to get round the coach and drinking on board law for example is there no way you could do a said trip to blackpool but obviously all go to the football, dont really see the difference you can drink on trains and annoy the general public, why is it a ruling on coaches.
it's illegal to carry alcohol on a coach to a professional football match and these coaches will observe the same rules as any other, not least because the consequences of not doing so would affect every passenger not just the culprit.
Those with long memories will recall that similar rules used to apply on designated trains, but mysteriously stopped being used around the time trains were privatised. Police would have struggled to turn a train around, mind.
wasnt suggesting at all that people drink on board just that would there be a way around it, as i know if you could have a drink would more people get it, can picture the jolly boys outing.
wasnt suggesting at all that people drink on board just that would there be a way around it, as i know if you could have a drink would more people get it, can picture the jolly boys outing.
it's illegal to carry alcohol on a coach to a professional football match and these coaches will observe the same rules as any other, not least because the consequences of not doing so would affect every passenger not just the culprit.
Those with long memories will recall that similar rules used to apply on designated trains, but mysteriously stopped being used around the time trains were privatised. Police would have struggled to turn a train around, mind.
We also won THE transport police over .The way CASC ran the trains was a credit to everyone that travelled. End of the day no need for Transport police or spotters to travel on train. Even given good safe pubs to drink in at away games. That was the enjoyment with train travel back then,good times had by all even The Police had agood day out.
it's illegal to carry alcohol on a coach to a professional football match and these coaches will observe the same rules as any other, not least because the consequences of not doing so would affect every passenger not just the culprit.
Those with long memories will recall that similar rules used to apply on designated trains, but mysteriously stopped being used around the time trains were privatised. Police would have struggled to turn a train around, mind.
We also won THE transport police over .The way CASC ran the trains was a credit to everyone that travelled. End of the day no need for Transport police or spotters to travel on train. Even given good safe pubs to drink in at away games. That was the enjoyment with train travel back then,good times had by all even The Police had agood day out.
With a user name like yours, I wouldn't have thought you needed to take the train...
Comments
Those with long memories will recall that similar rules used to apply on designated trains, but mysteriously stopped being used around the time trains were privatised. Police would have struggled to turn a train around, mind.
End of the day no need for Transport police or spotters to travel on train.
Even given good safe pubs to drink in at away games.
That was the enjoyment with train travel back then,good times had by all even The Police had agood day out.
Coach though never again.