- Trains services across London and Essex will be
publicly-owned from this Sunday
- This marks another move towards Great British Railways, doing
away with decades of fragmentation and private profiteering,
while rebuilding a world class service for passengers
- Key step in rail reset to boost reliability, increase
passenger numbers and drive economic growth under the Plan for
Change
Passengers across London and Essex will be travelling on
publicly-owned train services from this Sunday (20 July), as
c2c's services become the next to be brought into public
ownership through Government plans to restore pride in the
railways.
From Sunday, c2c services operating from Fenchurch Street to
Shoeburyness will be placed in public hands, marking the second
operator's services to be brought into public ownership under new
legislation, and the sixth operator run by the Department for
Transport Operator (DFTO) – meaning around 4 in 10 passenger
journeys will be run under public ownership. c2c will be joining
Northern, TransPennine Express, Southeastern, LNER and South
Western Railway currently operated by DFTO.
The move marks another step forwards toward Great British
Railways, which will unite track and train under a complete reset
that will mark the high standard of service and delivery the
public should expect to receive, encouraging more people to take
the train, driving growth and opportunity as part of the
Government's Plan for Change.
c2c is consistently rated one of the best performing operators in
the country, recently achieving high customer satisfaction
ratings of 89%*, supporting thousands of jobs, and driving
economic growth from London to Essex. Under public ownership it
will continue to thrive - engaging closely with local
communities, sharing best practices across other operators and
working towards a more efficient railway with passengers at its
heart.
Public ownership puts passengers back at the heart of the rail
network. Passengers can use their tickets on another publicly owned
operator at no extra cost during disruption, and passengers
in the north are now making journeys across Northern and
TransPennine Express with just one booking, with over 15,000
journeys estimated to be booked this way since June 2024. Through
working with Network Rail, Southeastern has increased capacity to
popular seaside spots in the summer months allowing more
passengers to take the train to beaches like Margate, Whitstable
and Herne Bay.
Two-thirds of Britons have already expressed their support for
public ownership, which will save the taxpayer up to £150 million
a year in fees alone and ensure every penny can be spent for the
benefit of passengers.
Transport Secretary said:
“Whether you're shopping in Lakeside or walking along the beach
in Southend-on-Sea, from this Sunday you will be able to get
there on a train service run by the public, for the public.
“Public ownership is already tackling deep-rooted problems we see
on the railway that's led to spiralling costs, fragmentation and
waste. A unified network under Great British Railways will take
this further with one railway under one brand with one mission –
delivering excellent services for passengers wherever they
travel.”
This follows the passing of the Public Ownership Act in November
which will enable passenger services operating under contracts
with the department to be brought into public ownership.
Rob Mullen, Managing Director of c2c said:
“At c2c, we are proud of the reliable and high level of service
we offer our passengers, consistently being rated as one of the
best performing operators in the country.
“We now have a golden opportunity to collaborate with the wider
family of publicly owned operators, sharing our successes and
best practice, but also learning from a wide range of different
and diverse operators who have already benefited from public
ownership, to drive even more improvements for the people and
places we all serve.
“A unified and focused railway can deliver more for our
communities, including better growth, jobs and houses. If we are
thriving as a train operator it helps our communities to thrive.
This is the positive feedback loop we are excited to deliver,
supported by better and closer collaboration with our partners in
the lead up to GBR.”
Earlier in May, South Western Railway's services became the first
to come into public ownership under new legislation, c2c's will
follow as the second this Sunday, and Greater Anglia's services
will be next to be brought in on 12 October. The Railways Bill,
which will be introduced to Parliament later this year, will
enable the establishment of Great British Railways. This means
passengers will travel on GBR trains, running on GBR tracks,
working to a GBR timetable.
In the meantime, public sector operators will have to meet
rigorous performance standards and earn the right to be called
“Great British Railways”. Public sector operators will be
set bespoke standards on things like punctuality, cancellation
and passenger experience, so we can rebuild a world class public
service. These will be set out in due course.