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![]() On Jan 23, 5:50*pm, MIG wrote: On 23 Jan, 17:29, Mizter T wrote: On Jan 23, 1:59*pm, MIG wrote: On 23 Jan, 13:46, Mizter T wrote: On Jan 23, 1:05*pm, MIG wrote: [snip] From other postings, it seems that legislation would trump anything else anyway if travelcards are "protected". My point was that, whatever the fare and pricing structure, "it could be inconvenient for people who haven't got Oyster or can't touch during the journey" will absolutely NOT be a consideration in any decision to retain day travelcards or otherwise. Oyster PAYG is essentially for people making in-boundary journeys, i.e. those within the zones. True, as are travelcards, but travelcards can be extended, while PAYG can't. I don't know how two single Oyster fares from Coulsdon South to London Terminals will compare with the difference between a day return Brighton to Coulsdon South and a day return Brighton to London Terminals. Not a great example of whatever you're trying to get at - if you're making a day trip from Brighton to Coulsdon South you don't sensibly go via 'London Terminals' (i.e. Victoria or London Bridge), you change at East Croydon. Eh? *You'd get a day return including travelcard. The travelcard validity starts at Coulsdon South. *An extension from the zones (if you start in London) is similarly from Coulsdon South. If you actually wanted to go there, you could do it by changing at Gatwick and Redhill or by doubling back. *I don't know how that affects the available fares. *If you had an outboundary travelcard or were extending a season, it wouldn't matter where the trains stopped. Understood - for some reason I thought you might have started to read things over from the outboundary situation to the inboundary situation, but you were in fact referring to the outboundary scenario and it all makes sense. Though I disagree with the very basis of your invented bogeyman fears - the person from Brighton is always going to be able to get an outboundary Travelcard, full stop. (Unless the Tories come in, give the TOCs total freedom and completely rip apart the whole basis of inter-available ticketing - which simply ain't going to happen. Even in a loony hypothetical situation where it did happen, said TOCs would almost certainly negotiate with TfL for the existence of some sort of combined day return plus TfL day rover pass.) People might feel they were paying multiple times if they had to go all the way to London Terminals and back without contributing to their PAYG cap. *If travelcards are retained, there's no problem, and they may well be, but I am doubting whether the effect on such people will have any bearing on a decision to retain them. *They'll be told that they have to get off during both journeys and touch in/out if they want to take advantage of the Oyster fares. "They'll be told..." - you're inventing a bogeyman that isn't there - there hasn't been any serious suggestion that the days of in-boundary Day Travelcards are numbered. If there ever was such a proposal for some reason, then the scenario you describe (Day Travelcard plus Boundary Zone extension fare) would undoubtedly be taken into account in the decision making process - I'm quite sure that this is a ticketing combination that's used by a proportionately small but nonetheless sizeable number of travellers in and around London on a regular basis. The discussion was mainly about day return outboundary travelcards, which it was accepted that they sell lots of. *So my person is the one who does a day trip from Brighton to London and travels around a lot in London. If the travelcards weren't retained, you'd have to go to London Terminals before you could realistically start running up your PAYG cap, hence wondering about the difference in day return Brighton to Coulsdon South and the day return Brighton to London terminals. That would be the extra bit you'd be paying that wouldn't count towards the cap. I am quite prepared to believe that the travelcards will be retained, but I'm saying that the reasons for retaining them will be down to legislation, not down to consideration of the people in Sussex who either don't have Oyster cards or wouldn't get the chance to touch in. Nonsense - ignore the legislation, and tell me in whose interest it would be to do away with outboundary Day Travelcards? The TOCs sell bucket loads of them. You can voice fears about a hypothetical future withdrawal of inboundary Travelcards and I will take you seriously... but to question the continued existence of outboundary Travelcards is a bit loopy. Sorry, I know that sounds harsh, but I'm in a rush and haven't got the time to rephrase it in a nicer, less harsh way! |
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