Man of Honour
What a laughable comment...a much tougher job. ahahahaaa. Really!
Having to deal with cyclists, taxis and idiot drivers - I'd say it is at least equivalent or on a similar scale of effort as a tube driver.
What a laughable comment...a much tougher job. ahahahaaa. Really!
Some of the comments here have to be a joke surely
Most train companies do recruit off the street if there are no suitable internal applicants. You see driver vacancies all the time.
Train drivers absolutely deserve their pay, they go through months and months of training and constant monitoring throughout their career.
They get paid so much for their knowledge of the route and traction and I'm afraid it is a highly specialised role that not everyone can do (I wish I could =p)
Interesting thread and I can see both sides of the discussion. A friend of the family used to be a tube driver and had someone jump out in front of him and its virtually ruined his life. He cant sleep, is half the weight he used to be and is a shadow of his former self. He went through all the counselling that was offered but said it was of little to no help for him.
Could the same not be said of HGV drivers or bus drivers that have run over someone?
Having to deal with cyclists, taxis and idiot drivers - I'd say it is at least equivalent or on a similar scale of effort as a tube driver.
60k isnt a lot for London
Sure, but I believe there is much higher risk of it happening on the tube.
I love the idea that, doing your job, and knowing about your job and doing training is treated like some kind of abnormal thing that suddenly deserves massive pay.
The training is simple, most jobs require you to train(to some degree, a lot don't have much training, but thousands of jobs have huge amounts of training). It's a few months of, press this button if Y, and do this if X and this makes it go forwards, this makes it stop, and red lights mean stop mkay.
It's not being a doctor, it's not several years of medical school and presumably... you actually get paid while training as it's you know, a job.
A doctor is highly specialised, does maybe 10 years of training all told and many people will be unable to pass that training. A train driver is not highly specialised, a few months of basic training that almost everyone on earth could complete doesn't make it a difficult job. It's not like they go for 3 months training and only a few come out the other side with newly gained knowledge of quantum physics and chaos theory. It's stuff no one else needs to know, but you do need to know to do the job, that doesn't make it complex or
Sure, but I believe there is much higher risk of it happening on the tube.
The training is simple, most jobs require you to train(to some degree, a lot don't have much training, but thousands of jobs have huge amounts of training). It's a few months of, press this button if Y, and do this if X and this makes it go forwards, this makes it stop, and red lights mean stop mkay.
To put it into comparison Prison Officers start on 20 grand, that's what you get for having a very weak union and a no strike agreement.
Completely the POAs and their members own doing.
A lot of tube drivers don't live in London. and 60k is plenty for London.
Suicide - probably, but injury and fatality via accidents is higher outside of the train network I would have thought, no?
I assume the cost is very high, but why don't more tube stations have the full barriers on the stations that open only once the train has stopped?