Long-overdue reform of the network must concentrate on who will ultimately be in charge

The pandemic has shown that rail franchising is no longer working, declared the transport secretary, Grant Shapps, on Monday, killing the model of privatisation of the past 25 years. His analysis is not quite right. The proof of franchising’s failures arrived long before Covid-19, which has merely provided more evidence. Reform should have happened years ago.

The franchising mess can be summarised as follows: baffling fare structures; prioritisation of revenues over investment; constant squabbles over infrastructure delays between the operators and Network Rail, which is charge of the tracks; and general dysfunction to the point where even an unremarkable timetable change caused chaos in 2018.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

YouTube suspends Russell Brand’s revenues from his channel

Google-owned company says move is due to it ‘violating our creator responsibility…

An obsession with migration figures is about more than just numbers | Jonathan Portes

Writers who pander to fears about immigration should realise that most Britons…

‘I love a rebuild’: Ange Postecoglou warms to Tottenham challenge

Incoming manager determined to do things his way and insists he is…

Beta prompts UK moves over France – but all variants could flourish after Monday

Analysis: making fully vaccinated travellers returning from places with lower infection rates…