The Planner
Veteran Member
- Joined
- 15 Apr 2008
- Messages
- 17,655
Why is being killed the metric? Surely being injured is bad enough?
Whatever happened to the concept of reasonable care ? For that matter, what happened to the concept of personal responsibility ?And the legislative background in this country (thankfully) means you can't acknowledge a risk exists and just do nothing about it.
How seriously ?Why is being killed the metric? Surely being injured is bad enough?
Ah the anti hsea crusdaer strikes again. It isnt worth trying to engage with this poster. He has no intrest in facts and merely wants to complain about hsea gone mad.
1 - It is also clear you don't like being told what to do
First point, correct, particularly if I cannot see any point to it.2 - by people you consider beneath you.
No idea, what are current categories apart from death and life changing? Broken limbs, required to go to hospital, minor injury, trip slip and fall?Whatever happened to the concept of reasonable care ? For that matter, what happened to the concept of personal responsibility ?
One of the unintended side effects of making the world so safe people do not have to think for themselves is that, in some ways, it makes it more dangerous because, err, people stop thinking for themselves and so take no care because "other people take care of my safety"....
Bur nobody has yet answered the basic question anyway, if it has been safe for 150 years, why is it no longer safe ? And if the answer is because our risk aversion has gone up so what was considered safe is no longer thought of as safe enough, the obvious question is where does that end ?
And how much is all this costing ? If making the railways 100% safe costs so much it puts up the price of the tickets more people will drive and, ironically, get killed.....
How seriously ?
Ahh, we agree on one thing. TBH I don't much like it anymore either. I would far rather have bought my son up in the 70s or 80s, and most parents (particularly older parents) think the same waythe world has changed and you don't understand it anymore.
Death is objective, you are either dead or you aren't, but injuries ares less soNo idea, what are current categories apart from death and life changing? Broken limbs, required to go to hospital, minor injury, trip slip and fall?
So injuries should be ignored and because "no one died" its ok?Ahh, we agree on one thing. TBH I don't much like it anymore either. I would far rather have bought my son up in the 70s or 80s, and most parents (particularly older parents) think the same way
Death is objective, you are either dead or you aren't, but injuries ares less so
I think there is a standard system for calculating the effects of injuries as a proportion of a death. So losing a leg = .23 of a death (made that up but you get the idea). Most industries have a threshold of cost per deaths prevented to asses safety measures.No idea, what are current categories apart from death and life changing? Broken limbs, required to go to hospital, minor injury, trip slip and fall?
It also doesn't help that UK passengers seem to have a habit of crowding round the doors making it so the disembarking passengers have to squeeze through the crowd.
It is feral at Picc - the "if you don't move I can't get off so you won't get on" thing works on the Tube, but if you try it at Picc they push you out of the way.
The cause of it is lack of capacity, people are physically fighting for seats. If there were enough seats there would not be a problem, you simply don't see the same thing on a 12 car on the south WCML. There is jostling for position by people after specific seats (e.g. legroom), but not physical violence.
Unsurprisingly it is less of an issue when a 6 car 331 rocks up. The answer to it is therefore obvious, and it isn't security guards who look like they'll push you off in front of a train if you even look at them the wrong way. Controlling your customers through fear so you comply when they are providing an unacceptable level of service is not an acceptable approach. Even Ryanair don't do that.
I’ve always avoided the through platforms at Picc for this reason, though of course this is not always practicable if travelling west / north. Seems like the red lines have simply added a further dimension of unpleasantness. As you say, if people feel the need to fight for seats then capacity is insufficient.
Are you a qualified expert on every kind of hazard then? You have the requisite knowledge and experience to competently review any risk assessment in every environment?First point, correct, particularly if I cannot see any point to it.
Speed limits ? Yes I can see the point of them and so adhere even if PC Plod is not about.
Being told to step back from the edge of the platform, no I cannot see the point of that and object to being told I am incapable of making my own risk assessment for my own safety. I am not a child.
