“Manchester and Liverpool mayors call for termination of Northern rail franchise”

[from The Guardian, Wed 29 May 2019] 

 “Manchester and Liverpool mayors call for termination of Northern rail franchise”

Andy Burnham and Steve Rotheram urge transport secretary to take action after year of misery

The mayors of Greater Manchester and Liverpool city region have called on the transport secretary to terminate the Northern rail franchise after a year of sustained misery for passengers.

Manchester’s mayor, Andy Burnham, and Liverpool’s Steve Rotheram, speaking on behalf of the 4.3 million people they represent, made the demand 12 months on from last May’s rail timetable chaos.

They believe Northern – which is owned by Deutsche Bahn, the German state railway – has consistently failed to show it was able to take the action required to restore public confidence or deliver its legally-binding franchise requirements. These include:

  • Failure to deliver a significant and sustained improvement in performance, with nearly a fifth of all services arriving late; 28,000 services cancelled in the last year; and a huge increase in services being “shortformed” (reducing the number of carriages on the train) from 2,825 in December 2018 to 4,172 in April 2019.
  • Failure to resolve the RMT industrial dispute, which has led to 46 days of strike action since March 2017.
  • Failure to operate Sunday services: last Sunday alone there were 165 unplanned cancellations on top of 90 planned cancellations.
  • Failure to deliver new services, such as a range of promised additional hourly services in much-needed parts of the network.
  • Failure to introduce new trains, which means the hated Pacer trains may not be gone by the end of the year as promised.

On Tuesday the government announced an “exciting” competition, which invites northern towns and villages to bid for Pacer trains to be turned into “community spaces, cafes or new village halls”.

The proposal was greeted with incredulity by northern MPs, after nine years of austerity cuts from central government in which councils have lost almost 60p in the £1 from Whitehall for local services in the decade to 2020, with northern authorities worst hit.

“I am not sure my constituents will agree that this is an ‘exciting opportunity’, unless one of them is turned into a museum dedicated to highlighting years of under-investment in Northern transport,”

the Stalybridge & Hyde MP Jonathan Reynolds told the Manchester Evening News.

“My personal suggestion would be to invite my fed up constituents to dismantle them piece-by-piece, a bit like when the Berlin Wall came down.”

The Greater Manchester and Liverpool city region mayors are now urging the department for transport to implement an “Operator of Last Resort” and bring in a new board and team of directors to run the company as soon possible.

Ministers should keep all options on the table, including further devolution to the north and the option of public operation.

Last year Chris Grayling, the transport secretary, terminated Virgin Trains East Coast’s contract and took the service in-house.

The Northern franchise is supposed to last until 2025, with an option for an additional year which is dependent on performance.

https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2019/may/29/manchester-and-liverpool-mayors-call-for-termination-of-northern-rail-franchise

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“Minister offers to give away Pacer trains to community groups”

Is this all that’s left of the “Northern Powerhouse”?

The offer of a draughty village hall with a leaky roof.

[Article from the Yorkshire Post, 29th May 2019, follows.]

“Minister offers to give away Pacer trains to community groups”

It might turn into a competition no-one wants to win, but as he leant on the cab of the Pacer train standing at platform seven in Leeds, the Rail Minister was doing his best to sound optimistic.

The so-called railbuses – bus bodies welded on to a train chassis – were intended by the old British Railways to be in service for only 20 years, but nearly 40 will have passed when at the end of the year they are finally retired. However, we still might not have seen the last of them.

The Minister, the Harrogate MP Andrew Jones, was hoping that some of his constituents might be sorry enough to see them go, to want to bid for one as the prize in a competition.

“What’s second prize? Two of them?”

wondered the driver of the one on platform seven when the details were put to him.

Mr Jones, who hopes community groups will propose ideas for the onward use of three Pacer carriages for the common good, said:

“I could easily imagine them in lots of different uses. Scout huts, doesn’t really matter. I don’t want to put parameters on this.”

Admitting that the trains did not have the cachet of red telephone boxes, hundreds more of which were made available to communities earlier this month, the Minister said:

“Most people will be really rather pleased that they’re going. But I think some will have a soft spot for them.

 “The trains can’t have much value, although there’s always scrap value in metal. But if there’s a way of prolonging their service to the community, then I think we should be encouraging it.”

