British Airways fly from Dublin to Heathrow.Fly to a different airport and get the train. If you're flying out of Heathrow then you've no other choice. If your end destination is London then you've loads of choice.
So you lived in all of those cities, for a prolonged period of time, and have used the public transport there for your daily work commute? And you are still saying public transport in Dublin is not too bad? I give up....Try London, Paris, New York, Toronto, Zurich, Sydney, Melbourne, San Fransciso to begin with
Here is a link to the NTA public transport performance results
[broken link removed]
Rail passengers could face disruption due to strike action next month in a dispute over pay while there is also potential for further industrial action at Bus Éireann, unions warned today.
So you lived in all of those cities, for a prolonged period of time, and have used the public transport there for your daily work commute? And you are still saying public transport in Dublin is not too bad? I give up....
I am (unfortunately) flying a lot, also with Ryanair
and had my fair share of delays
According to the link you provided, Dublin Bus managed to operate 96.2% of their scheduled services in Q1/2017.
What exactly is the point you are trying to make?
Despite those exceptional circumstances which are no ones fault but their own, Ryanair cancels 2% of their flights, i.e. 98% are as usual.
According to the link you provided, Dublin Bus managed to operate 96.2% of their scheduled services in Q1/2017.
British Airways fly from Dublin to Heathrow.
I am using the current situation in Ryanair as an example to show how being sacked in the private sector is not as easy, or as common, as some would have you believe
I'm not here to bash Ryanair, I think its a great company, does its job very well. That is why also, I would be surprised if anyone was ever sacked over this.
Is that because the driver drives the bus slowly? Should he drive it as if he were driving a car? Do car drivers have to stop to drop off and take on passengers along the route? Could that have something to do with it?
So now if public sector workers don't take a stand they are the bad guys too? A bit of damned if you do damned if you don't?
Where are your similar questions to try to understand the issues with Ryanair?
???
Those responses were in return to criticism of the length of time it takes a particular bus eireann journey!!!
That is the whole point. A public transport company makes a mess and there are typically calls and criticisms for sackings, accountability, the 'sheltered public sector' etc.
You clearly missed the point - which was that the Navan fiasco was ignored in the media apart from on one TD's twitter account. And that the more generalised mess of the 109 bus route has been tolerated for years without any media or public reaction.
Those facts together contradict your thesis as above.
???
That is the whole point. A public transport company makes a mess and there are typically calls and criticisms for sackings, accountability, the 'sheltered public sector' etc.
Again you're repeatedly contradicting your own words, viz.,
On Toibin, look a little harder. He tweeted on it earlier in the week and again today.
you seem to be the only one obsessed with dividing the public and private sector. It really is a case of:
Private Sector = Bad
Public Sector = Good
On Toibin, look a little harder. He tweeted on it earlier in the week and again today.
Good God this is getting really stupid.So it was raised in the media? Social media at least?
Good God this is getting really stupid.
What prompted you earlier to check Peadar Toibin's twitter page?
On Toibin, look a little harder.
You quoted a post of mine referring to his twitter account over 10 hours ago. Maybe you've had a few jars or something, but is your memory that bad?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?