Bishopstone
Established Member
Arun Valley and Crystal Palace services returning to Victoria from next Monday, so not a total roll-over of the current timetable.
But not of course services from Dorking to Horsham even though Arun Valley services all go through Horsham where services to London via Leatherhead, Epsom and Sutton start and even though once upon a time fast services from Bognor used to travel up the Dorking to Horsham line................Arun Valley and Crystal Palace services returning to Victoria from next Monday, so not a total roll-over of the current timetable.
Arun Valley to run to Vic 0700 to 2000 only though according to Southern webpage. Seems odd to switch it mid evening. Anyhow its a start and given the massacre over at SWR next week at least we still have a reasonable service level even if it involves a change.Arun Valley and Crystal Palace services returning to Victoria from next Monday, so not a total roll-over of the current timetable.
Indeed. The DfT simply lacks any sort of strategic view of these things. Penny wise and pound foolish...In the current climate where the Dft call all the shots this level of contractual obligation seems to have gone by the board. The point of principal stands I think, it's now becoming commonplace for operators to withdraw a service completely or make first/last train times significantly later/earlier with little or no warning. This does little to promote public confidence in the railway.
The odds of making it to the Courts are very low, because in the unlikely event that someone was sufficiently aggrieved to start legal proceedings, the matter would almost certainly be settled through a "goodwill gesture" of some sort.It also means people can have little confidence buying seasons if any compensation arrangements are only in place against the temporary timetable. I wonder if at some point we may see this tested in the courts? As people can buy a product based on the advertised service which is then withdrawn. Especially applicable to annual seasons as any refund won't be on a pro rata basis.
Most of this isn't correct to be honest.Indeed. The DfT simply lacks any sort of strategic view of these things. Penny wise and pound foolish...
The odds of making it to the Courts are very low, because in the unlikely event that someone was sufficiently aggrieved to start legal proceedings, the matter would almost certainly be settled through a "goodwill gesture" of some sort.
As you say, they are slashing the timetable on a moment's notice, with spurious justifications and effectively no recourse being offered. It's rather unlikely that that position would hold up in Court.
This appalling behaviour means that anyone who still commutes by rail will only be doing so because they have no reasonable alternative (e.g. for some reason having to live in Brighton but work in London) - a captive market in other words.
The revenue from this market is now so small that frankly the DfT and Treasury don't give a monkey's about it. They are purely interested in what minimises liability, even if it is at the expense of having a railway worth running.
Perhaps it might help if you could also state in what respect you believe the comments made by Watershed about the alleged decision making processes of the DfT in respect of these latest rail service cuts to be incorrect.Most of this isn't correct to be honest.
I'm sure it would be of interest to most of us if you could be more specific.Most of this isn't correct to be honest.
Yes but only on the fast shuttles, this includes Class 377 too.Will the Victoria to east Croydon use class 387 Gatwick Express stock
Where did you hear this?Be longer than that. Seven weeks is what I've heard
Current situation will continue for roughly 5 weeks.Where did you hear this?
It's not a measure on all lines. Portsmouth Dircer even sees an improvement with more trains stopping at Claphsm Junction. Scan Cobham has 2 trains an hour still.Arun Valley to run to Vic 0700 to 2000 only though according to Southern webpage. Seems odd to switch it mid evening. Anyhow its a start and given the massacre over at SWR next week at least we still have a reasonable service level even if it involves a change.
Out of interest, how often were you travelling in the evening, when you could?But not of course services from Dorking to Horsham even though Arun Valley services all go through Horsham where services to London via Leatherhead, Epsom and Sutton start and even though once upon a time fast services from Bognor used to travel up the Dorking to Horsham line................
Leaving the section of line from Dorking to Horsham with no train service out of London at all after the 1725 on a weekday is completely and utterly unreasonable.
Other lines are merely experiencing less service frequency and diversion to London Bridge as the London terminus but not not no weekday evening service whatsoever after the 1725 service from London Bridge. So with that being so why aren't services to Horsham via Dorking a priority for the earliest possible restoration to the normal service pattern and why does Southern and/or the DfT not also have to pay our consequential losses in having to travel by taxi instead for as long as the normal weekday service pattern with evening train services is not put back in place.
Current situation will continue for roughly 5 weeks.
In the current climate where the Dft call all the shots this level of contractual obligation seems to have gone by the board.
Every change of service will be agreed by the DfT. Southern are not breaching any contract.
Thank you.Southern Diverted services from Horsham via Dorking or from Dorking Only to London Bridge don't go through East Croydon and nor dis the trains on this line when they terminated at London Victoria. Instead they travel via Leathehead, Ashtead and Epsom, Sutton, Ewell East, Carshalton, Hackbridge, Mitcham Junction and Mitcham Eastfields etc (and the last service back of the night only at Balham) and then run non stop to London Bridge just as they previously ran non stop to London Victoria.