..is the correct response.Even without the H&S war of words, Piccadilly's red lines need to vanish. Instead, there needs to be a proper investment in making the platforms suitable for the traffic they handle.
Spot on!Even without the H&S war of words, Piccadilly's red lines need to vanish. Instead, there needs to be a proper investment in making the platforms suitable for the traffic they handle.
..is the correct response.
There are always going to be H&S odds and sods perceived as overreactions (certainly to a few folk here) but those particular Piccadilly platforms are a nightmare. The red lines are merely a symptom of a much more pressing infrastructure issue.
Can I just contradict myself ?Death is objective, you are either dead or you aren't,
The most important word in all this, and indeed in the pandemic response, is proportionate.So injuries should be ignored and because "no one died" its ok?
The National Journey planner always seem to recommend a change at Oxford Rd.I’ve always avoided the through platforms at Picc for this reason, though of course this is not always practicable if travelling west / north. Seems like the red lines have simply added a further dimension of unpleasantness. As you say, if people feel the need to fight for seats then capacity is insufficient.
What about if the platform is that overcrowded someone falls? Personal responsibility too?The most important word in all this, and indeed in the pandemic response, is proportionate.
But you are missing the point anyway, it's as much about personal responsibility, e.g. if a group of lads are messing about and one gets pushed on to the track, that's their fault, nobody else's.
Would a simpler solution not be, given that the island platform is far longer than almost every train using it, to just wall off one side of the platform, changing from one side to the other at the midpoint; That seems to be how the platforms are used anyway, ie Up trains use the Stockport end and Down trains the Oxford Road end ?
This is the most stupid post I have ever read.Are you a qualified expert on every kind of hazard then? You have the requisite knowledge and experience to competently review any risk assessment in every environment?
If the platform is too crowded that is a completely different issue.What about if the platform is that overcrowded someone falls? Personal responsibility too?
If the platform is too crowded that is a completely different issue.
I am not quite sure what you mean here, who is vulnerable, to falling off the edge of a platform ? But if such a person exists the solution is obvious, they should stay away from the edge of the platform. Do these people really need someone to point that out to them ? Or are you meaning mentally disabled ? If someone is so mentally disabled they might walk off the edge of a platform should they be out without a carer ? It is not for Network Rail (or anyone else) to prevent that.sometimes it's not about everybody but the most vulnerable.
I do not agree, how exactly is me walking closer to the edge of a platform putting anyone else at risk ?But if you just decide to ignore the rules because you don't think they should apply to you, you're just being selfish.
Your logic is tenuous at best. It wasn't compulsory to wear seat belts in the UK until 1983. If it had been safe not to wear seatbelts for almost 100 years, why was it no longer safe?Bur nobody has yet answered the basic question anyway, if it has been safe for 150 years, why is it no longer safe ? And if the answer is because our risk aversion has gone up so what was considered safe is no longer thought of as safe enough, the obvious question is where does that end ?
And how much is all this costing ? If making the railways 100% safe costs so much it puts up the price of the tickets more people will drive and, ironically, get killed.....
I do not agree, how exactly is me walking closer to the edge of a platform putting anyone else at risk ?
Do these people really need someone to point that out to them ? Or are you meaning mentally disabled ? If someone is so mentally disabled they might walk off the edge of a platform should they be out without a carer ? It is not for Network Rail (or anyone else) to prevent that.
I do not agree, how exactly is me walking closer to the edge of a platform putting anyone else at risk ?
How does considering everybody lead to an unhappy experience for the majority, who have the mainstream interpretation of common sense? Non-stop trains have run past platforms for the best part of 200 years now. If I wait for a bus anywhere I am a comparable distance from passing road traffic, and certainly from the bus as it arrives. Yet none of these has ever been considered an issue.To keep people safe. It may look silly to you, but NR has to consider everybody who might use the railway, some of whom would be very vulnerable only 1m away from the edge as a freight train ran past.