@Izzywizzy, you're right that it's not a charity but they're not there to make a profit off you either, Dublin Bus is a public service so they have an obligation to accept passengers if it's the last bus and they havent got enough or any money so they can get home safe, it's part the company policy which drivers should be aware of as it's part of their training and it's in their employee handbooks. Obviously same rules apply to behaviour so if the person is causing a nuisance or being violent they dont have to take them, from OP's post he seemed to be reasonable enough
i-bloodhound wrote: » I fear that this reasoning, as sound as it is, will be lost on the masses of AH.
Ass Face wrote: » How can bus drivers be ignorant? They don't even say anything, ever. You get on put money in the little box thing and tell them the fare you're paying, they press a button and that's the last you see of them till you get off. As for your story, it serves you right for trying to hop on the bus with out paying the full fare. You probably should have been fined. If I were the bus driver I'd have called the Gardaí and you'd have spent a night in the cells. Only scumbags try to dodge paying the fare the way you did.
i-bloodhound wrote: » He's a bus driver. If I was a bus driver I'd be pissed that my life went in that direction and I'd rightly take it out on everyone else Do you see the scum they've to deal with everyday? I'd drive a bus full of them to the Dail and become a (bus) suicide bomber.
Red Alert wrote: » He should have offered to give his details and get a bill from CIE .
Captain Ginger wrote: » Right well as a daily bus user I have noticed a lot of drivers to be decent enough, I get the odd one who doesn't bother saying "you're welcome" but besides that I have to say most are decent enough, but last night was a right shock to the system. I was in town getting the 45 back to Bray at night and realized I'd left my wallet back in the bar, went through my pockets and found most of the bus fare I needed (needed 2 euro, had 1.70). So I put that in and tried to explain to the driver what had happened, most of the time and she was not happy, looked at me like I was dirt and told me to ask others for the rest. Now I'm a bit of an intimidating guy in some ways, I have a good few piercings in my face and smelt of beer at this stage, so I asked a couple of people who ignored me (and to be honest I don't really blame them). So I'm getting off the bus and the driver stops me and starts giving me abuse. I'm mortified in frount of the others and I try to explain most of the time I end up having to put in too much anyway and explain why people at 12:00am on a bus try to ignore me asking for money due to my appearance in a feeble attempt to excuse myself while constantly saying sorry, she still won't have any of it so I try to make a light hearted recession joke, she then put on an extremely obvious fake laugh and mocked me openly in front of the others. I got off and walked the rest home. Now I know I am in the wrong here for not having my full fare, but at the same time I really don't think I should of been treated like that and would be half tempted to lodge a complaint. I was as polite as could be and was sober. Any of you had a similar experience?
peanuthead wrote: » This is typical Irish attitude. All rules should be manipulated to suit people, and we moan when its not. Its the very thing we criticise the gardai for!!!! I have been thrown off the bus after my shift ended on new years day one year because the fares technically went up to one euro, as opposed to 95c after midnight. It was kind of bad luck as the bus drivers usually use their discresion for the first few days, but I just got a toughie who wasnt prepared to let me on for the sake of 5c. I did call and complain, and the guy on the phone said to me "Would you go into the shop and try get a loaf of bread for 5c cheaper than it is?" And he's right. We wouldnt do that so why do we expect special treatment on the bus?
Ruen wrote: » "Section 19 (c)(Dublin Bus Bye-Laws) Any person found without a valid ticket on a vehicle by an authorised person shall pay the standard fare immediately upon the request of the authorised person or within the period of 21 days from the time the request is made and such fare may be recovered by the Company as a simple contract debt in any court of competent jurisdiction." So just pay what you've got and if they call you out on it when you get as far as you can or you're getting off after you're supposed to then you can pay them within 3 weeks and if they dont say anything then nothin to worry about.
Homer wrote: » I'd have charged you double.. Just for being Ginger? And made you sit down the back of the bus to boot!
jim o doom wrote: » That is completely off point - he mentioned that the bus driver ridiculed and mocked him in front of other passengers on the bus in his original post. He was not complaining about the amount less he paid, but the rude treatment from the driver, which was completely unacceptable. You might not ask for bread 30c cheaper in a shop, but neither would you expect a shop keeper to openly mock you in front of other people - even if you did request something in that fashion. In my situation, if a bus driver (or imaginary shop keeper) chose to mock me in front of a load of strangers, I would abuse them long and hard abour their questionable ancestry, how many siblings were involved in their genetic make up and a number of less funny & more offensive things on top. No stranger has a right to accost another person in public especially when they are supposedly "serving the public". But then again I get irate easily when I'm treated badly. Stories like this are the reason I don't get busses or trains anymore unless absolutely unavoidalbe. The busses are the pits.
Red Alert wrote: » I think the OP had the wrong attitude with the bus driver. That said, I notice a lot of the female bus drivers aren't as a rule very friendly, though there's at least one who's always in good form. He should have offered to give his details and get a bill from CIE rather than making a scene when getting on.
peanuthead wrote: » I completely agree with you, I too have had my fair share of horrible people, not just bus drivers, who think that they can belittle you for no reason at all. And I agree that it is disgraceful to speak like that to somebody, especially when you work in the public sector. However, my post was regarding this: I cannot understand why Irish people expect rules to be bent for them all the time. CIE do not issue bills, thats not how they work!!
Turd Ferguson wrote: » In Soviet Russia, bus driver drives you
jim o doom wrote: » "Thats not how they work" ? They don't work
cocoa wrote: » In Soviet Russia, bus drives you
marti101 wrote: » I was on the bus today and i pressed the button to get off but because i had a pram and bags i let a few people off in front of me.By this time the bus driver had driven off and i was left standing there and i made a point of pressing the button really harda nd for ages coming to the next stop.I said i wanted to get off the last stop and he said he didnt know that.But he was just so ignorant it really annoyed me.