Unions urge ‘final push’ to save England’s rail
ticket offices
Public consultation on cost-cutting plans ends on
Friday, as drivers strike again over jobs and pay
Gwyn Topham
Transport correspondent
@GwynTopham
Fri 1 Sep
2023 05.00 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/business/2023/sep/01/save-rail-ticket-offices-england-unions-striike
Unions have
urged one “final push” to save railway ticket offices from closure before the
public consultation ends on Friday, when train drivers strike again.
Around half
a million responses have been submitted to the consultation over cost-cutting
proposals to close most of England’s 1,000 station offices.
The issue
has become a focal point in rail’s wider pay dispute with unions claiming it
will further run down services and deter passengers, though train operators say
customers will be served better by staff in new roles on platforms and
concourses.
Most rail
services in England will not run on Friday due to the Aslef strike, with a
further day of severe disruption on Saturday when train staff in the RMT will
walk out again, in the long-running dispute over jobs and pay.
Mick
Whelan, the general secretary of Aslef, said most drivers wanted the union to
step up industrial action, as it embarked on its first strike in three months
after reballoting members for a fresh mandate.
He
described the ticket office closure plans as a “naive and dangerous decision”
and accused the government and rail industry leaders of “blatant lying” in
saying people would all be redeployed as front-facing staff: “The actual
figures [show] these are job cuts. We’re going to have a railway where we were
talking not long ago about increased sexual assaults and county lines [drug
trafficking], made less safe for the travelling public, less safe for the
people that work on the railway.”
An RMT-led
march in London protesting against the ticket office closures set off from the
Department for Transport (DfT) to Downing Street on Thursday evening.
A third
rail union, the TSSA, which represents many station staff, said it had been
“heartwarming” to see so many people respond to the consultation.
The TSSA
interim general secretary, Peter Pendle, added: “It’s clear that the public
recognise that ticket offices perform an essential role in making our railways
safe and accessible for all. We must make one final push and urge the
government to think again.”
The Rail
Delivery Group, representing train operators, extended the consultation in July
and said it was listening to feedback. Jacqueline Starr, its chief executive,
said: “The taxpayer is continuing to subsidise the railway, and we believe that
now is the right time to move staff to more flexible, engaging roles so our
staff can better support customers face to face with a whole range of needs –
from finding the right ticket, to navigating the station and getting support
with accessibility needs, while reducing costs to taxpayers.”
On the pay
issue, Whelan said there had been no talks with rail industry leaders or
government for many months, but 14 pay deals had been settled in the last year
around Britain with operators who were not directly contracted to the DfT. He
said: “This is a Westminster political problem. It’s not an industrial
resolution that’s going to solve this.”
Hopes that
public sector pay deals agreed in the NHS and education could ease a settlement
in rail have proved unfounded.
Whelan
said: “Most of those deals were done on a no-strings basis.” The 8% two-year
offer to train drivers also demands changes to working conditions, the Aslef
leader said. “We work for private companies that make hundreds of millions
profits. Why should we fund their profits?”
Friday’s
rail strike will stop virtually all national rail services in England, with
cross-border trains to Wales and Scotland also affected. Drivers will not work
overtime on Saturday, amplifying the effects of the RMT strike.
The
companies affected are Avanti West Coast; Chiltern; c2c; CrossCountry; East
Midlands; Greater Anglia; GTR, covering Great Northern, Thameslink, Southern
and Gatwick Express; Great Western; LNER; Northern; Southeastern; South
Western; TransPennine Express; and West Midlands Trains.
A Rail
Delivery Group spokesperson said operators would run as many services as
possible, adding: “There is no question the strikes called by the RMT and Aslef
leaderships are deliberately designed to target passengers at the end of the
summer holidays, disrupting their plans, hurting local economies and forcing
more cars on to the road.”
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