Coronavirus: Doncaster children urged to stay away from railway lines during COVID-19 crisis

Network Rail is urging parents and carers in Doncaster to hammer home railway safety messages as schools across Britain close for coronavirus.
Watch more of our videos on Shots! 
and live on Freeview channel 276
Visit Shots! now

Incidents of trespass on the railway always spike when children are not at school, so parents are urged to remind their children to keep off the tracks as trespassing on the railway is incredibly dangerous and can have horrendous consequences for children and their families.

Last year, there were 133 recorded instances of trespass in Doncaster, with 25 of those being instances of youth trespass. More than 13,500 trespass incidents occur on the rail network each year, a quarter of which involve youths.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Allan Spence, head of public and passenger safety at Network Rail said: “The Easter holidays are the start of the peak for railway trespass and with schools now closed for an extended period, I’m really, really worried that the railway will become an irresistible but catastrophic playground for too many children.

Pedestrians sitting on a level crossing in Doncaster.Pedestrians sitting on a level crossing in Doncaster.
Pedestrians sitting on a level crossing in Doncaster.

“Each year, we see hundreds of people taking risks on and around the railway, resulting in tragic consequences and life-changing injuries.

“Please talk to your children, access our free school railway safety lessons and help us to help save young people as we know all too well that that everyone loses when you step on the track.”

Network Rail and British Transport Police run a hard-hitting safety campaign – You Vs Train, which highlights the devasting consequences of trespassing on the railway.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

With the early closure of schools, the organisations are offering parents the opportunity to sign up for free online tutorials of the You vs Train railway safety lessons, which are normally broadcast into schools via their educational partner LearnLive; visit https://learnliveuk.com/trespass-awareness-week/ for more details.

The rail network is never switched off. Electricity powers the overhead cables 7 days a week.

The rail network does not go to sleep once the last passenger services have run. Freight trains run all through the night.

Never anticipate that you know when the next train is due. The reduced number of passenger trains running on the network during the day will allow more freight services to operate during the daytime hours,

Further information on rail safety can be found at www.youvstrain.co.uk