News1 min ago
Newcastle Metro
4 Answers
I recently spent a holiday in Newcastle and travelled about on the Metro quite a bit. The total amount spent on this was in the region of �8 and yet there were no ticket barriers and nobody ever checked whether I actually had a ticket. Is this lack of ticket inspection normal for Newcastle and, if it is, does this mean that lots of people travel about for free?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Brugel. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.It used to shock me too when I lived in Newcastle. An entire underground network built on trust! And as a smelly student I did regularly bunk the metro. I never had my tickets checked. I regret doing that now. The ticket prices were a pittance then anyway.
A friend of mine did get caught, and was held for 45mins, until he was issued with a fine. Not worth the effort in retrospect.
Mind you, the fine was only a fiver, so you could quite reasonably weigh the cost of a fine against never buying a ticket.
But as I'm older now, that's just plain wrong!
Mind you nicking blocks of Chedder from the blind-spot in the Presto supermarket in Byker was priceless.
There are crowds of ticket checkers buzzing about in clouds that descend on trains. They have you trapped if you are a fare dodger and the fines have gone right up. I think it's �30 now and off to court for repeat offenders. At weekends this seems to be backed up by police patrols.
Just after the extension to Sunderland opened, I don't think more than 20% of the travellers on the nearly always full trains to Wearside paid. The ticket checkers have increased this proportion, but I still have the impression that ticket holders on the Sunderland branch only number 50-60%.
NEXUS, the Metro operator are supposed to be always in a cash crisis and say they can't afford to employ ticket inspectors, and the ticket barriers were considered a health and safety hazard. If the barriers did not let non-ticket holders out they would be fried in a fire! I think that NEXUS would soon recoup the inspectors' salaries in increased fares revenue. This was proved hands down on the buses before bus de-regulation in 1980s.
Just after the extension to Sunderland opened, I don't think more than 20% of the travellers on the nearly always full trains to Wearside paid. The ticket checkers have increased this proportion, but I still have the impression that ticket holders on the Sunderland branch only number 50-60%.
NEXUS, the Metro operator are supposed to be always in a cash crisis and say they can't afford to employ ticket inspectors, and the ticket barriers were considered a health and safety hazard. If the barriers did not let non-ticket holders out they would be fried in a fire! I think that NEXUS would soon recoup the inspectors' salaries in increased fares revenue. This was proved hands down on the buses before bus de-regulation in 1980s.