The Daily Telegraph

Fear of touching ‘tainted’ Tube handrails leads to escalator falls

- By Jack Hardy

ESCALATOR falls have increased dramatical­ly in Tube stations because passengers are too afraid to hold handrails amid fears they could catch Covid.

A London Undergroun­d chief has warned falls caused by people not holding handrails “due to a perception they are not clean” is one of the biggest safety risks facing the network.

There were 12 serious injuries on the Tube network between April and June and 23 on buses, which Transport for London (TFL) said was “a total greater than any quarter throughout 2020-21”.

It is believed that the end of lockdown has also contribute­d to the rise in accidents on escalators after the return of large numbers of drunken revellers travelling on nights out.

Speaking at a TFL panel on safety this week, Andy Lord, managing director of the London Undergroun­d, said escalator falls were “our biggest risk from a personal injury perspectiv­e”.

Elderly passengers are among those most vulnerable if they fall while failing to hold the handrail, which often happens when they are trying to manoeuvre luggage on to the escalator, he said.

Mr Lord told the hearing: “The two biggest risks we have are falls on escalators caused by people who don’t hold the handrail. There is an issue with the perception that the handrail is not clean because of the pandemic.

“The other bigger issue is actually intoxicati­on.

“We have seen a significan­t spike as the various stages of lockdown have been reduced, with particular spikes initially on Thursday and Friday evenings and then weekends.” Public hesitancy to touch the handrails on escalators persists despite researcher­s from Imperial College London finding almost no trace of the virus on any shared surfaces that they swabbed in stations.

TFL is also installing UV light devices on handrails at an increasing number of stations that kill the virus.

Mr Lord added: “We’re spending a huge amount of time and money and resources cleaning the handrails, as well as the UV cleaners which are being steadily rolled out across the entire network.

“We are looking at what further communicat­ions we can do to raise awareness of that for our customers.”

An accompanyi­ng report on passenger safety published by TFL this week revealed the number of customers injured per million passenger journeys was currently “above our target”.

It said: “Very sadly, the number of people killed or seriously injured has increased in line with the return of customers to the network.”

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