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Daily Record
Daily Record
National
Laura Ferguson & John-Paul Clark

Blind Scots man says he narrowly avoided death after falling from train platform

A blind Scots man says he could have been 'minutes from death' after falling from a platform in a Glasgow east end railway station.

Michael Tornow, 41, from Glasgow, fell at Bellgrove Station due to a lack of tactile paving which would have warned him of the platform edge.

He was unable to climb back himself but was helped by other passengers who put their own safety at risk, reports Glasgow Live.

"A train was due in about five minutes after me falling, and I would probably not be alive now if it weren’t for the help other people gave me," he said.

Sight loss charity RNIB is currently undertaking a campaign to press for tactile paving to be fitted on all railway station platform edges in the UK and said the accident shows the dangers blind people face in stations.

"On April 10th, I arrived at Bellgrove and made my way towards the stairs to exit the station. On my way, I must have been walking slightly too close to the platform edge on my right-hand side and I fell off the platform.

"Fortunately, my guide-dog remained on the platform."

RNIB are calling on Network Rail to fit tactiles at Belgrove station, where Michael fell, as a matter of urgency. In February 2020, a blind man Cleveland Gervais fell to his death from a platform in Beckenham station, south London, that also was unmarked.

At present, 40 percent of UK rail stations lack tactile paving, which are concrete strips indented with furrows or small bumps that are felt when someone stands on them.

"I am a completely blind person and I also have a hearing impairment," says Michael, who lost his sight to a genetic condition called Alstron Syndrome.

"I travel independently with my guide-dog, and my journey begins and ends at Bellgrove station in Glasgow. The station has an island platform between the two tracks and there is no tactile paving at the platform edge on either side.

"I reported this to both ScotRail and the Office for Road and Rail. ScotRail did liaise with Network Rail because Network Rail are currently installing tactile paving at platform edges throughout the UK.

"Network Rail advised however, that they are prioritising installing tactile paving at stations where there are partial tactiles already present, or where the station is likely to be used by a visually impaired person to attend something nearby, for example a college.

"They say there is an aspiration to install tactiles at all Scottish stations where funding allows, but there is no deadline for this to happen at Bellgrove. Network Rail advised that Bellgrove station is not a priority and they aren’t reprioritising it following my fall.

"The Office for Road and Rail couldn’t record my fall as a near-miss because they can only do this when there has been an injury requiring medical treatment.

"I did raise with ScotRail, Network Rail and ORR that I have fallen previously at Bellgrove station in 2008 and again this wouldn’t have happened had there been tactile paving present."

Director of RNIB Scotland, James Adams added: "It is vital that railway stations are fitted with tactile paving to ensure the right of people with sight loss to use public transport safely.

"We launched our #RailSafe campaign calling for urgent addressing of rail safety. We welcome the promises so far to accelerate the roll out of tactile, however, we are keen to receive a firmer commitment to complete the installation of tactile paving on all railway platforms by 2025."

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