Would it help if the driver could open the doors ?
Any thoughts
Yeah, I have thoughts.
It's hard enough at times to justify the Guard's job. Once the driver starts opening the doors, that's another little job that we no longer have to do. Then it's a short step to having the driver shut them, too. Then it's another short step to complete DOO. Then it's just a short walk to the Dole queue. I digress.......
Speaking of walking through trains, as you were.
I sign four types of traction, these being 150, 153, 321 and 350. Of these, only one (350) can have the doors operated from anywhere else as well as the cabs. Of the other three, they are almost exclusively used on short hops, such as Bedford-Bletchley in the case of the DMU's, and Tring and Milton Keynes terminators in the case of the 321's. There is rarely enough time to walk through 321's due to the short travel time between stops.
On the Bedford branch, that is classed as a "pay-train" and we are
expected to walk through them. We also get commission on the tickets we sell on-board, so it's a nice little bonus for you if you walk trains and sell the odd ticket. Not all Guards get this commission, and not all get the amount we do, so they don't see the point of walking trains. Fair enough.
It's also worth remembering that a lot of the guys on the railways are old-school, and when they passed as Guards (which is what the job was actually called, unlike today) there were such things as Travelling Ticket Inspectors (I know, I've gone all surreal) whose job was to check tickets, issue UPFN's etc etc. So these old school Guards don't see that they should waste shoe leather walking trains. They see it that if the company was short-sighted enough to get rid of TTI's and lose money, that's the company's problem, not theirs.