b. At stations that average over 10 passenger journeys per train calling, can you not arrange for a bus or taxi to be at the station for normal train departure time if the train is cancelled hours in advance and there is no further train in that direction due for over 100 minutes?
Every cloud has a silver lining.
Performance (in terms of cancellation rates) has not been good at Melksham for the last week, but
I'm pleased to report that a bus is running and planned in good time ... actually connecting at Chippenham with the next train from Swindon. It also appeared on the departure boards / train displays earlier in the week when I was at the station, though that doesn't seem to be the case at the moment.
Getting there. Step in the right direction. Tuning needed - a delicate balance between "Thank You, Mark" and the Oliver Twist "Please Sir, I want some more". More really coming down to the should-be-easy customer info stuff when things go wrong, and trains that actually run so that (ironically) we don't need this special stuff.
Nothing wrong with good manners but it wouldn't hurt to lose the excessive deference.
As customers and taxpayers
we have the right to expect a good service, it's not something for which we should have to bow, scrape or beg for or show excessive gratitude.
IRO this week's farce on the Transwilts, if anything, it should be
GWR▸ senior management donning sackcloth & ashes and providing explanations, apologies & illustrating how measures are urgently being put in place to prevent a repeat performance.
A bus is the absolute minimum mitigation.