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Chris! April 26th 05 02:46 PM

Strike next Thursday
 
http://www.thisislondon.com/news/lon...ing%20Standard

So this election day strike thingy - it says bus inspectors will be
striking. Is a bus inspector someone who inspects the bus itself in a
maintenance kind of way or is a bus inspector one of those people that
walks around routemaster buses selling tickets?


Brimstone April 26th 05 02:52 PM

Strike next Thursday
 

"Chris!" wrote in message
oups.com...

http://www.thisislondon.com/news/lon...source=Evening
%20Standard

So this election day strike thingy - it says bus inspectors will be
striking. Is a bus inspector someone who inspects the bus itself in a
maintenance kind of way or is a bus inspector one of those people that
walks around routemaster buses selling tickets?


Neither.



[email protected] April 26th 05 05:43 PM

Strike next Thursday
 
I would take it to mean neither. That article doesn't specify, but it
could mean someone who inspects tickets on a bus where all passengers
are already required to hold them as a "revenue protection" exercise.
These people are not officially called "bus inspectors". The other, and
more probaby more accurate, meaning is an official who observes buses
at a fixed point on a route to regulate the service on behalf of the
bus company and ensure drivers aree keeping to time etc. In London,
both TfL and the bus operating companies employ such officials.


Chris! April 26th 05 05:46 PM

Strike next Thursday
 

wrote:
I would take it to mean neither. That article doesn't specify, but it
could mean someone who inspects tickets on a bus where all passengers
are already required to hold them as a "revenue protection" exercise.
These people are not officially called "bus inspectors". The other,

and
more probaby more accurate, meaning is an official who observes buses
at a fixed point on a route to regulate the service on behalf of the
bus company and ensure drivers aree keeping to time etc. In London,
both TfL and the bus operating companies employ such officials.


Ah so it's correct when it says buses will still run but they will
probably bunch up?


James Farrar April 30th 05 08:46 PM

Strike next Thursday
 
Chris! wrote:
wrote:

I would take it to mean neither. That article doesn't specify, but it
could mean someone who inspects tickets on a bus where all passengers
are already required to hold them as a "revenue protection" exercise.
These people are not officially called "bus inspectors". The other,


and

more probaby more accurate, meaning is an official who observes buses
at a fixed point on a route to regulate the service on behalf of the
bus company and ensure drivers aree keeping to time etc. In London,
both TfL and the bus operating companies employ such officials.



Ah so it's correct when it says buses will still run but they will
probably bunch up?


The strike will have no effect, then!


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