Sometimes we're called upon to be a travel agent ... and so it was last night, when a delegate attending an event that's running at our hotel in Melksham approached me to ask about return trains on Friday morning. Here's the story.
Last Sunday, he was dropped off at Peterborough station and asked for a return to Melksham, stating that he would be travelling back on Friday morning. For 79.20, he was sold a Super OffPeak Return, valid "Any Permitted Route" ... and he travelled to Melksham, duely arriving in the town (population around 24000) on the only Sunday southbound train at 18:44.
"What time train can I get back?" he asked me. Now - I know the times (06:41 and 07:17) of the only two trains from Melksham in the morning, but I wasn't sure on ticket validity. Looking on the web site, neither train was being offered to me at super offpeak prices so, puzzled, I called up First Great Western to ask them selecting the phone option for enquiries about tickets already purchased.
The gentleman who I spoke to told me that the ticket was NOT valid on either the 06:41 or the 07:17. But it was acceptable on the train at 19:47, and my customer could use that. I pointed out that the ticket had been bought with the morning being specified, and that 19:47 wasn't the morning (it would get to Peterborough long after his last onward bus into the fens!). He told me that my customer had to go back to the station
where he bought the ticket to get it changed. I asked about getting it changed on the train and he said that wasn't allowed, and if he got on the train without having had it changed first he would have to pay a full regular single fare - that he should go to Melksham station early and get it dealt with there before he got on the train. I asked if he knew Melksham station, and he assured me that he did - he was a First Great Western expert - but I then had to tell him that Melksham is unstaffed. When he then said that the train conductor could help, I asked what the extra cost would be and he told me it would be up to the conductor whether to charge a full single or apply some sort of discression bearing in mind the wrong ticket had been sold.
Hardly a good solution, so I phoned National Rail to see if they could be more explicit / give me a proper price. And from talking to their person, it appears that the ticket is valid out of King's Cross from 09:29 to 14:27, and again after 18:15, and on any train up from Melksham to connect into those trains. So it's actually valid on either morning departure.
Two different stories - how to check which is correct? I couldn't re-run the booking through the web to see what I was offered, as the outward journey date has happened but I did do it for journeys for next Sunday and the following Friday and , sure enough, the 79.20 fare is valid as stated by National Rail on the morning trains from Melksham.
Some questions ... I wonder if I can get inputs here today prior to my customer travelling:
a) Who is right - National Rail and the
FGW▸ website for the week ahead, or the customer service adviser at FGW?
b) The Train Managers on the train from Melksham, and the connections from Swindon to London, will be working for First Great Western like the first gentleman I spoke with. How can we be re-assured that they demand that my customer buy a full standard single all the way?
c) What's the best way to get proper, authoritative answers to queries like this? I would have thought that if the web site doens't provide the information, phoning up the people who run the trains should be the way to do it, but it looks rather as if their representative was looking to make them a further 90 pounds when the ticket already held is valid.
I took the names of the staff involved - not published here due to forum policies. I am not escalating this by email with FGW at this stage, as by the time I got a reply it would be academic