Not in any meaningful way, as has already explained. Their interactions are in public and covered by CCTV.
nfortunately this post shows that you misunderstand the guard role and the RMT’s arguments. The fact is that rail staff have no more interaction with the public than shop workers
A train is not a public place and the CCTV is, to be charitable, 'variable' in quality.
A train guard works, to all intents and purposes, alone.
A train guard is responsible for the safe operation of a piece of machinery which has hundreds of people on it.
A train guard or RPI is also responsible for dealing with those people. Beyond the bog standard 'tickets please', a guard or an RPI is responsible for their safety- particularly where someone may be incapacitated or otherwise vulnerable.
Staff also have the legal right to require someone give their contact details- and don't try and claim you don't routinely exercise this right, because the disputes forum is full of people who demonstrate otherwise.
The autonomy and responsibilities of the chap in Tesco who hands me my 20 B&H and scans my Clubcard is, with respect, absolutely nothing like those afforded to a train guard or RPI.
I have to say I am curious as to why people are
so vociferous against the idea of making on-board railway staff subject to an Enhanced DBS. I don't understand; possibly because I've had to have one done for fifteen years and, really, it's no big deal. The DBS really is the best example there is of 'nothing to hide, nothing to fear'.
could easily have committed the same offence had he not been at work.
Except the point is that his work gave him direct access to his victim and gave him direct authority over his victim. It seems that she was only able to escape him because, by a quirk of fate, the doors on an IET are actually released by the driver.
Even the BTP made it clear in their press release that he:
completely abused his position and took advantage of this young woman
And you're trying to claim that his position was irrelevant to how he was able to commit this offence?
ou somehow managed to quote two sentences and proceed to completely ignore the second sentence where it clearly states "McMurray approached her and sexually assaulted her."
Um, that's literally in the sentence I quoted?
The BTP press release seemed rather more focused on him 'adjusting her dress' and 'touching her' rather than focusing on what was, by any measure, an extremely serious sexual assault. The BTP don't even use the word 'serious' once.
Any employment which calls for background checks is also seen as being barred to anyone with any criminal record whatsoever - see any number of threads in the Disputes & Prosecutions forum about people concerned their careers will be threatened by an unpaid rail fare!
A lot of careers are rightly barred to people with criminal records.
I am subject to Enhanced DBS because of a specific application in the legislation, and not because I have any access whatsoever to vulnerable people. I drive a desk all day. But the law says my employer can ask for Enhanced DBS and so they do.
I don't think all jobs should be subject to Enhanced DBS. The chap in Tesco who hands me my B&H shouldn't be. The lass in the ticket office who sits behind the glass screen all day shouldn't be. But when you look at the rights, responsibilities, and autonomy of a train guard, not to mention their access to vulnerable people, I am quite frankly amazed that the law doesn't seem to mandate the use of at least an Enhanced DBS.
Even then, Security Check isn't that intrusive, and is the level which applies to most people with security clearances.
True enough, the form is a pain in the backside to complete, especially the financial stuff. But once it's submitted everything gets vetted in the background.