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Transportation United Kingdom

London Bus Crashes Are the Result of an Unsafe Model (ft.com) 18

An anonymous reader shares a report: Earlier this year I had one of those encounters which, afterwards, I just couldn't stop thinking about. Eight months and some digging later, I have decided to write about it. My meeting was with an American businessman called Tom Kearney, who was on a pavement in central London one Christmas when he was whacked on the head so hard that he fell to the ground, spent weeks in a coma, and only just survived. Had he been mugged? Not quite. He'd been hit by the giant wing mirror of a London bus.

[...] The most recent data show that 86 people died or were badly injured in bus collisions in London between 10 December 2023 and 31 March 2024. Kearney's analysis of TfL data suggests that around three people a day are hospitalised after bus safety incidents. That doesn't feel good, even though it's tiny in comparison to the 1.8bn annual passenger journeys. Compared with other world cities like New York and Paris the capital's buses rank in the top quartile for financial efficiency but the bottom quartile for collisions per kilometre. And the number of collisions in London has increased in the past couple of years, despite buses travelling fewer miles.

Could this have anything to do with the way that bus contracts prioritise speed? Last week, hundreds of bus drivers marched to TfL headquarters to demand better working conditions and the right to report safety concerns "without fear of retribution from TfL or employers." Drivers described the pressure of long shifts, few breaks and having to drive in sometimes blistering heat, all while being shouted at over a monitor by controllers who want them to make up the time to the next stop, and keep the right amount of distance between their bus and next. It's not surprising that a third of bus drivers, before the pandemic, reported having had a "close call" from fatigue.

With the government about to export the London franchise model to other parts of the country, someone in Whitehall needs to take a look. Michael Liebreich, a former McKinsey consultant who sat on the TfL board for six years, believes that TfL's contracting out model is "institutionally unsafe." Bus drivers are under such pressure, he thinks, that some may break the speed limit and overtake cyclists dangerously.

London Bus Crashes Are the Result of an Unsafe Model

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  • Bicycles are very very dangerous. Better be inside the bus.
    • I prefer horses because they're generally nice animals. Unfortunately, they shit all over the street and have the capacity to buck you off and kill you if they get scared. But I guess that isn't much different than riding on a bus you can't control when the drunken bus driver decides that a shop door is actually an entrance to a tunnel. (/s for the stupid)

    • by troon ( 724114 )
      Bicycles are not dangerous. Bad drivers of large motor vehicles are a danger to people on bicycles.
  • Well, yeah... (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Moryath ( 553296 ) on Monday November 18, 2024 @09:23PM (#64956195)

    This is what happens when conservative f-tards demand "efficiency efficiency efficiency" rather than building a safe, sane system for a public service.

    The buses shouldn't have to keep such a tight timetable that they're rushing to make the next stop. They should have enough padding in the schedule to accommodate holding at each stop for a few minutes - whether that means they can drive at safe speeds and account for any issues of traffic, or issues with people who have mobility challenges needing extra time to get on or off the bus, or anything else.

    I'm surprised the bus drivers aren't also being forced to pee in bottles. [forbes.com]

    • The stops are every few hundred metres, max. If they padded the schedule like that, it would be faster to walk. The worst thing a bus driver can do is leave early, so they will have to wait those few minutes every stop. No thanks.

      To add some numbers from experience: the supermarket is just over 15 mins walk away. If itâ(TM)s more than five minutes wait for a bus, I do walk, because itâ(TM)s faster. Even if I have 25 kg of shopping.

  • by gardyloo ( 512791 ) on Monday November 18, 2024 @09:25PM (#64956199)

    [...] Compared with other world cities like New York and Paris the capital's buses rank in the top quartile for financial efficiency but the bottom quartile for collisions per kilometre.

    Where apparently "bottom quartile" means "top quartile", but something in a top quartile doesn't mean a frowny-enough face for the author. Thanks for the careful writing and editing, Financial Times.

  • And don't walk in a road facing away from traffic. You'll never see it coming.

    But no, this is all the fault of a 'Bus Model'. No not the model of bus, but the dispatch software set up with ridiculous schedules. Oh wait that's not the model's fault either, it is the dispatch 'engineer' or whatever they call it.

    CLickbait trying to sucker us in with 'models' like Al or something...
    • And don't walk in a road facing away from traffic. You'll never see it coming.

      But no, this is all the fault of a 'Bus Model'. No not the model of bus, but the dispatch software set up with ridiculous schedules. Oh wait that's not the model's fault either, it is the dispatch 'engineer' or whatever they call it.

      CLickbait trying to sucker us in with 'models' like Al or something...

      It's an opinion piece, not a news article. You can read the full text with additional information (summary link is paywalled) via https://archive.is/hehDF [archive.is]

    • What are you talking about?
      The summary says he was walking on the pavement, which is the british word for the sidewalk. Do you walk on the sidewalk "facing away from traffic", and always looking for cars to make sure "you see it coming"? (if so... what the fuck. if i'm on the sidewalk i assume i'm safe, that's the entire point of the sidewalk).

      Sounds like a bus that was turning into a busstop a bit vigorously hit a pedestrian. If that sounds normal for you... or the pedestrians fault... It's honestly the fi

    • Yes, the correct story is that people arenâ(TM)t being taught properly to watch the road and keep back from the edge and nor are they paying attention close to a road. The mirror isnâ(TM)t the only thing you have to watch out for with a bus because theyâ(TM)re driven to come as close to the curb as possible. If the stop is at an actual bus bay, the angle the bus comes in at often means the front corner sweeps past some way over the pavement.

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