an orderly and safe manner.
No, evacuated safely means that everyone got out without injury or fatality.

You do not have to be led by someone wearing a British Rail uniform for it to be safe.

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That is not the case. What actually occurred was an 'uncontrolled evacuation', a term which speaks for itself.
Most evacutions from fire, whether a train, a building, whatever are 'uncontrolled'. Uncontrolled does not mean unsafe, although the two do sometimes go together.

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This large group of people then seemingly wandered aimlessly around an operational commuter railway line until they were eventually rounded up and escorted to a place of safety.
Why invent things that there is no evidence for? Some hung around the train and were escorted down the embankment by the emergency services. Others walked the short distance (about half a mile) to Mottingham, the next station and exited there. Where was the aimless wandering?

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The fact that nobody was electrocuted, fell and injured themselves, got hit by another train or came to grief in some other way during this incident is down to sheer luck and circumstance, and in no way whatsoever proves that DOO is 'safe'.
Why attribute it to luck? How about giving the passengers some credit for avoiding the dangers and behaving sensibly? How about applauding the driver for taking the correct actions to make the site safe? How about applauding SouthEastern for their processes?

There seem to be a lot of people on this thread willing to put all the good things down to luck, all the passenger actions down to stupidity, and all the staff actions as futile.
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