RE: QuayCity VOLTRA Yutong E12's
(05 Sep 2022, 6:29 am)Ianthegoon wrote Not sure the All-Line Rover analogy is a good one, as under equivalent circumstances on the railway a Delay Repay payment may well be due, even on Rover tickets. Unfortunately there's no such provision on the buses, if a bus is delayed your journey is delayed and you're late. Having said that, explaining the purpose of the journey might get you something; Go North East are fairly enthusiast-friendly even if their ability to actually provide a service has been a bit shaky of late .....
The All-Line Rover analogy was meant to illustrate the futility of attempting to argue that, as an enthusiast, you felt the ticket didn't offer value for money as you weren't able to complete certain aspects of your journey due to time constraints. For example, at the beginning of 2020, I purchased 7-Day Freedom of the North East (or whatever its called) Rover and ventured down to Cleethorpes. Now, I would have liked to have gone to Barton Upon Humber, but upon learning the service was rather infrequent, I decided against waiting for it and went back to Doncaster instead as I had something planned that evening.
There is equivalence between this example and the one stated by the poster. Both of us had set out to do something for the purposes of leisure but time-constraints had prevented us from completing what we had set out to do. I agree, explaining the purpose of the journey may yield some return, however this requires you to provide the burden of proof if you were financially impacted or inconvenienced in some way. As enthusiast-friendly Go North East might be, I don't think an explanation of 'I wanted to travel to Wallsend but only got to the Law Courts because the bus ran into a problem, and I needed to be back home for a certain time' is sufficient enough for a refund. If it were, it opens the door for all sorts of frivolous claims by enthusiasts for journeys they might have wanted to do, but couldn't, which is what my example was meant to illustrate.