No, can you show me where I've actually argued against the word of a driver please Dave? Like, told them they're wrong, just because I felt like it?
You are incapable of engaging in a proper debate, but I'm giving you a chance to prove your point.
What you don't like is lay people daring to ask questions and using referenced evidence that counteracts your own intuition. Well, I'm afraid train crew are getting a good kick up the arse, over and over again, by a clever government, who have you all totally surrounded.
I hate Tories and I like trains - and train crew. I'm more than a little tired of being told I know a) nothing or b) too much, and that somehow I don't like train crew, or am "pro DOO". It illustrates how little in the way of reasoned argument there is out there, from some posters here, and the RMT in general.
Actually we are very happy for lay people to ask questions. Especially since there is widespread ignorance about every aspect of the railway, even within the railway itself. However if our answers are then doubted or dismissed because our experience doesn't comply with the reports or evidence you have seen, then what is the point in asking us, or us bothering to try to debate? I know what the stats say. That's not much comfort to the driver who ends up at the sharp end of an incident. Yet again I will say there are many drivers who are not opposed to the principle of DOO. They would just like their fears regarding its expansion (and indeed its current use) into account as it is them who will be taking the consequences of that expansion.
Maybe it's me misreading the tone of your responses, but you don't sound like someone who "likes train crew". You seem to be pleased about us "getting a kick up the arse" and "being totally surrounded".
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You don't want passengers to suffer then don't strike...simple. I am also pretty sure you'll find that a straw poll of most rail commuters don't think the unions increase safety at all. The RMT are not in this for safety at all and never have been. It's all about the bottom line....less guards...less members.....less subs...simple. To go on strike over a role they have signed a new contract on is striking for the sake of striking. The public have plenty of sympathy for rail staff but not rail unions. I see now the RMT and other unions are penetrating much more into buses too and sure enough the strikes are now appearing. Not satisfied with ruining the railway they now are going after the buses all for those extra subs....lucky passengers.
Do you really need it spelled out?
Better pay, better perks, better security = more committed workforce, who have a stake in doing things well, more likely to take their role seriously - because believe me, if you don't, you could do a LOT of harm - and willing to stay for the long haul instead of the ten a penny poorly skilled poorly paid agency staff who are here today gone tomorrow because there is no incentive for them to do different.
Protected working hours such as the minimal 12 hours between shifts and breaks that have to be taken. Make no mistake, the operator would be happy for us to work longer hours, more intensively, with less breaks, then blame us when we nod off and pass a red signal, because in the long term it will cost them less. This protection didn't come out of nowhere, it had to be won, and it wouldn't be given to us out of good will.
Even just simple elements of the union's work that you will never know about play an overall part in safety. Something that might seem trivial - like an uneven or unlit walkway to a siding - by being properly lit and maintained might stop the driver slipping and breaking his leg on the way to the train in the dark early hours. Result is lots of cancelled trains - not helpful to passengers.
Yes, their first duty is to their members. But their actions make the railway a safer place for everyone as a result. Like it or not. If there were no unions the operators would be trying to get away with far more than they do now.
I'm faintly disturbed that there seems to be an implicit approval from so many that we should be happy to create a less skilled, less satisfied workforce as this directly affects those to whom they provide the service.