WombleGuard
Member
As the title suggests, if you'd had an operational incident (RTS on Red or unaccommodated door release for example), would this disqualify you from getting a driving job?
No.As the title suggests, if you'd had an operational incident (RTS on Red or unaccommodated door release for example), would this disqualify you from getting a driving job?
I'd like to think if you were on a plan from an incident you'd be ineligible to be promoted until you come off the plan. However I've known the complete opposite to happen, so I'm also going to say no!As the title suggests, if you'd had an operational incident (RTS on Red or unaccommodated door release for example), would this disqualify you from getting a driving job?
At most TOC’s guard- driver isn’t a line of promotion.I'd like to think if you were on a plan from an incident you'd be ineligible to be promoted until you come off the plan. However I've known the complete opposite to happen, so I'm also going to say no!
Those damn shops crop up everywhereDoes it perhaps depend on the nature of the incident?
I know of a signaller who put back on a train (Returned a signal to danger in error, resulting in a SPAR) but who had an otherwise perfect record. He applied for a higher grade box around 2 years later and was successful.
At most TOC’s guard- driver isn’t a line of promotion.
At most places yes, however it is a line of promotion at Mersey rail.This! Driver is a completely different job. Promotion for a guard would be into guard management.
SPAR- Signal Passed at Red (Formerly a Cat B, C or D SPAD) Only the former Cat A SPADs are still referred to as SPADS.Those damn shops crop up everywhere![]()
At most places yes, however it is a line of promotion at Mersey rail.
Yes of course, but it’s still their line of promotion. You have to be a guard to become a driver. They don’t recruit for trainees. Not sure if it will still be the same when their new trains come in.But they’d presumably still have to apply and sit the driver selection tests etc. so I guess it couldn’t be considered a promotion in the way shed driver to mainline could be (which can be done on a time served basis because they’ve already passed selection).
I’m not sure I’d fancy my chances if I went around asking our guards when their “promotion to driver” is coming through.
This kind of thing happens quite frequently. Signalling, thankfully, hasn’t gone over to the punitive and discriminatory “clean licence” policy that train crew grades have (yet lol)Does it perhaps depend on the nature of the incident?
I know of a signaller who put back on a train (Returned a signal to danger in error, resulting in a SPAR) but who had an otherwise perfect record. He applied for a higher grade box around 2 years later and was successful.
Incidents on record last for seven years I believe. After that, a record is considered clean. So worst case, bide time?
I've been able to see the extract of my company's internal safety record database, it was pretty indepth. My version of events, the formal version, action taken, culpable or exonerated, dates times headcodes etc. Quite a lot of info. A former H&S rep gave me the details about the seven year deal. That may be specific to my TOC.There's no standard time for how long an incident would stay on file. The longer its been since the last one the less relevant it becomes. Some TOCs may set their own limits of course and may apply GDPR data retention policies on some or all of the information.
Realistically, even where that isn't the case, the further back you go the less likely you are to be able to find reports for a given incident to actually review and understand the circumstances (misfiled, archived in a storage centre somewhere, never got sent over with a transfer of safety information, lost in an office move or computer system change etc) so even if you can see Jo Bloggs was involved in a given incident years and years ago the most info you'll be able to get on their involvement and the extent of their culpability would be a couple of paragraphs.
Very much a benefit of electronic systems rather than dealing with cupboards full of paper files.I've been able to see the extract of my company's internal safety record database, it was pretty indepth. My version of events, the formal version, action taken, culpable or exonerated, dates times headcodes etc. Quite a lot of info. A former H&S rep gave me the details about the seven year deal. That may be specific to my TOC.