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npn Crowborough 17 Feb 17 10.22am | |
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Originally posted by mezzer
You were right. So now the drivers have rejected their union, where do we go from here? Not very far on a train I fear. quite. seems like back to square one. RMT are out next week anyway (Wednesday I think), ASLEF now don't speak for the staff, so it begs the question "what point would be served by more negotiations?". If the union and the management sit down and negotiate a deal, but the staff don't accept it, it seems a waste of everyone's time. Do the union even know what the staff want? Seems all trust has gone. Union don't trust company, workers don't trust union, workers don't trust company, company doesn't give a f**k because they get paid anyway. Omnishambles!
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thegreatlardino crawley/selsey 17 Feb 17 10.24am | |
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having had the misfortune on relying on TL/Southern this whole thing is one big fiasco, it has turned very political, government are using Govia Thameslink as some sort of test case in removing the guards, once they win then other companies will do it, ScotRail, MerseyRail spring to mind, RMT appear to be trying to tory government bash, where this leaves ASLEF who knows
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7mins In the bush 17 Feb 17 10.44am | |
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Originally posted by mezzer
You were right. So now the drivers have rejected their union, where do we go from here? Not very far on a train I fear. The vote was close enough to give Southern hope that a few little changes should swing a vote. The problem Southern have is, they've been caught lying and this new deal depended on trust. Can't blame drivers for not trusting a company that's lied to them twice this year. A new deal will have to airtight. Drivers won't vote a yes for a ambiguous deal. The problem Southern have got... is there is very low morale and no trust. They also need at least 30% of their workforce to do favours so they can run a service. They're chronically understaffed. I expect Southern are gonna have to pay through the nose to get drivers to do O/T now. They're gonna realise this dispute is gonna cost them ££££'s
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7mins In the bush 17 Feb 17 10.46am | |
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Originally posted by thegreatlardino
having had the misfortune on relying on TL/Southern this whole thing is one big fiasco, it has turned very political, government are using Govia Thameslink as some sort of test case in removing the guards, once they win then other companies will do it, ScotRail, MerseyRail spring to mind, RMT appear to be trying to tory government bash, where this leaves ASLEF who knows Thameslink have HD cameras and stop at mainly manned stations. Southern have 15 year old cameras and serve mainly unmanned stations.
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pefwin Where you have to have an English ... 06 May 18 5.53pm | |
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Apologies for resurrecting an old thread but oh dear Southern.
"Everything is air-droppable at least once." "When the going gets tough, the tough call for close air support." |
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Badger11 Beckenham 06 May 18 6.26pm | |
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This is my hobby horse and not just about Southern. Every flipping bank holiday and I mean every one there are major closures on the network for engineering works. Yes we geddit the track or signals has to be replaced or upgraded but this has been going on for years. How many folk have had Christmas's ruined because they cannot get to their loved ones and back in time for their shifts. It happened to me 3 years in a row and I don't mean catching a train Christmas day I couldn't even get one Boxing day and my start was Dec 27 at 6am. My solution is that in alternate years the train companies give the public a break. So instead of Christmas chaos one year they tell us they will shut down for a long weekend in January. Yes that is just transferring the problem to another date but I think most folk would prefer that. Rant over back to Southern and the train strike I look forward to driverless trains, can't say they haven't been warned. Edited by Badger11 (06 May 2018 6.28pm)
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7mins In the bush 10 May 18 5.06pm | |
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Originally posted by Badger11
This is my hobby horse and not just about Southern. Every flipping bank holiday and I mean every one there are major closures on the network for engineering works. Yes we geddit the track or signals has to be replaced or upgraded but this has been going on for years. How many folk have had Christmas's ruined because they cannot get to their loved ones and back in time for their shifts. It happened to me 3 years in a row and I don't mean catching a train Christmas day I couldn't even get one Boxing day and my start was Dec 27 at 6am. My solution is that in alternate years the train companies give the public a break. So instead of Christmas chaos one year they tell us they will shut down for a long weekend in January. Yes that is just transferring the problem to another date but I think most folk would prefer that. Rant over back to Southern and the train strike I look forward to driverless trains, can't say they haven't been warned. Edited by Badger11 (06 May 2018 6.28pm) TOCs (Train Operating Companies) have no say... Network Rail have a meeting (usually 9 months in advance) and tell the TOCs what engineering they have planned... this sometimes changes at short notice... if there's a pressing issue... when I worked for a TOC, we had major issues with subsidence in rural locations, also cable theft was a big problem... these meant emergency engineering works were planned at short notice. The Gatwick problem was Southern management trying to do things on the cheap... they will always rather book to few replacement buses than too many... sometimes this goes slightly wrong... sometimes it goes massively wrong (sunny bank holiday weekend... passenger numbers can double) Your comment about driverless trains confuses me... are you against the reasons for drivers striking? I've sat in meetings where the current management have tried their best to cut corners on safety and have wanted to deny wheelchair users the right to use trains... they constantly asked for ways to get round the Disability Discrimination Act. My hands aren't clean... I was part of the problem... Working in HR means you sell your soul... the constant pressure to increase profits is overwhelming
