Bletchleyite
Veteran Member
Apparently police already involved with this!
Is there an Airport byelaw they can enforce? As except where there is, trespass is a civil matter and so the Police are not relevant.
Apparently police already involved with this!
I'm puzzled, how did RATP become involved - it's Terravision being (rightly or wrongly) referred to as 'cowboys'.
Terravision pay coach companies to run their services for them, like National Express do. Currently, Epsom Coaches (owned by RATP) are running their Stansted routes.
includes picture of its passengers waiting in the rain for a coach and comment about a coach passenger being arrested because not happy with airport staff's advice on where to go to catch a coach!
Latest news from Terravision's viewpoint http://www.britalypost.com/stansted-the-battle-of-low-cost-transfers/
includes picture of its passengers waiting in the rain for a coach and comment about a coach passenger being arrested because not happy with airport staff's advice on where to go to catch a coach!
That is the car pick up/drop off point! cannot see the police putting up with this for very long! God knows where the coaches work from as they were slung out of Mid-stay on Weds eve at 5pm! Absolute cowboys, good riddance.
Seems to be some kind of weird arrangement between Citylink and Terravision from what I've read?
I guess neither of them have any time for NX.
NX are cowboys. What kind of greedy company doesn't allow people onto the next coach when departing the airport after arriving in London - someone's flight arrival could be delayed and you can't predict what customs etc will be like on any given day.
All others used to say they wouldn't guarantee the next coach but would if space available. Grasping NX don't allow. Pure greed from them.
I'm confused now. This Tweet shows that people are still being taken to Bishops Stortford.
https://twitter.com/pabloua/status/688748375475380224
The train ticket is dated today. I thought that stopped now that Terravision are using Citylink?
Latest I was told is they aren't even transferring Kings Cross to Victoria now only from Victoria you may get lucky and from Stratford all coaches go to Bishops Stortford to catch and pay for the train to Stansted. Despite this, in response to online tweets they say they are running Stratford to Stansted.
I felt sorry for Arriva when this happened to them at Luton. I don't feel sorry for this kind of cowboy approach.
Yep, same here. Arriva were shafted by Luton Airport but had the organisational ability to put in a robust enough advertised connection down to Parkway interchange. Selling tickets to Stansted but dumping people at the railway station, expecting them to make their own way the rest of the way, is disgraceful.
I'll be honest, I hope Stansted Airport get blown out of the water at the High Court in the summer.
An airport is a private organisation, I don't fundamentally see why they shouldn't do what they are doing
I disagree.
If an airport or a shopping centre denied some local bus companies access to a bus station, because they'd agreed an exclusive contract with a competitor, there would be outrage. I see no difference between a local bus company and a coach company (indeed, in the same situation at Luton, the coach company was the local bus company).
I see no justification- other than greed- for airports to be selling exclusive or semi-exclusive contracts to preferred coach suppliers for access to the coach station. I see no issue with them charging for access to the coach station, but that should be on an equal footing between coach companies.
(And FWIW I feel the same about the TOCs charging thousands for access to station taxi ranks).
Luton Airport is a bit different here, and is another reason I supported Arriva in that case - it is owned by Luton Borough Council, though operated under contract, and as such I consider it effectively *is* public land, and LBC as a public body have no business letting a contract giving exclusivity to anyone. But that is not the case for Stansted.
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Stansted airport is owned by the Manchester Airports Group which is two thirds owned by the local authorities of Greater Manchester and hence under the definition above could also be regard as public land.
I felt sorry for Arriva when this happened to them at Luton. I don't feel sorry for this kind of cowboy approach.
An interesting point...as it's a foreign local authority does that put it on a similar standing to DB running trains here?
Am I missing something here? Manchester is not a foreign local authority
Stansted airport is owned by the Manchester Airports Group which is two thirds owned by the local authorities of Greater Manchester and hence under the definition above could also be regard as public land.
After asking few workers at the airport, they all told me you don't run Stansted service anymore. I had to buy Nat. Express ticket which they sell at reduced price for Terravision customers. So where can I get refund for my unused return ticket?
Stansted 'bus war' as Terravision sells coach tickets despite airport ban
Firm lost right to use facilities at terminals leaving unsuspecting customers facing interchange at Kings Cross, meaning journey times doubled
Nadia Khomami @nadiakhomami
Friday 22 January 2016 13.23 GMT
Stansted airport is at the centre of a bus war after the travel company Terravision lost the right to operate out of the terminal but continued to sell coach tickets to unsuspecting passengers.
Travellers have complained of missed flights and chaotic scenes because the company failed to tell them that its services no longer run to the airport. Terravision, which has run direct, low-cost transfer services to and from several locations in central London for the past 12 years, lost the right to use Stansteds privately run coach station after a disputed tender process last year.
It was eventually barred from the airport last week. It has launched a legal action in an effort to have its access rights restored, claiming Stansted is denying passengers choice.
In the meantime, it has quietly made an arrangement for its passengers to be carried by a new operator, Stansted Citylink. Terravision now ferries travellers from its pickup points at Victoria and Liverpool Street stations in London to Citylinks stop near Kings Cross station, where they are made to change coaches.
Passengers travelling from Liverpool Street have said the first they knew of the arrangement was when they arrived at Kings Cross instead of Stansted airport and were told to get on another coach.
Meanwhile, Terravision ticket holders arriving at Stansted airport are instructed to use bays 11 and 12 the bays used by Citylink. There is no mention of the arrangement with Citylink or the transfer at Kings Cross on the Terravision website, which claims that a journey between Stansted and Liverpool Street would take 55 minutes. In fact, with the Kings Cross diversion, journey times are up to double that.
Terravision, founded by the Italian businessman Fabio Petroni, believes the tender process was flawed. It has launched legal action against Stansted, accusing it of abusing its dominant position under the 1998 Competition Act, and restricting competition to the detriment of consumers. The company has also lodged complaints with the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) and the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA).
Stansted denies the claims and has advised customers to book direct with the three operators who won the contract National Express, Stansted Citylink (operated by Metroline) and Airport Bus Express (operated by Autostradale).