Taking the piss on the railways

Last weekend I reported on broken bridges, closed main lines and industrial action.

Yesterday we saw continued consequences of the infrastructure fail between Woking and Basingstoke, the closure of GWR and SWT lines west of London and yet another failure on the Elizabeth Line.

This at a time when it is cold ,wet, dark and when many of the passengers have had one too many at the Christmas party.

For all the hype , taking the Elizabeth Line is taking life into your own hands, especially if you have a weak bladder, it has no toilets and it’s prone to break down leaving passengers between stations for hours on end. It was last night the only option to get West of London to Southall, Slough and Reading.

This report from the “toilet queue”..

I was on one of the last Elizabeth line trains to head through Hanwell before the “incident” occurred. I count myself very lucky.

My journey ended in a two mile walk in the rain because there were no connecting trains from Slough, a journey halved by some helpful tourists who stopped to pick me up in their taxi.

Anyone who chose the Elizabeth line to get a plane from Heathrow and got stuck , is now facing a morning of re-arrangement and expense.

These are the scenes facing those who pay high fares for a service that only opened recently after years of delays which we were told were to make sure this kind of thing wouldn’t happen.

This, dear readers , is what happens to a nation when it neglects to invest properly in its infrastructure ,when it fails to manage its human resource and when the basic requirements that human beings have – are ignored.

About henry tapper

Founder of the Pension PlayPen,, partner of Stella, father of Olly . I am the Pension Plowman
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3 Responses to Taking the piss on the railways

  1. Pingback: Value for money from the tax we pay on pensions | AgeWage: Making your money work as hard as you do

  2. Peter Wilson says:

    Railways are a Victorian invention and should be left to the history books. A great idea when the alternative was a stage coach. These days to design a system with multiple single points of failure and then to be surprised when it doesn’t work is crazy. This isn’t limited to the UK, I have friends in Europe that are often let down by their trains as badly as we are. If you want a public transport system fit for the 21st century then pave over all the railways and have a fleet of autonomously driven busses that can route around failures. Huge amounts of money are soaked up by this crazy system and still governments want to build more train lines to play with.

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