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Badger11 Beckenham 10 May 18 5.21pm | |
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Originally posted by 7mins
TOCs (Train Operating Companies) have no say... Network Rail have a meeting (usually 9 months in advance) and tell the TOCs what engineering they have planned... this sometimes changes at short notice... if there's a pressing issue... when I worked for a TOC, we had major issues with subsidence in rural locations, also cable theft was a big problem... these meant emergency engineering works were planned at short notice. The Gatwick problem was Southern management trying to do things on the cheap... they will always rather book to few replacement buses than too many... sometimes this goes slightly wrong... sometimes it goes massively wrong (sunny bank holiday weekend... passenger numbers can double) Your comment about driverless trains confuses me... are you against the reasons for drivers striking? I've sat in meetings where the current management have tried their best to cut corners on safety and have wanted to deny wheelchair users the right to use trains... they constantly asked for ways to get round the Disability Discrimination Act. My hands aren't clean... I was part of the problem... Working in HR means you sell your soul... the constant pressure to increase profits is overwhelming
Thanks for your input, it's always useful to have an expert opinion but in my defense I did say it was a rant. Of course emergency work cannot be helped but if you look at the network overall it is mainly schedule work at the holidays. Whoever does this, and I bow to your knowledge, they are not thinking about their customers at key holiday times. As I mentioned I am not saying they should never do it but give the long suffering customer a break every now and then. As regards the rail dispute you are closer to it than I. I am certainly not sticking up for Southern and I would be happy for them to lose the franchise. Never the less the railway unions don't have a great record in this area. They are very quick to say they are protecting the public yet when a driver is sacked for failing a breath test or other safety infringements they seem to have an issue with that. Yes I do look forward to driverless trains it may not happen for 20 years but it is certainly one of the areas of the economy under threat from new technologies.
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7mins In the bush 10 May 18 6.53pm | |
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Originally posted by Badger11
Thanks for your input, it's always useful to have an expert opinion but in my defense I did say it was a rant. Of course emergency work cannot be helped but if you look at the network overall it is mainly schedule work at the holidays. Whoever does this, and I bow to your knowledge, they are not thinking about their customers at key holiday times. As I mentioned I am not saying they should never do it but give the long suffering customer a break every now and then. As regards the rail dispute you are closer to it than I. I am certainly not sticking up for Southern and I would be happy for them to lose the franchise. Never the less the railway unions don't have a great record in this area. They are very quick to say they are protecting the public yet when a driver is sacked for failing a breath test or other safety infringements they seem to have an issue with that. Yes I do look forward to driverless trains it may not happen for 20 years but it is certainly one of the areas of the economy under threat from new technologies. ASLEF have never even represented let alone defended a train driver that has failed a breath test, they completely wash their hands of them... if we had to fire someone for failing a random or Safety induced D&A (Drugs/alcohol) test, it was a slam dunk. I think you're confusing it with the tube case where the management got rid of the sample of urine after testing it... this goes against all agreed protocols and the system is then open for abuse. Driveless trains probably won't come in to use in the next 20-30 years... and they'll probably still need someone up front. Southern/SouthEastern/SouthWest still run over routes with semaphore signalling. This has been discussed loads.... but the Southern franchise is the one of its kind... I left the industry before it came in, but it's a no risk management contract...They get paid a set amount to carry out the DfT's instructions... I think Southern's approach to industrial relations has Tory fingerprints all over it.... Southern made money during the strike days... they had same operating costs, less wages (they don't get ticket sales)... the government also let them buy out their poor performance clauses in the contract... the whole franchise was set up to go to war with the unions. The old CEO refused, Southern then went for Charles Horton, who is also on the board of the RSSB (Rail Safety and Standards Board). No conflict of interests there! If you take one thing from this.... the whole industrial action was expected, the franchise (the first ever risk free management only contract) was designed to insulate Southern financially from any industrial action... Southern knew their CCTV was substandard.... Southern knew that getting rid of guards would deprive the disabled of access to their trains... they still made these changes... safe in the knowledge that DfT backed them. Middle management (the ones I know) agree with the unions... the plan was to buy off the train drivers with a big fat pay rise... funded by getting rid of guards (there would have still have been a huge saving for Southern). Fair play to the drivers... they refused all pay rises... they demanded better safety equipment and they also demanded a 2nd person on board to ensure access for disabled passengers.
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7mins In the bush 10 May 18 7.02pm | |
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Drivers have power at Southern/Thameslink/SouthEastern.. purely because the TOC's need them to do them favours... Drivers giving up their time off is the only thing that keeps the network going... When I was in HR I think 1 in 5 trains was driven by a driver doing overtime... we got that to 1:6.
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7mins In the bush 10 May 18 7.18pm | |
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When I was there... we stitched up soooo many staff. We really f***ed over the cleaners. To get around paying them for lunch breaks... a manager came up with a plan to instead of having a 8 hour shift... we'd have two 4 hour shifts... so instead of working 8-5pm with a paid break, he changed it to split shifts.. shift 1 was 8-12... shift 2 was 1-5pm.
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7mins In the bush 20 May 18 11.56am | |
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