Public transport is a necessary inconvenience. Like getting dressed or waking up.
It can be an extraordinary windfall if you live near a train station or bus shelter, don’t like getting caught in traffic and never travel during peak hour but at every other time it’s a buzzing centre of suffering.
A peak hour train can be an exercise in sardine-tin-simulation as every nose is forced into every other armpit. Buses perform the vehicular interpretation of the ‘Waiting for Godot’ play and never show up. Public transport is the nerve centre of any city, but oftentimes it’s a frayed one.
The intersection of public transport and humanity can also, sometimes, be a fraught one as throngs of people jostle past each other and apparently forget ever rule of manners they’ve ever learned.
The Japanese have it down to a fine art. They’re quiet. Considerate. Can sleep standing up.
Australians? We’re not quite there yet.
If somebody stands within 30cm (which is almost always) we bristle, yet others have been known to defend the right of their plush toys won after shows to take up entire seats.
It’s all a terrible game of rush-hour roulette.
According to news.com.au, passengers are willing to pay to escape the less desirable aspects of public transport:
“Public transport passengers are willing to pay as much as $4 on top of standard daily travel costs to avoid an over-crowded carriage, while most would pay an extra 25-per-cent for a premium service to guarantee seats and access to newspapers and Wi-Fi.
Asked how much more they would be willing to pay to avoid service delays, commuters said they would pay $1.15 for every minute, and an extra 66 cents per minute to avoid being late.
What’s your public transport horror story? And what would you pay to see?
Top Comments
Number one hate on trains:
Crazy or mentally challenged people..
If they're not making a fuss, that's fine. I've seen ones though that say very very rude insults to passengers walking past, they scream, they babble on about nonsense at the top of their lungs.
I know they are mentally challenged and cannot help that but it is NEVER ok for people to feel unsafe or seriously threatened on public transport.... never, never ever.
My biggest PT horror story is when I was indecently assaulted on a bus, at 9pm on a Saturday night and the bus driver watched the whole thing, and ignored my pleas for help. The battle continued with the transit commission who told me that the bus driver didn't have to do anything (legally - and I get that), and that the transport commission themselves had no obligation to protect their passengers and that "security was tied up at that time so it just sucked for you that there was no one to help". Yes. "Dude". It sucked. I sucked a lot.
I'm quite lucky - as a nurse I always seem to just miss peak hours and I travel the opposite way so I never seem to be stuck over crowded trains. It's pretty quiet at 6:40am on the train...I have a massive aversion to buses now and will only catch them if there are no other options.
Or rather *it sucked, it sucked a lot.