I've gone back through the departure boards on NRE for the whole day, the only service all day showing as cancelled from Paddington is a Bristol service, there are also a few Swanseas showing as 'delayed' which should have got to their destination by now so clearly were also cancelled. It still amounts to only 3 or 4 services all day, everything else is showing as running. Does Trust show something different?Alexia wrote:Having a quick look through the system, it seems that between 6 and 8 of the scheduled services from Paddington are being cancelled per hour. These are not just InterCity 125 services, but Thames Valley driver-only services. It would seem that there is an effect occurring.
So obvious solution is to send the drivers to the depots to bring them into the station themselves (particularly easy in the case of places like Exeter TMD which is effectively on the station anyway)? Obviously if there's a tight turnaround this may make some services late and some may have to be cancelled if the delay would cause it to lose it's route, but it's better than nothing. Whilst I'm sure it won't be that simple, is there any real reason why this can't happen other than 'job description' or 'union'?Alexia wrote: It is worth remembering that although most mainline drivers are in ASLEF, some shunters and depot pilots are RMT, so if there's no-one to bring an empty train off of the depots, the train won't run.
For the record, had a 'door on catch' emergency stop out of Exeter on Friday, and that was with the correct qualified people running the train and the station! Also thought it a bit bad that the guard did not make any announcement explaining what had happened given that most people on the train would not understand what this was. A few people were a bit concerned.Alexia wrote:There's another wrinkle to this - some trains and stations had operational incidents (dispatch attempts against a red signal, doors on catches, communication procedure with Signaller not followed) and as such bodies such as RAIB and CIRAS are keeping a close eye on the situation to make sure that FGW are not wilfully putting passengers in danger by running trains with underqualified and non-competent staff; and that competency is not being given out willy-nilly / under political pressure from "above".