Great Western Coffee Shop

Journey by Journey => Shorter journeys in Plymouth and Cornwall => Topic started by: JayMac on August 09, 2011, 11:53:09



Title: Disruption in Cornwall. 9th August 2011
Post by: JayMac on August 09, 2011, 11:53:09
From FGW Live Updates:

Quote
Tuesday 09th August at 11:15

Due to a Police incident in the Truro- St Austell in Cornwall. We are experiencing disruption to services in both directions.

Limited road transport is operating in the Cornwall area.

Currently, we have closed Truro Station for safety purposes due to volumes of customers .

Further updates to follow.

According to National Rail Enquiries (updated 1145), buses are replacing trains between Plymouth and Penzance.


Title: Re: Disruption in Cornwall. 9th August 2011
Post by: anthony215 on August 09, 2011, 12:12:54
any idea on what this inccident is?


hope it isnt any more yobs causing trouble

found that the 13:44 arrival into paddington from Penzance has been cancelled, although it is also shown as a service from Par which is due into paddington at 13:57.

http://www.livedepartureboards.co.uk/fgw/summary.aspx?T=PAD&x=28&y=4



Title: Re: Disruption in Cornwall. 9th August 2011
Post by: grahame on August 09, 2011, 12:15:29
any idea on what this inccident is?


hope it isnt any more yobs causing trouble

From Twitter:

Quote
Kilo_Juliet1984
 
Just seen evidence of rioting in #stAustell. Oh no, a sign was just blown over in the wind.


Title: Re: Disruption in Cornwall. 9th August 2011
Post by: marky7890 on August 09, 2011, 12:17:31
Someone on my Facebook who was on a train stuck at Truro says someone was threatening to jump from a bridge in St Austell.


Title: Re: Disruption in Cornwall. 9th August 2011
Post by: ChrisB on August 09, 2011, 12:17:41
NRE are recommending not to travel twixt PNZ and St Austell....


Title: Re: Disruption in Cornwall. 9th August 2011
Post by: Ollie on August 09, 2011, 12:30:27
Got a person on St Austell viaduct threatening to jump. D&C Police dealing. Long one though - this started at 08:45 today.


Title: Re: Disruption in Cornwall. 9th August 2011
Post by: marky7890 on August 09, 2011, 12:33:19
First Great Western are advising not traveling in Cornwall.


Title: Re: Disruption in Cornwall. 9th August 2011
Post by: RailCornwall on August 09, 2011, 12:46:31
Cornwall-Truro railway station is closed due to overcrowding and train operators are advising people not to travel in Cornwall today[SG]

 
from ^..

BBCTRAVELSW on TWITTER (https://twitter.com/#!/BBCTravelSW/status/100893301833613312)
09-Aug-2011 @ 12:45


Title: Re: Disruption in Cornwall. 9th August 2011
Post by: Ollie on August 09, 2011, 16:59:05
Services can now run.


Title: Re: Disruption in Cornwall. 9th August 2011
Post by: old original on August 10, 2011, 19:56:56
No trains moved for 9 hours, approx ^90k loss to train operators(according to media),  man appeared before in court and given 2 years conditional discharge!!


Title: Re: Disruption in Cornwall. 9th August 2011
Post by: LiskeardRich on August 10, 2011, 20:41:51
i shouldnt imagine the individual has appeared in court and given a discharge already. you must of read about a different case.
a defendent has to be issued with minimum 6 weeks notice of a court appearance to prepare your legal defence, and such.


Title: Re: Disruption in Cornwall. 9th August 2011
Post by: inspector_blakey on August 10, 2011, 21:40:26
I think the post above referred to the "previous" of the individual concerned, for which he had received a conditional discharge in the past?

I'm also fairly sure that if the matter is dealt with by Magistrates rather than a Crown Court then the six-weeks doesn't necessarily apply - for example several Magistrates' Courts in London are working overtime right now to get through initial court appearances for all the people arrested and charged over the disorder in the last few days.


Title: Re: Disruption in Cornwall. 9th August 2011
Post by: old original on August 10, 2011, 23:07:41
just repeating what I had heard on local radio this evening, where they certainly made it sound as if it was yesterdays incident.


Title: Re: Disruption in Cornwall. 9th August 2011
Post by: bobm on August 11, 2011, 12:51:40
From this is Cornwall

http://www.thisiscornwall.co.uk/Cornwall-court-s-sympathy-man-caused-rail-chaos/story-13111736-detail/story.html (http://www.thisiscornwall.co.uk/Cornwall-court-s-sympathy-man-caused-rail-chaos/story-13111736-detail/story.html)


Title: Re: Disruption in Cornwall. 9th August 2011
Post by: super tm on August 11, 2011, 13:34:21
i shouldnt imagine the individual has appeared in court and given a discharge already. you must of read about a different case.
a defendent has to be issued with minimum 6 weeks notice of a court appearance to prepare your legal defence, and such.

are you sure about that.  Plenty of cases already been concluded in London for people involved in the riots.


