British Rail was for it's faults a wonderful organisation too work for, it was one big Happy family (for 95% of staff, there was always the odd person who hated BR▸ and couldn't wait to get out).
New staff were tought the ways to look after the public and knowledge was passed from old hand to new hands.
Today it's all a culture of Blame and counter Blame, nobody trust's anybody and this simple knowledge transfer is lost, and NO WAY is the Railway now a HAPPY FAMILY.
Tragic. It isn't just the railway that has changed. You try seeing someone at your back who has expertise, experience and descretion to act. A few years ago this is exactly what a bank manager did. Now it is a question of "computer says no". I had a battle last week with trying to get a newly set up direct debit cancelled but because it had not yet appeared on the computer their was absolutely nothing that could be done.
Style over substance is the order of the day. It is the attitude that leads
FGW▸ to repaint their trains into a new livery every couple of years but means that they lack the attention to detail to keep the toilets watered.
As a passenger I much prefered travelling with BR. Sure the trains were older and slower, but they were cheaper, friendlier and their seats lined up with the windows and when things went wrong I think that there was less of a blame culture from the passenger to the staff (perhaps because a nationalised railway in some way belongs to the passenger/taxpayer and the blame for lack of investment partly belongs to the passenger/taxpayer). My attitude used to be much more along the lines of "oh dear *our* railway isn't as good as it ought to be" rather than "what a bunch of idiots FGW are. Despite charging me ^120 they can't even run a decent service". The relationshiop between staff and passenger is much more strained than ever before and I expect that this (together with huge fare increases) is something to do with this
Sorry - I've become a grumpy old man (and I'm not yet 40!)