UK rail strikes: what is happening?
Biggest walkouts in decades involves 40,000 Network
Rail staff could spread across public sector
Passengers in Waterloo station in London before the
start of the national rail strike b
As well as the 24-hour walkouts by members of the RMT
union – happening on Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday – a separate London
Underground strike is happening in the capital on Tuesday.
Archie
Bland
Tue 21 Jun
2022 07.20 BST
What’s
happening?
https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2022/jun/21/uk-rail-strikes-what-is-happening-today
After
last-minute talks to avert them failed on Monday, the rail strikes that got
under way this morning will be the biggest in the UK for more than 30 years.
(Here’s how the Guardian covered the last one, which ended with an 8.8% pay
rise for rail workers.) As well as the 24-hour walkouts by members of the RMT
union – happening on Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday – a separate London
Underground strike is happening in the capital on Tuesday.
The RMT
strike involves 40,000 signallers, maintenance and train staff working for
Network Rail – which is responsible for infrastructure such as track, stations
and level crossings – and 13 train operators. Here are more details on train
operators’ advice for strike days. And here’s a special timetable for the
duration of the strikes, as well as links for more information on each affected
operator.
How severe
will the impact be?
Services
started to reduce last night – but the full force of the strikes will be felt
on Tuesday and throughout the week. About 4,500 services will run on Tuesday
compared with the 20,000 that would normally be expected.
About half
of all rail lines will be closed completely, and the timetable will start later
and finish earlier than usual, running from 7.30am to 6.30am. Services in
Scotland and Wales will be severely affected despite operators not being
directly involved because they rely on Network Rail staff to function.
The impact
is also expected to run into Wednesday, Friday, and Sunday – non-strike days –
because overnight maintenance work will not take place ahead of the usual
timetable. There are knock-on effects on other forms of transport, with
warnings of overcrowding on buses and greatly increased motorway traffic.
What are my
rights if my journey is affected?
Anyone
whose journey is cancelled should be able to receive a refund or exchange for
an alternative route – but check with the relevant train company first (here’s
a helpful set of links on refund policies). The transport secretary, Grant
Shapps, has also said that the government will make sure season ticket holders
are eligible for “full compensation”.
National
Rail says train companies should provide alternative means of transportation or
overnight accommodation if necessary – but will not cover taxis or hotel bills;
some, including GWR, are not offering rail-replacement buses. More details on
all of this are available here.
What are
the strikes about?
Pay and
conditions. Commuter habits which changed over lockdown have not fully returned
to normal, meaning that revenues have been reduced. The industry says it needs
to act to reach a “sustainable footing”.
Meanwhile,
the RMT says that Network Rail is threatening to cut safety-critical jobs
(Network Rail rejects that characterisation) as part of its modernisation
programme, which would also include an increase in working hours. And with
inflation soaring, the union is asking for a pay rise that mitigates the pain
for its members. Against an inflation rate heading towards 11%, the union wants
a rise of 7%, and has already rejected a Network Rail offer of a 2% rise with a
further 1% tied to job cuts.
What do the
rail companies and the government say?
They argue
that the railways were subsidised to the tune of £16bn during the pandemic, and
that with annual running costs at £20bn and income from fares just £4bn, the
union’s demands are simply not feasible. Network Rail says that modernisation
is essential to keep the system on its feet, and says that, for example, the
maintenance of ticket offices with very few customers when an automated option
could be used instead is “frankly Victorian”.
Meanwhile,
the government is making good on threats to remove some of the protections set
out in law for striking workers – starting with the acceleration of plans to
scrap a legal ban on using agency workers to limit the impact of future
industrial action, an incendiary move.
Shapps has
pointed to median train-driver salaries of £59,000 as evidence that a pay deal
would be unmerited. And the government has made a wider argument for pay
restraint: Simon Clarke, the chief secretary to the Treasury, said on Monday
that workers must show “collective, society-wide responsibility” to “forestall
the evil of inflation”. (Here’s a useful piece explaining why that argument is
more controversial than Clarke makes it sound.)
What do the
unions and the opposition say?
For a sense
of the level of hostilities, watch this testy Newsnight clip in which the RMT’s
Mick Lynch calls the minister Chris Philp a liar. The RMT points out that most
train drivers are not part of this dispute – and says that the true median
salary for its members is about £33,000, a figure supported by this BBC analysis.
The union
says that members deserved recognition for work that “kept the country moving
through the pandemic”, and argues that they are simply seeking to protect their
existing terms and minimise the real-term pay cut caused by inflation.
Labour, meanwhile,
has adopted a variety of positions over the strikes, and frustrated unions with
its lukewarm support. Frontbenchers tend to argue that they do not want them to
happen, but that they are ultimately the government’s fault. They point out
that Shapps has not taken part in negotiations.
But unions
and their allies within Labour were dismayed by another story that broke last
night: PoliticsHome reported that Keir Starmer’s office ordered the shadow
cabinet to stay away from picket lines. “To instruct Labour MPs not to be on
picket lines with workers speaks volumes,” said the Unite general secretary,
Sharon Graham. “It’s time to decide whose side you are on. Workers or bad
bosses?”
How long
will this go on?
The strikes
may go on for some time – and as the cost of living bites more widely, they
will only spread across the public sector. The RMT has suggested that strikes
on the railways could continue until Christmas. Train drivers represented by
Aslef are also expected to strike soon – and teachers and NHS workers could
take industrial action too. On Monday, criminal barristers voted to go on
strike over legal aid funding, which could see them walk out from next week.
(Here’s a summary of some of the possible impacts.) If all that comes to pass,
this week’s rail strikes may soon look like a relatively minor inconvenience.

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