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The Foxton box: Meldreth School's Junior Travel Ambassadors visit Foxton signal box and level crossing for a rail safety lesson
The Foxton box: Meldreth School's Junior Travel Ambassadors visit Foxton signal box and level crossing for a rail safety lesson

Press release -

​Safety at Foxton is fun for young travel ambassadors

Six Hertfordshire schoolchildren enjoyed a fun, hands-on railway safety lesson on a trip to Foxton signal box and level crossing this week [Monday 4 March].

The six children, who are Junior Travel Ambassadors for their school in Meldreth, travelled with their two teachers and Sarah Grove of the Meldreth, Shepreth & Foxton Community Rail Partnership (MSFCRP). Sarah had organised the trip with train operator Great Northern, who provided the free rail journey to and from Meldreth, and Network Rail, whose signalling staff showed them how the signals and crossing barriers work together to keep everybody safe when a train passes.

Inside the signal box, the crossing operator showed the visitors how the barriers are operated at both Foxton and, using CCTV, Shepreth. The children were fascinated by the technology, especially the screens that show where the trains are on the local network.

Under supervision, the children were allowed to operate the barriers for the passing trains. These included local stopping trains, fast trains to Cambridge and London, a Thameslink train all the way from Brighton, and a quarry train that reversed into the branch line towards the Barrington Quarry.

After asking many questions, and receiving a Network Rail goody bag, the visitors caught a train back to Meldreth, just in time for school dinner.

Teacher Andrew Jones said: “The visit to Foxton level crossing offered a unique and fantastic leadership and learning opportunity for our Junior Travel Ambassadors to extend their work on local transport safety issues into a whole new arena. They learned an enormous amount of important safety lessons about rail safety - which is tremendously important to us in Meldreth, where the railway line runs directly behind the school and can be easily accessed by anyone.

“Travelling to Foxton courtesy of Great Northern in their high-visibility jackets, the children felt like very important safety ambassadors for the school. We were given a fantastic welcome by Jody and Ben at the signal box and the children all had their diverse questions answered as well as assisting with the control of the barriers under the staff’s guidance. The children certainly recognised the importance of rail safety as a result of their visit and will be presenting the results of their experience to the rest of the school population in assembly next week. I do hope that this leads to further links between local schools and the local rail network.”

In their joint report on the visit, the children thanked the signal box staff for a great experience and said: “We think it was a really valuable trip because it helped us understand how dangerous it can be at the level crossing if you’re in a car or if you’re a pedestrian. We learned how we control the barriers, and how trains know when they can go or not go. It was clever how we could lock the magnetic gates to keep people safe when they cross.

“The people at Great Northern trains gave us a free travel pass so we could go by train to get there. It was great fun to travel on the train in our bright orange JTA jackets. When we got there, Jody the signaller put the barriers down just so we could cross the road. It felt pretty cool!”

Ends

Notes to editors

Junior Travel Ambassador Scheme (http://www.carbometer.org.uk/junior-travel-ambassador/)

The Junior Travel Ambassador scheme, run by Cambridgeshire County Council, promotes safe travel and gives the Ambassadors themselves a remit to encourage active and healthy lifestyles among their peers.

Foxton Level Crossing is a “full barrier” crossing over the busy A10 where the barriers are closed two to three minutes in advance of the train arriving. The signaller will not give the train a green light to proceed until the crossing is clear of all road users. Other crossings in the area, over quieter roads, are “automatic half barriers”, lowered less than a minute before the train passes.

Meldreth, Shepreth & Foxton Community Rail Partnership:http://meldrethsheprethfoxtonrail.org.uk/.

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Govia Thameslink Railway

Govia Thameslink Railway (GTR) operates Thameslink, Great Northern, Southern and Gatwick Express services as follows:

  • Thameslink – cross-London services between Bedford/Peterborough/Cambridge and Brighton/Horsham/Littlehampton/East Grinstead, and between Luton/St Albans and Sutton/Wimbledon/Rainham; plus services between London and Sevenoaks
  • Great Northern – services between London and Welwyn, Hertford, Peterborough, Cambridge and King’s Lynn
  • Southern – services between London and the Sussex coast (Brighton, Worthing, Eastbourne, Bognor Regis, Hastings) and parts of Surrey, Kent and Hampshire (Ashford International, Southampton, Portsmouth)
  • Gatwick Express – fast, non-stop direct services between Gatwick Airport and London Victoria

www.southernrailway.com, www.thameslinkrailway.com, www.gatwickexpress.com, www.greatnorthernrail.com

Govia Thameslink Railway
United Kingdom