, Labour’s Shadow Transport Secretary, responding to
the Transport Secretary’s speech on the Government's review of
Britain's railways, said:
“It is two and half years since the Williams Review was first
commissioned. And the very fact that Williams was commissioned at
all shows that the state, the travelling public and those
excluded from the railways because of accessibility, have been
given a poor deal.
“And whilst much has changed on the network over that time due to
Covid, what he’s announced today is pretty much what was briefed
out and reported in the Telegraph in November of last year. So,
can I firstly ask the Secretary of State when he settled on this
position? And if it was back in November, why he didn’t announce
it then?
“It is said that control of both the infrastructure and the
contracting of train operations, will be given to the arms-length
government owned body, with private firms bidding to run
concessions, with an agreed profit margin built in. Can he
confirm whether a publicly owned provider will be able to bid for
these concessions? Can he also confirm if an Operator of Last
Resort will continue to exist, and if so, will it be brought
fully back in house?
“It’s been reported that the Treasury is demanding cost cuts of
between 10% and 20%. Can he confirm this is the case? There is
concern that rather than increased investment, the real driver
behind bringing track and trains under one group is at its heart
a move to disguise painful cuts? Any talk of cuts in funding like
the £1 billion funding cut Network Rail which we have already
seen, will have a direct impact on jobs, our regions and vital
maintenance and upgrade works.
“Does the Secretary of State know how many jobs will be lost by a
10 or 20% reduction in funding, and what assessment has he made
of the impact in each of our regions?
“The head of Network Rail, Andrew Haines, and its chairman, Sir
Peter Hendy, are to be tasked with drawing up the processes and
structures of the new Great British Railways. What date will they
report by?
“And Mr Speaker can I ask him about freight. Can he say more
about how the reforms will impact the Track Access regime, and
the governance arrangements for freight if Network Rail takes
charge of the passenger railway, albeit under a different name?
“Decarbonising transport will mean a much greater shift is needed
from road to rail. How will the reforms help rail freight grow as
part of decarbonising freight transport, and what targets will he
set in this respect?
“Mr Speaker, the Government has also made an announcement on
flexible ticketing; though few details have been provided. A lack
of detail on any flexible ticket promise, and whether it will
make travel cheaper for the average commuter renders it
meaningless for millions of passengers, and completely fails to
meet the scale of challenge required to encourage people back
onto the rail network as we come through the pandemic. What
research has the Government done to see if type of product will
address the needs of the travelling public?
“Mr Speaker this report fundamentally fails to tackle one of
biggest issues with our public transport system that timetables
for modes of transport just don’t join up. We need a bus and
train system that genuinely connects people rather than leaves
them standing around in the cold waiting for connecting
services.
Will the Secretary of State work towards joining up different
modes of transport, and what devolved powers does he envisage for
our Metro Mayors and transport authorities as part of his plan?
“And on devolution. Will the Government finally follow through on
transferring train station responsibilities to our Metro Mayors,
as expected in Greater Manchester some years ago?
“We haven’t seen any detail on what profit margin operators can
expect, and whether the cost of this will hit fares or
investment. Will he publish this?
“Finally Mr Speaker while I welcome steps to increase public
control and ownership over the railways. It doesn’t go far
enough, I believe that there is ample proof that fuller public
ownership rather than the concessionary model would be better.
“I fear the Government have not fully understood the scale of the
challenge in front of them, and in doing we may see the change of
name on the side, but fundamentally passengers will still left
short changed.”