What a mess! What a classic illustration of the failure of our public transport to run as a network!
Management summary - Phil's 20 minute journey took 3 hours. But even with the cancellation of his train he could have made the journey in under an hour if only all the public transport available worked as a network service.Let me quote background from another thread.
14:19 Westbury to Swindon due 15:01
15:14 Swindon to Westbury due 15:59
15:14 Swindon to Westbury due 15:59 will be cancelled.
This is due to a shortage of train crew.
16:23 Westbury to Swindon due 17:08
16:23 Westbury to Swindon due 17:08 has been delayed at Westbury and is now 37 minutes late.
This is due to this train being late from the depot.
.....similar delay advised on the return trip.
I got caught up in this. Arrived at WSB» in time to get the 14:19 to Mkm, only to see it was cancelled because the driver failed to show up. Despite valiant efforts on the part of platform staff to find me and 2 others a taxi to Melksham, it was school run time and no taxis were to be had. We were assured the 16:23 would run on time. 16:23:30 came and I could see the train still sat away in the distance in the yard at Westbury showing red running lights (they probably have another name, but you know what I mean - the ones that turn white when it's good to go). In the far opposite distance a figure in an orange jacket ambled towards the distant loco - a driver! Half an hour later it trundled into Platform 1 to the accompaniment of an ironic round of applause from some now fractious would-be passengers. By 5:19 I was on my way back to Melksham, a mere three hours after arriving at Westbury station.
Phil arrived at Westbury Station at about 14:15 and didn't reach Melksham until 17:15 -
180 minutes later. What should have happened? He should have reached Melksham by 14:35. So his journrey took 9 times as long as it should have done.
It should have taken 20 minutes.
But hang on a moment - what if our public transport system was treated as a network? What if buses and trains talked to each other?
Phil could have been directed to the 14:40 train to Trowbridge, to change there (14:45 to 15:14 at Trinity Church onto the x34 bus at the top of Station Approach) and arrive into Melksham at 15:55 - just
100 minutes after arriving at Westbury Station.
Or had he been at Westbury station in good time ... the 14:12 train from Westbury, change to the bus (14:18 to 14:29 at Trowbridge) and get to Melksham at 15:03 - so that's just over
50 minutes after arriving in Westbury.
"OOOze gonna pay for it?". Nobody.
It's already paid for. Both trains and buses are under the tight management regulation of the public sector, all the alternative services I have mentioned are running already, financed already, and with (I can be pretty sure) space available for Phil and his two fellow passengers.
So who is going to do the clever IT coding to work this out? Nobody.
It's already been done. I have just asked Google about an afternoon journey from Westbury to Melksham for a future weekday. 48 minutes.
Hardly rocket science, then. In my days as Community Rail Officer for the line, we had what we called the "Integrated TransWilts Rail Corridor" which included timetable leaflets with both trains and buses shown, an even an arrangement (in daily use) where passengers could catch certain buses on their rail ticket - at a time that there wasn't a train. The bus policy was expanded after my departure - see
https://transwilts.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/Bus_Policy.pdf dated six months after I was gone. I'm disappointed that much of this remains work in progress and hasn't yet got to the point where Phil was directed to other aleady running public transport to complete his journey.