The commuters forced to queue for 100 yards to buy train tickets . . . AFTER their journey
- Images of fed-up commuters at Glasgow's Central Station have been revealed
- Passengers were unable to buy tickets at their departure station or on the train
- This left exasperated customers no option but to wait to pay at their destination
Frustrated passengers were forced to stand in a 100 metre-long queue to buy tickets even though their journey on ScotRail had finished.
Images of fed-up commuters at Glasgow's Central Station were revealed online.
The passengers were unable to buy tickets at their departure station or on the train, leaving them with no option but to wait to pay at their destination.
Images of fed-up commuters at Glasgow's Central Station have been revealed online
Christina Wilson, who had got on at Cambuslang, had been unable to buy a ticket there because the queue meant she would have missed her train.
However, when she arrived at Glasgow Central she was faced with another huge queue and only one member of staff selling tickets.
She posted the image of the queue stretching back on the ScotRail Facebook page.
The post read: 'So this was the queue for tickets on platform six at Central Station at around 8:50am this morning.
'With one member of staff (later two) selling tickets. What an absolute disgrace. I'm late for work.'
ScotRail responded to tell her that she 'must buy a ticket before boarding' even though Christina stressed this wasn't always possible due to queues and the machine often being out of order.
In their response, ScotRail, which got her name wrong wrote said: 'Hi Lisa, where do you travel into the station from?'
Christina replied: 'My name isn't Lisa. Obviously. Cambuslang but the queue for the ticket machine meant I would've missed the train if I'd waited in it.'
Commuters vented their frustration at ScotRail over the queue at Glasgow's Central Station
ScotRail responded: 'Sorry Christina, my mistake there. I'm afraid you must buy a ticket before boarding the train at Cambuslang, this'll allow you to avoid the queues at Glasgow Central. Do you travel in daily on this route?'
Christina responded: 'Not daily, hence why I don't always buy a four week ticket and have to buy individual tickets.
'But it is often the case that the ticket machine at Cambuslang isn't even working and again, the queue at the desk would mean I would miss the train.
'Do you really expect people not to get on a train because they haven't been able to get a ticket?'
ScotRail responded to tell her they have a 'buy before you board policy' and urged their customers to get to stations in 'plenty of time to purchase a ticket.'
Other incensed commuters were quick to respond on Christina's post.
Leanne Adkin wrote: 'Look at ScotRail trying to give you a telling off for not having the time to stand for 30 minutes in a queue to buy a ticket before you board.
'You queue longer than you are on a train. I don't think the buy before you board policy is really working for you considering the hundreds of people queuing after their journey.'
Stephen Walsh commented: 'Just the type of response I would expect. The service should meet the customer's requirements not the opposite.
'Just because you have a monopoly does not give you the right to provide poor service and expect your customers to be inconvenienced because it suits ScotRail.'
Whilst Fee Dinning-Coutts added: 'It sounds like you are passing the blame onto passengers when the initial problem lies with ScotRail not providing adequate ticketing facilities.'
A ScotRail Alliance spokeswoman said: 'No one likes having to queue, particularly on cold Monday mornings.
'However, most of our customers in the queue this morning could have avoided the wait if they'd bought their tickets or weekly passes at their departure station before starting their journey.
'Our records show eight out of 10 boarded at a station with ticket buying facilities.'
Most watched News videos
- New video shows Epstein laughing and chasing young women
- British Airways passengers turn flight into a church service
- Epstein describes himself as a 'tier one' sexual predator
- Skier dressed as Chewbacca brutally beaten in mass brawl
- Two schoolboys plummet out the window of a moving bus
- Buddhist monks in Thailand caught with a stash of porn
- Melinda Gates says Bill Gates must answer questions about Epstein
- Police dog catches bag thief who pushed woman to the floor
- Holly Valance is shut down by GB News for using slur
- JD Vance turns up heat on Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor
- China unveils 'Star Wars' warship that can deploy unmanned jets
- Sarah Ferguson 'took Princesses' to see Epstein after prison