Title: Re: Disruption in Cornwall. 9th August 2011
Post by: vacman on August 11, 2011, 13:54:48
The "jumper" was put before Bodmin mags the next morning and sentenced there and then.


Title: Re: Disruption in Cornwall. 9th August 2011
Post by: grahame on August 11, 2011, 17:47:10
I'm trying to work out the maths of the newspaper reports.   

They talk of 6000 FGW customers and 4000 other train operator customers being inconvenienced and I'm some what surprised at the proportions.  Are there really 4 XC passengers for every 6 FGW passengers deep in Cornwall?

The report states that the train operators face losses of 83,000 pounds.  My understanding is that under the current "cap and collar" arrangement, around 75% of losses are met by the government, so does that mean that the real income that was lost (in revenue that failed to be taken) was actually around 332,000 pounds, with the taxpayer picking up a tab of about a quarter of a million?

Finally, not all the people who would have travelled on the trains would have been lost as revenue. Some people, for sure, will have switched to the road or not travelled at all, but many other would simply have travelled anyway once the line was re-opened.  Presumably the 83,000 pounds quoted as a "loss" took this into account - what's the sort of income figure, then, if that's not taken into account?  i.e. what proportion would have been lost?

I'm looking to learn a little more about how some of these financial systems work, to help in working out and understanding out some of the TransWilts figures.


Title: Re: Disruption in Cornwall. 9th August 2011
Post by: LiskeardRich on August 11, 2011, 17:50:20
i shouldnt imagine the individual has appeared in court and given a discharge already. you must of read about a different case.
a defendent has to be issued with minimum 6 weeks notice of a court appearance to prepare your legal defence, and such.

are you sure about that.  Plenty of cases already been concluded in London for people involved in the riots.

yes, sorry as pointed out above the 6 week rule only appears to apply for crown court, i was under the impression it applied to all court hearings. My understanding is you can have a bail hearing, but the formal hearing has to be 6 weeks notice


Title: Re: Disruption in Cornwall. 9th August 2011
Post by: Tim on August 11, 2011, 17:57:35
I'm looking to learn a little more about how some of these financial systems work, to help in working out and understanding out some of the TransWilts figures.

Good luck with that Grahame.  I am not sure that these contrived money-go-round systems actually do work.  For example, it has been said before that compensation for engineering work, with TOCs will untimately benefit from means that in some cases TOCs do better from having NR close the line and pay compensation than they do actually having to run the trains and sell tickets. 


Title: Re: Disruption in Cornwall. 9th August 2011
Post by: JayMac on August 11, 2011, 20:28:33
yes, sorry as pointed out above the 6 week rule only appears to apply for crown court, i was under the impression it applied to all court hearings. My understanding is you can have a bail hearing, but the formal hearing has to be 6 weeks notice

The guy pleaded guilty, so no need for six weeks for a defence to be prepared. Magistrates can chose a fine or discharge sentence immediately. After a guilty plead they can defer sentencing for a number of reasons. Examples being to request a pre-sentence report from the Probation Service or committal to Crown Court if they feel they have insufficient sentencing powers.


Title: Re: Disruption in Cornwall. 9th August 2011
Post by: smokey on August 14, 2011, 13:46:09
I'm trying to work out the maths of the newspaper reports.   

They talk of 6000 FGW customers and 4000 other train operator customers being inconvenienced and I'm some what surprised at the proportions.  Are there really 4 XC passengers for every 6 FGW passengers deep in Cornwall?

The report states that the train operators face losses of 83,000 pounds.  My understanding is that under the current "cap and collar" arrangement, around 75% of losses are met by the government, so does that mean that the real income that was lost (in revenue that failed to be taken) was actually around 332,000 pounds, with the taxpayer picking up a tab of about a quarter of a million?

Finally, not all the people who would have travelled on the trains would have been lost as revenue. Some people, for sure, will have switched to the road or not travelled at all, but many other would simply have travelled anyway once the line was re-opened.  Presumably the 83,000 pounds quoted as a "loss" took this into account - what's the sort of income figure, then, if that's not taken into account?  i.e. what proportion would have been lost?

I'm looking to learn a little more about how some of these financial systems work, to help in working out and understanding out some of the TransWilts figures.

