Hopefully that explains how this decision ended up having to be ‘resource led’ everyone knows it’s not ideal and that’s why there’s a new plan being created as soon as possible (the week after).
Southern's own PR notice of 4th January linked to in the email they sent me and to be found at
www.shorturl.at/kmHZ1 claims that "
By reducing the service, we aim to provide more certainty over which trains will and will not run for those that are travelling and reduce unexpected cancellations". and then goes on to say that "
From Monday 10 January 2022 until further notice. We will provide details of the service we plan to operate as soon as possible. Some services to and from London Victoria will be re-introduced"
However I would like to respond to that by saying that it is not absolutely not better to have the certainty that I will only have a Saturday service with no evening train services and no early morning services on a weekday and I would rather take my chances with an attempt by Southern to run the full weekday timetable with say 40% of those services being cancelled (which I could then check online before I set off to make the 0.8 mile walk to catch the train) as it would still means some trains being available to me in the early morning and late evening and would also mean that Southern would have to pay me compensation for any cancelled journey and/or provide a replacement taxi for my journey where they cancel the last scheduled train of the day. A permanent Saturday service simply means that you can't make many journeys at all and also that you the rail user are then forced to pay the vast extra amount for a taxi if you still want to go out at times of day when trains are no longer available but were formerly available (under the regular timetable).
I would like to know if Southern is only offering a Sunday rail service or Saturday rail service (for lines like Dorking to Horsham that have no Sunday service at all) on all its lines this week or if some lines like the good old Brighton Main Line (seemingly the jewel in Southern's crown) are actually still enjoying a full Monday to Friday service level up to London but with the minor inconvenience of trains terminating at London Bridge instead of London Victoria.
Also if Southern is only capable of or at least willing to provide us with a Saturday/Sunday level of service this week then in my book weekend fare rules should also apply and hence I should be able to get my one third Network Card discount on all fares at all times of day and not only on services with fares over £13 leaving after 10am when the vastly reduced level of service means I have to be back home again by just after 6pm. It does seem to me that the very least Southern could do would be to drop the £13 minimum Network card fares and make the one third discount available on all trains in order to make up for leaving us with a Saturday only service.
Also Southern's regular Saturday only service timetable between Dorking and Horsham is completely and utterly unacceptable as this incident highlights with that Saturday service with no evening service (which already stops anyone using the train going out in London to the theatre or for a meal on Saturday) being an almost totally useless service, especially if also transferred to a normal working weekday. We folks in the forgotten straw chewing badlands South of Dorking don't actually need a train every single hour of the day on either Saturday or Sunday (realistically there aren't enough passengers to sustain that frequency of service) but for those who do not have the option of using a car even a train once every 2 hours service would do so long as it could be provided on both Saturday and Sunday from the morning until the late evening..............
Re having the resources to run the timetable since Southern weren't expecting to run this Saturday timetable (at least it is Saturday from Dorking to Horsham and I expect it is a Sunday timetable on many of their other lines with better Sunday Services) then how come they mysteriously did have the resources available to to run the between Christmas and New Year timetable when clearly many of the drivers who worked that timetable would surely have been rostered off on one or more days this week.
In my book Southern is running a Christmas Week timetable again this week simply because it thinks it can get away with it and ramp up its profits by spending less on paying staff because in the mindset of many people the week after the main Christmas Break period (which this year was confined to only one working week rather than spread across two weeks due to the dates) is still a Christmas Week.
I think Southern have behaved quite reprehensibly but there is nowhere I can get a sensible hearing for that view given Southern's cynical elimination of all of its Meet The Manager sessions (with no online meeting replacement provided) for the last two years and due to running a call centre with Teleperformance with staff hired only for their ability to tolerate minimum wage and lousy job conditions and with no passion for or interest of any kind in the rail services provided to the beleaguered rail passenger. Staff in Southern's Teleperformance contact centre literally have no knowldedge of or interest in what services have been cancelled this week and/or how in that situation might change or develop going forwards. It isn't the fault of the individual employees but the combined fault of Teleperformance and Southern in giving them almost no information to give to passengers about the current changes or how the situation is going to develop going forwards.
Oh and I do think I should be able to claim for the cost of a taxi this week if I need to travel at times of day when Southern would normally be running a weekday train service but have simply chosen not to run one for reasons of their own business expediency. Only by forcing GoVia group to compensate customers for not running the service they have previously committed to with the DfT do they any incentive at all to try and restore those train services again as soon as possible.