Getting help at a Melbourne railway station can be difficult, when around half of them being desolate wastelands with no staff members to be seen. Those that do have somebody to talk to fall into two groups: ‘premium’ stations have staff present inside the booking office from first to last train, while ‘host’ stations have staff roaming the platforms for a few hours on weekday mornings.
My local station was one of the latter, having two nice ladies saying hello to the regular passengers each morning, and keeping everybody up to date regarding late running and cancelled trains. While the sources of real time train information available to them were often patchy, they did their best with the resources available to ensure everybody got to work on time.
Everything was fine and dandy until one Monday morning in late September, when the usual whiteboard with train information was replaced by a farewell message from the station staff.
My initial thoughts were around Metro Trains trying to cut costs (as per usual) but the truth for their disappearance was revealed the next day by an article in the Herald Sun‘:
Constant monitoring of CCTV planned on Metro train stations in bid to improve safety
Lachlan Hastings
September 25, 2012Metro is trialling “continuous monitoring” of CCTV feeds from all train stations on the Craigieburn and Upfield lines in a bid to boost passenger safety.
And during the six-month trial, passengers will be able to reach control centre staff from any station on either line by pushing the red button on platforms.
The red button was previously for use only in emergencies.
“CCTV at every station on the Craigieburn and Upfield lines will be monitored continuously while the network is operating, providing improved customer safety,” Metro spokeswoman Geraldine Mitchell today mX today.
“Control room officers at Broadmeadows and North Melbourne will also be able to provide added assistance during times of disruption or delay by providing long line announcements to every station along the Craigieburn and Upfield lines.”
But during this period Craigieburn line stations Newmarket and Ascot Vale will no longer be staffed for ticket sales in the morning peak.
Mitchell said that under the trial, our staff who worked at the stations from 6am to 10am on weekdays would be redeployed to the Broadmeadows control centre.
(The above emphasis is mine)
Some of the ‘facts’ given by Metro in the Herald Sun article are rather dubious. For a start station staff at Newmarket and Ascot Vale never sold tickets to passengers as there was no booking office available to them, and long line announcements are nothing new – control room staff along the Craigieburn line were already making them on a regular basis, each morning advising passengers that every single Craigieburn-bound train was running about 10 minute late out of Flinders Street.
Over the next few days, posters advertising the CCTV monitoring trial appeared along the Craigieburn line:
Another change was the masking of the ’emergency use only’ message on the intercom units with a sticker detailing their new functionality:
After staff were removed from Newmarket and Ascot Vale the amount of useful information given to passengers has nosedived – both locations lack LED screens showing train departures, so there is no easy way to find out how far away the next train is. When station staff were around they kept a whiteboard up to date with a list of cancelled trains, and regular announcements over the PA system give passengers useful titbits such as letting a late running and crush loaded train depart, as the empty train behind it was just two minutes from arriving.
Today the only information that passengers get at unmanned station is from the insipid ‘talking brick’ – push the green button hoping to find out how long until the next train arrives, but instead you spend the next five minutes listening to the stopping pattern of the next three trains to arrive and the tedious ‘if travelling with Myki remember to touch on and on and on and on‘ message, with the minutes until departure found somewhere in between at a barely audible volume.
The only thing worse than listening to the stupid box go through the spiel is when you get a busy tone, because everybody else on the network is also trying to find out where the hell their train is – a far too frequent occurrence in the past few weeks.
After a few days of putting up with the green button, I had a brainwave: is Metro Trains contractually permitted to withdraw staff from railway stations in Melbourne? A look at their Customer Service Charter found the following:
Every weekday morning Metro will commit to providing staff at 22 Host stations meaning more than 80 percent of our customers will start their journey at a staffed station.
Did Ascot Vale and Newmarket fall into the 22 host stations they committed to staffing? I found more promising lead in the Melbourne Metropolitan Train Franchise document signed by Metro Trains Melbourne and the State of Victoria.
