Chris you are wrong to say that
ASLEF» "deemed the conviction was for the radio". ASLEF have simply noted that this was
one of the points raised by the
ORR» in the prosecution. It is the opening line in their circular which I quoted in my first post in this thread!
Why would the ORR mention the radio being unregistered it if they, the regulator, did not believe it to be an issue? The charge was a breach of the Health & Safety at Work Act, not anything railway specific. ASLEF have not publicly condoned any part of the driver's behavior.
As even you say, the situation around an unregistered radio remains untested. Therefore it may never have been legal to have an unregistered radio. We don't know. Something doesn't suddenly go from legal to illegal because a court says, the court simply rules on what the law always was.
I feel ASLEFs action is reasonable, because in recent years the
RSSB▸ have been gradually withdrawing rules from the rule book in the expectation they will become
TOC▸ specific instructions/policies. For example, did you know
GSM-R▸ used to have a rulebook module (although it never covered registration), but it was abolished a few years ago?
Did you know that the RSSB have issued a statement in response to a
CIRAS▸ report saying...
If a train fitted with a GSM-R radio system must be registered and with a signal before a
train can enter service from a station?
If a GSM-R cab radio cannot be registered for any reason, but it displays ^GSM-R GB▸ ^,
indicating that it is attached to the network, it should be assumed that the train radio is
operative and capable of sending and receiving calls (including railway emergency calls).
Therefore the train can enter service.
The above statement appears to be at odds with the ORR.
At least ASLEF are doing something. There's not even a statement from the RSSB right now that they are even looking at this. Historically the RSSB only updated the rulebook twice a year. Do you remember the Liverpool James Street incident? The guard involved was found guilty in November 2012, but it wasn't until June 2013 that the RSSB updated the rule book to say that guards should remain at the door controls until the train has left the platform (a rule which the RSSB previously abolished in 2006).
That's why I don't think it is unreasonable for ASLEF to take the lead on this as the RSSB do not move quickly.
The thing that puzzles me about this is why there doesn't seem to be much in the way of communication between the ORR and RSSB. What if there are other practices on the railway that the RSSB are fine with that cause concern for the ORR?