So passengers on lines from Horsham to London via Dorking and Epsom were never going through Purley, East Croydon etc previously and nor are they travelling through those stations now. So they were never most likely to change at Wimbledon since Southern trains through Sutton have never ever called there and nor do they now during the near total blockade on services in to London Victoria. Only South Western trains from Dorking to London Waterloo call at Wimbledon but they don't call at East Croydon either.
I used the shuttle from Clapham Junction to East Croydon in the morning peak yesterday. It was a very busy 8 car train. A large number of passengers boarded at Clapham, which begs the question as to how they managed last week.
How many passengers were on the later trains you used, of those who also alighted at Ockley (if any) how many didn’t have a car or lift and have therefore switched to using Dorking?Several times a week during recent months. Do you think that I would make all this fuss if I wasn't substantially adversely impacted by the removal of all evening weekday train services south of Dorking after the current 1725 service out of London Bridge.
So we do not care about @Capvermell then?How many passengers were on the later trains you used, of those who also alighted at Ockley (if any) how many didn’t have a car or lift and have therefore switched to using Dorking?
I'm not suggesting that any contract is being breached. Simply that any certainty for passengers that rail companies will attempt to provide a specified minimum level of service has gone. That has to impact on public perception and as suggested further up the thread will in turn lead to people making decisions about where they work and how they travel which take that unreliability into account. That's not good news for the railway and the prospect of passenger numbers recovering. The situation currently is more like buses where services can just vanish overnight.Every change of service will be agreed by the DfT. Southern are not breaching any contract.
As I said earlier Ockley was lucky to survive Beeching and used to have a very limited service. I’m pretty sure passengers there are subsided by Brighton main line passengers, question is how much should this tiny number of people be subsidised by people in towns and cities who don’t enjoy living in beautiful countryside and are already subsidising utilities and services in rural areas.So we do not care about @Capvermell then?
What would you suggest they do with such an unavailability of staff? What would you do?And yet they seem to be almost wholly unaccountable for their actions other than that one came make a complain to Transport Focus who then seem to fail to obtain any form of redress or explanation whatsoever from the DfT or GoVia/Southern for the current quite unreasonable slashing of Southern train services in response to no more than 10% of drivers being off sick due to the Omicron variant.
So we do not care about @Capvermell then?
I'm not suggesting that any contract is being breached. Simply that any certainty for passengers that rail companies will attempt to provide a specified minimum level of service has gone. That has to impact on public perception and as suggested further up the thread will in turn lead to people making decisions about where they work and how they travel which take that unreliability into account. That's not good news for the railway and the prospect of passenger numbers recovering. The situation currently is more like buses where services can just vanish overnight.
Can't tell youWhere did you hear this?
After mid evening, stock and crew workings affect it. Trains and crews from the Arun Valley don't go back down the Arun ValleyArun Valley to run to Vic 0700 to 2000 only though according to Southern webpage. Seems odd to switch it mid evening. Anyhow its a start and given the massacre over at SWR next week at least we still have a reasonable service level even if it involves a change.
We have industry insiders on this forum; looking at this page of the discussion I see several members posting who I know for a fact work within the industry in positions which mean they will be party to additional information which will not be in the public domain.Where did you hear this?
Well the traditional approach is to thin out the service but maintain first and last trains, rather than abandon parts of the network. Not a hypothetical answer as it's what I've spent most of the last 2 years at work doing thanks to covid!Ok - but what would do if, say, a fifth or your workforce was unable to come to work?
What would you suggest they do with such an unavailability of staff? What would you do?
Can't tell you
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After mid evening, stock and crew workings affect it. Trains and crews from the Arun Valley don't go back down the Arun Valley
We have industry insiders on this forum; looking at this page of the discussion I see several members posting who I know for a fact work within the industry in positions which mean they will be party to additional information which will not be in the public domain.
But the subsidy is available and it is a bit beneficial to towns and cities if it avoids some people from Ockley taking yet more cars into the towns.As I said earlier Ockley was lucky to survive Beeching and used to have a very limited service. I’m pretty sure passengers there are subsided by Brighton main line passengers, question is how much should this tiny number of people be subsidised by people in towns and cities who don’t enjoy living in beautiful countryside and are already subsidising utilities and services in rural areas.
I do not think anyone argues it should not be a lesser priority but there must be a space between lesser priority and a last train at 1725 instead of 2325. That is about a third of the service day cancelled without even a replacement bus. It even makes it impossible to do a 9-5.30 city job and get home after.In all honesty; probably not.
Its a huge numbers game. A small backwater village with a minimal passenger count is going to be a lesser priority than a huge station with thousands of passengers. That's just the nature of the beast.