6. Staffing of Stations
(a) Each Premium Station must be staffed at all times when trains are scheduled to call at the relevant Premium Station (including for a reasonable period of time before the first and after the last scheduled train). Staffing at these times must be sufficient to cover operational and customer service needs.
(b) The Franchisee must ensure that at least 2 staff are providing customer service every Weekday between 7am and 9am at the following Stations (each a Hosted Station):
- Albion
- Armadale
- Ascot Vale
- Auburn
- Balaclava
- Burnley
- Carnegie
- Fairfield
- Glenhuntly
- Heatherdale
- Holmesglen
- Hoppers Crossing
- Huntingdale
- Jolimont
- Malvern
- Middle Brighton
- Moonee Ponds
- Murrumbeena
- Newmarket
- Noble Park
- North Brighton
- Nunawading
- Ormond
- Prahran
- Ripponlea
- Syndal
- Tooronga
- Windsor
- Yarraville
So it seems that Metro Trains is required to provide station staff at Ascot Vale and Newmarket stations each morning, or they are breaking their contract with the State Government.
Footnote
It is possible that Metro actually went to the government and said “we want to remove station staff from two stations for a six month trial – is that okay with you” but I haven’t been able to find anything supporting this theory – then again the management of public transport in Victoria is a Byzantine empire that doesn’t publicise any of their decision making process, so the lack of public information is not proof of anything.
Great blog. CCTV doesn’t help safety, as it doesn’t prevent crime. Recent research is also casting doubt on its utility in catching offenders after the fact. Even where offenders are caught, the cost per offender is very high – perhaps it would’ve been cheaper to staff stations in first place and prevent the crime happening.
Also, CCTV is no justification for removing host staff. They serve different purposes. CCTV is directed at safety, hosts are directed at customer information and managed the high passenger loads in the peak periods. Installing CCTV does not fulfill a host’s functions, as your blog so well demonstrates.
Spot on there – having somebody in Broadmeadows watching a CCTV monitor doesn’t do anything to help a commuter wanting to know when the next train is.
Someone should ask that dodgy geraldine mitchell for a straight answer on what you should actually do if the myki machine is broken.
Probably the same as if you find a broken Metcard machine – get on the train hope that you don’t come across any Authorised Officers on your travels.
Supposedly the machines are designed to ‘phone home’ and tell somebody who cares that something is wrong, so somebody can come out and fix it, but I don’t hold too much faith in that actually happening:
http://ptv.vic.gov.au/fares-tickets/refunds-and-replacements/ticket-equipment-faults/
If you do get pinged for boarding a train from a station with faulty equipment, I also would also assume getting the infringement notice withdrawn will be a *lot* of stuffing around.
I guess if you made a phone video showing the location and what happens when you try to top up or whatever isn’t working that would be convincing evidence of your good intention!
in January 2017 the government changed the enforcement regime, with more warnings issued:
https://www.theage.com.au/national/victoria/one-in-four-myki-fare-evaders-get-warning-as-government-targets-repeat-offenders-20170511-gw2uyk.html
Press green button for next train information, press red button in an emergency. Press both for “Help! Help! When’s the next train!” (That joke killed in 1999!)
[…] in October 2012 Metro pulled station staff from the Craigieburn and Upfield lines as part of a six month long ‘trial’ of full time CCTV monitoring, with the removal of platform staff at City Loop platforms in […]
Dear Marcus,
perhaps the solution is a talking CCTV ? I agree with you, CCTV records what is happening. It relies on the CCTV Panel Observer actually detecting that something is wrong, and that depends on the cycle rate and the number of CCTV screens being observed. The person murdered at Hallam station when CCTV was relatively new, was not detected by the Observer as the cycle rate was too high, and there was a large number of screens to observe. After the Police examined the footage, only part of the assault was captured by CCTV.
I am also not convinced that PSOs are of much help either. Staffed stations do provide both customer service and employment, the latter is necessary for both passenger assistance and on going health of the economy , which should be structured to benefit the whole community, and the community only working to benefit the economy.
regards, Paul
[…] Even at stations without staff. […]