The Mayor of Greater Manchester, , has today called for a
substantial package of compensation for holders of advance and
season tickets for Northern services and a general reduction in
fares for all passengers on routes affected by the emergency
timetable.
The temporary timetable, announced late on Friday evening, starts
today and will see thousands of train services cancelled over the
summer.
In a letter to the Chair of Transport for the North (TfN), John
Cridland, the Mayor of Greater Manchester says that Northern is
likely to benefit financially from the operation of the reduced
timetable. If the company is not prepared to fund the
compensation package and reduced fares voluntarily, then fines
should be imposed to pay for it.
has also called for Northern
passengers on affected routes to be allowed to use their tickets
on other modes of transport such as TransPennine Express trains,
buses and Metrolink. He believes the TfN board should reserve the
right to require changes to the emergency timetable - and have
services reinstated - where there is an impact on particular
communities.
Mayor of Greater Manchester, said: “Northern have already
left people seriously out of pocket and turned their lives upside
down with their chaotic services. I have heard countless stories
of people forking out for taxis, hire cars, hotels and extra
childcare but unable to get compensation for it.
“Now that Northern are unilaterally cancelling thousands of
services - that many season ticket holders have already paid for
- passengers must be properly and fully compensated. There must
also be a general reduction in fares for all passengers on routes
affected by these changes. Northern are set to benefit
financially from this emergency timetable. It is the company, and
not the passengers, who should pay the price for their
mismanagement.
“As far as I am concerned, this emergency timetable represents
the last chance saloon for Northern. They are causing too much
damage to the economy of the North to be allowed to inflict their
miserable, unreliable services on us any longer. If they are not
providing the promised new May timetable by early August, then
steps should be taken to strip the franchise from them.”
The Mayor of Greater Manchester will join other Transport for the
North board members on a call later today. In advance of the
call, he has written to the Chair of the Board itemising the
issues he intends to raise.