- Avanti West Coast placed on short-term contract to stabilise
its operational challenges
- government has only approved a limited extension of 6 months
to 1 April 2023
- Avanti must roll out its recovery plan and deliver
long-overdue reliability for passengers
The Department for Transport has placed Avanti West Coast on a
short-term contract and challenged it to deliver the urgent
increase in services required.
Over the past few months, Avanti has seen major operational
issues primarily caused by a shortage of available drivers.
Nearly 100 additional drivers will have entered formal service
this year between April and December. This has meant the company
has begun to add more services as new drivers and those who need
re-training become available to work. They have also added extra
trains on its key London-Manchester and London-Birmingham routes,
bringing service levels closer to normal running.
With Avanti’s previous contract coming to an end, the short-term
extension will see it continue to run services on the route until
1 April 2023. This window is designed to provide Avanti with the
opportunity to improve their services. The government will then
consider Avanti’s performance while finalising a National Rail
Contract that will have a renewed focus on resilience of train
services and continuity for passengers.
Alongside rolling ahead with training new drivers, Avanti’s
service improvement plans include:
- the successful delivery of its timetable recovery plan and a
significant, sustained and reliable increase from about 180
trains per day to 264 trains per day on weekdays as new and
retrained drivers become available
- continuing to deliver on its traincrew recruitment and plans
to reduce reliance on rest day working to operate services
- extending booking options for passengers, making the full
range of tickets available as early as possible
Transport Secretary said:
We need train services which are reliable and resilient to modern
day life. Services on Avanti have been unacceptable and while the
company has taken positive steps to get more trains moving, it
must do more to deliver certainty of service to its passengers.
We have agreed a 6-month extension to Avanti to assess whether it
is capable of running this crucial route to a standard passengers
deserve and expect.
The problems facing Avanti over recent weeks stem from old
working practices that mean shifts are often covered by existing
drivers volunteering to work above their 35 contracted hours.
This antiquated practice shows just how urgent it is for us to
modernise our railways, so passengers benefit from reliable
services that don’t rely on the goodwill of drivers volunteering
to work overtime.