The irony is, I remember on the morning of the day Lewisham happened, posters on this very forum were moaning about the warnings from SE not to travel being over the top and scaremongering!
Quite!
The irony is, I remember on the morning of the day Lewisham happened, posters on this very forum were moaning about the warnings from SE not to travel being over the top and scaremongering!
Not really - the rail industry is not going to pay for toilets or battery power to be fitted to trains, or more control or station staff or training for the very occasional problems caused by bad weather. It is not cost effective. The solution will be more advisories not to travel in poor weather, and more suspension of service in bad weather, to manage the risk. This is the direction that the railway (and the wider society) has been travelling anyway, and this will just push these policies further along. Gone are the days when 'getting through' were paramount. Not that this will be friendly to the non-complaining sections of the travelling public!
I don't disagree, but it's still depressing.
Hopefully, new trains will have better batteries and back up in general.
Hopefully, future training will include greater emphasis on communication with stranded passengers.
Hopefully, the chains of command will be streamlined to ensure serious issues are escalated quickly.
Hopefully, communication between the various emergency services will be clarified.
There's little or no additional cost incurred when such matters are absorbed into new practices for the future, so much of the above should become the norm.
Hopefully.....hopefully......hopefully...
A bit worrying that a number of points have been raised in just this one thread for which there may still be no plan for improvement. I hope I'm proved wrong.
Well you seem to be presuming that it hasn't but how can you know? There's not been a major stranding incident since (which could in of itself be seen as good news that the process has improved).
While the severe weather at the time formed the background to, and was, at least in part, the cause of the initial issue (2M48 failing to make a clean departure) in the Lewisham incident, one wonders if the railway would cope any better on a balmy summer day if a similar scenario (train not departing from platform 4, and another stopped behind it at L445 off the Down Lewisham line) developed, for any reason?We haven't had such severe weather in London since the 2018 Lewisham incident either.
Probably a bit easier to arrange normal 'assisting train' procedures in those circumstances too.It's a good point. It wouldn't be in darkness though...