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The North Boat (Northlink ferries)


peeriebryan
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Where should the North Boat dock?  

447 members have voted

  1. 1. Where should the North Boat dock?

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Personally, I always though that  "lifeline" was a two way service.  Unfortunately, it is beginning to look as though passengers are beginning to interfere with the "smooth running" of their vessels...

 

Perhaps Serco/Northlink should be made to realise that passengers/customers do not interfere with your work, they ARE your work...

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The days of the ferry waiting for ya if you are late are long gone.  Ever since the Herald of Free Enterprise disaster or if not before, if I remember correctly all ferries over a certain capacity have to submit a passenger list before they sail.  If that list has already been submitted, they won't let you onboard.  The onus is on us, the passengers, to get there on time.

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Whilst the circumstances in this case are sad and genuine, there will the another side to this story and the Northlnk staff will probably not be allowed to defend themselves. I notice people always turning up late for boats and flights (usually the same people) where it is down to trying to squeeze every last minute out of their stay. I wonder how often staff get to hear the same story and probably have to answer to management , or not get paid extra  if there are delays. an old adage " flights run for people who are waiting, not waiting for people who are running. "

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I wonder if this is a simple thing about money.  Noticed the boat almost always leaves around 10 minutes before departure time and I can only think that if the dockers (all right "un-dockers"" are not free of their duties by the hour do they get another hours pay.  In which case why not change the departure times to 10 minutes earlier.

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Whilst maybe arrangements for patients leaving and travelling home from hospital maybe deserve a look at, what I can't understand is the the master had requested a prompt departure because of strong tides. The maximum tidal stream strength occurs at half water and this had passed some time before the sailing time, so tides would only be getting weaker.

 

Would have thought, given the circumstances they would let the 3 remaining passengers board 3 minutes late. It would likely take Serco 15 minutes to alter their tickets for the next night?

 

I know it's different ferries , but the Yell Sound ferries only start loading at 5 minutes prior to sailing and they can take 40 cars and 144 passengers. 

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6 minutes before check in was due to close. Leaving plenty of time for staff to pre-print their boarding cards as i've seen them frequently do. Northlink have to leave enough time for passengers checking in 30 mins prior to sailing for them to get luggage in the trolleys and to get aboard, that means they need to leave the ramp and walkway open. Cars can check in until 30 minutes before departure and the luggage trolley can't be loaded until after final check in. Can all that be done and the ship closed up within 3 minutes? 

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3 minutes, 6 minutes..  What does it matter?

 

Bottom line seems to be that the family phoned prior to the check in closing and advised that they were going to be a couple of minutes late whilst the master had decided that he wanted to leave a couple of minutes early.

 

Anyone else spot the obvious conflict/culprit here?

 

No point in putting to much blame on the company when, ultimately, only one person is responsible for the vessel..

 

Sack the master and replace him with a Shetlander..  No guarantees but, you might get a more considerate service.

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i think if you phone, and you do your best, there is no need to go 10 minutes early.

 

They are there for passengers.  

 

But they are not "there" for the passengers. They are there to extort as much money as they possibly can from the passengers whilst giving as little as possible in return, thereby producing as much profit as they can. They prove it time after time.

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And if they held the ferry back every time someone phoned up to say they were running late? I can imagine how that would pan out.

 

Trains don't wait, buses don't wait, no other ferry company waits - try phoning Brittany Ferries etc and see if they'll hang around for late arrivals.......

And that is the hole in my argument (although I don't recall claiming that it should be held up every time)..  There will always be "exceptional" circumstances.  Problem is, there is no mechanism to decide what is "exceptional" but, I would have thought that someone returning from "life saving" treatment would have been ideally placed to claim some benefits(?) from our "lifeline" service.

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