It needs to be remembered that whilst this Idiot held up Trains in Cornwall the fact is Trains that were held up effect everyone using that service.
If the 08:28 Penzance to Glasgow is your service home from work from Edinburgh Waverley than this mans actions effected passengers in Scotland.


Title: Re: Disruption in Cornwall. 9th August 2011
Post by: smokey on August 14, 2011, 13:59:54
^83 000 loss for the Train operators, as little as that?

What would it have cost Network Rail who will being paying out ^160 per minute per train effected?

I heard from a Person who attended that Court Case that NR may have to fork out more like ^850 000


Title: Re: Disruption in Cornwall. 9th August 2011
Post by: vacman on August 14, 2011, 22:01:41
The high proportion of XC pax affected was due to the timing of the incident, had it happened about an hour or so later there would have been no XC pax effected.

The costs are about right, the knock on effects are huge, stock and traincrew displacement, onward connections up country being effected etc etc.


Title: Re: Disruption in Cornwall. 9th August 2011
Post by: Oxman on August 15, 2011, 01:44:49
I suspect the quoted cost was based on the notional cost of delay minutes - there would not have been time for any other calculations! NR would have applied its standard rates for delay minutes and cancellations to the numbers recorded by Trust to arrive at the total cost. Delay minutes vary from something like ^5 per minute on a branch line service to ^100 per minute on a class 1 between Padd and Reading. Its not just the services directly affected, but also any knock on effects to other services - these are often significantly larger than the directly affected services. I don't know the cost attributed to cancelled/caped services. NR is responsible for any "external" delays, such as trespass, and compensates the TOCs accordingly.

As an example of knock on costs (and one with which I was at one time very well aware of), at Oxford, 1W47, the 1647 off Oxford to the Cotswolds was allowed two minutes at Oxford - not a lot for an HST that was well loaded on arrival and was a popular service from Oxford. Bikes in the TGS were (and probably still are) a regular cause of delays. If Trust recorded three minutes or less on the platform, then no delay was attributable to the station. Four or more minutes was an attributed delay for which the Station Manager was responsible. Because of the intense use of the single line, other services would then be delayed, including an up Padd service that would then delay other services between Reading and Padd. A two minute delay to the down Cotswold service could easily grow into 60ish minutes of knock on delays, at an average cost of ^80 per minute!

Not surprisingly, the result was a great deal of management attention - it was not unusual to see the Station Manager assisting on the platform!


Title: Re: Disruption in Cornwall. 9th August 2011
Post by: bobm on August 15, 2011, 09:51:19
How are delay minutes attributed if incurred dealing with wheelchair passengers.  Even though staff are generally very good at having the ramp ready in the right place it takes time to get a disabled passenger onto a train and settled into the correct space.  It's not a job you want to rush either.


Title: Re: Disruption in Cornwall. 9th August 2011
Post by: paul7575 on August 15, 2011, 10:08:32
Recorded internally but not included in final figures, I believe.

Paul


Title: Re: Disruption in Cornwall. 9th August 2011
Post by: Oxman on August 15, 2011, 12:52:23
On FGW, if its a staffed station, the delay is attributed to the station manager. If its an unstaffed station, the delay will go to the guard's manager.


Title: Re: Disruption in Cornwall. 9th August 2011
Post by: Maxwell P on August 16, 2011, 09:27:44
How are delay minutes attributed if incurred dealing with wheelchair passengers.  Even though staff are generally very good at having the ramp ready in the right place it takes time to get a disabled passenger onto a train and settled into the correct space.  It's not a job you want to rush either.

The above is reasonable comment I feel.  However,if an unreserved, wheelchair-bound passenger turns up at a station to catch an HST and the disabled places are already booked, there can be problems getting the passenger comfortably installed.  Of course crew are trained to recognise and assist with a wide range of disabled customer issues and  do their utmost to assist, but extra minutes do get lost in such cases, particularly at an unstaffed station and/or ones with a short platform.  Standing instruction for TMs is to notify the delay attribution service ASAP if this occurs.  As FGW are thus complying with the various codes of practice ref disabled passengers and always attempt to go above and beyond the provisions of the Disability Discrimination Act 1995, I wouldn't imagine that attributing minutes lost in this way is too onerous a task.

FGW



This page is printed from the "Coffee Shop" forum at http://gwr.passenger.chat which is provided by a customer of Great Western Railway. Views expressed are those of the individual posters concerned. Visit www.gwr.com for the official Great Western Railway website. Please contact the administrators of this site if you feel that content provided contravenes our posting rules ( see http://railcustomer.info/1761 ). The forum is hosted by Well House Consultants - http://www.wellho.net