The trains are owned by Porterbrook, one of three large leasing companies created in 1994 as part of the privatisation of British Rail, It is making three carriages available to the competition winners, who will be chosen in the autumn.

Northern, the rail company that runs the Pacers in Yorkshire, admitted last December that it had not begun retiring its fleet, as it had promised to do.

But Mr Jones said the company had assured him that its schedule was back on track.

 “We’ve seen quite a bit of progress over the past few weeks. We’re seeing approval of the new trains that are coming into service. They have to be approved by the regulator and we’re now at the point where Northern is able to look at staff training, engineering and renewal,” he said.

Asked how passengers in prosperous south Buckinghamshire might react if a Pacer turned up for their commute to Marylebone tomorrow morning, the Minister said:

“What was appropriate several years ago – in this case several decades ago – is not appropriate any more. “I know that when you turn up at the station expecting another train and one of these turns up it can cause a problem. But we are in the middle of a renewal of some scale right across the network.”

Some previous Yorkshire Pacers were sold to Iran at the end of their regular life, but the authorities there phased them out nearly 15 years ago.

Similar options for the current fleet were “a question for Porterbrook”, Mr Jones said.

The North’s rail network was still playing “catch-up” from the effects of the “no growth” franchise that was in place from 2004-16, he added.

“Other parts of the network were seeing investment – we didn’t get any. We should have been planning for growth.

“We are now making progress having had a long period of utter stagnation.”

Mr Jones said passenger numbers had continued to grow during that time even though the capacity had not.

“It just led to congested trains and the rolling stock becoming even less fit for purpose,” he said.

https://www.yorkshirepost.co.uk/news/transport/minister-offers-to-give-away-pacer-trains-to-community-groups

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Meeting with Andy Burnham, 10th April 2019

Useful meeting with Greater Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham on 10/04/2019.

He’s not in charge of the railways. No one is in charge of the railways. There are just people and organisations that have influence or control of certain aspects of the railways, and he’s one of those with influence.

He is Greater Manchester’s  representative on the Transport for the North Committee, and as such he has quite a lot of influence over decisions which TfN makes.

[As an aside, we have also requested a meeting with Cllr Judith Blake, who is West Yorkshire’s representative on the Transport for the North Committee.]

Subjects discussed included

  • the December 2019 timetable – the need to restore the same peak frequency as existed before May 2018, the importance of reliable connections at Stalybridge for commuters bound for Victoria and Salford
  • Transpennine Route Upgrade – what outcomes, in return for the disruption whilst work is taking place, will it deliver for Mossley, Greenfield, Marsden and Slaithwaite? Will it deliver full disabled access at all four stations, plus two trains an hour throughout the day? When might it happen?
  • Further compensation for passengers and communities impacted by the May 2018 timetable debacle (ref Yorkshire Post article of 9/3/19)
  • Cross-boundary fares
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“Key project to improve accessibility at Marsden station successfully completed”

[Network Rail press release, Friday 5 Apr 2019]

Network Rail, working in partnership with Northern and TransPennine Express, has successfully completed a vital project at Marsden railway station which will make alighting and boarding trains calling at platform two much easier.

The platform has been raised, meaning that there is no longer a large drop between the train and the platform. This removes the need for single door operation, the process where only one set of doors on the train open, making boarding and alighting the train much easier. The project will also reduce congestion.

The money for the work has come from the £15million benefits package for the North, which was announced by Rail Minister Andrew Jones in late 2018.

Anna-Jane Hunter, Network Rail’s Director of Rail for the North of England, said:  

“We are absolutely delighted that this vital work has now completed and it is great to mark this occasion today alongside our industry colleagues and those living locally.

“We know that this will really benefit passengers using platform two as getting on and off trains will now be much easier. This is a fantastic example of the rail industry working together to improve the railway for all users.”

Chris Nutton, Major Projects Director for TransPennine Express, commented:

“We are pleased that work to raise the height of the platform is now complete. We have responded to customer feedback and this will make it easier for customers to comfortably get on and off our trains.”

Steve Hopkinson, Regional Director for Northern, said:

“The improved accessibility at Marsden gives more people improved access to all the railway has to offer.

“The improvements at the station go hand-in-hand with our own investment across the Northern network. This will see new trains, more refurbished trains and better stations all introduced during 2019.”

https://www.networkrailmediacentre.co.uk/news/key-project-to-improve-accessibility-at-marsden-station-successfully-completed

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