- Avanti West Coast’s new contract will run until 15th
October 2023
- Follows significant improvements including running 40% more
services and cancellations falling to 4.2%
- Further improvements will be needed over the next six months
The Department for Transport has today
(20th March) extended Avanti West
Coast’s contract for a further six months after significant
improvements have been made since October.
This decision comes almost six months after the operator was
initially put on a short-term contract by the Government and
ordered to develop a recovery plan aimed at addressing poor
performance on vital West Coast Main Line routes, including
between Manchester, Birmingham and London.
Shortly after being placed on this contract, the Transport
Secretary travelled to Manchester to meet with stakeholders to
further understand what could be done to address the situation
and improve services. This led to the decision to introduce a
recovery timetable which has significantly reduced reliance on
overtime working and has seen services increase from 180 trains
per day to 264 on weekdays – the highest level in over two years.
Since the introduction of this timetable on
11th December, Avanti West Coast has
seen very significant improvements across services
including:
- Weekday services have risen to the highest level in over two
years.
- Reducing cancellations from nearly 25% of the service in
August 2022, to 4.2% in early March 2023 – the lowest in over 12
months.
- 90% of trains now arriving within 15 minutes of the
booked time.
- Over 100 additional drivers have been recruited, reducing
reliance on union-controlled overtime working.
Transport Secretary, said:
“The routes Avanti West Coast run are absolutely vital,
and I fully understand the frustrations passengers felt at the
completely unacceptable services seen last Autumn. Following our
intervention, Rail Minister and I have worked closely with local leaders to put
a robust plan in place, which I’m glad to see is working.
“However, there is still more work to be done to bring services
up to the standards we expect, which is why over this next six
months further improvements will need to be made
by Avanti West Coast.”
Although Avanti West Coast has made significant
progress in the past six months, further work needs to be done to
restore reliability and punctuality to the standards that
passengers rightly expect. This will include delivering more
reliable weekend services, continued reductions in cancellations
and improvements in passenger information during planned and
unplanned disruption.
The six-month contract was initially introduced after major
operational issues primarily caused by a shortage of available
drivers and a ban on rest day and overtime working. Last July,
drivers for Avanti West Coast, who overwhelmingly
belong to the ASLEF union, simultaneously and with no warning
stopped volunteering to work overtime.
To help address this, the Government continues to support the
industry – including through setting a mandate – as they
negotiate with unions to ensure we can take forward much-needed
reform, including introducing a reliable seven day a week service
to secure the future of our railways.
The Transpennine Express contract expires on 28 May and will be
considered separately with a further announcement in due course.
Notes to editors
- The cancellations statistics refer to Avanti-caused
cancellations and do not include cancellations caused by external
factors such as infrastructure failure, adverse weather
conditions or trespass.
- Avanti must continue to regain the confidence of
passengers over the next six months, before decisions
on Avanti West Coast’s future are made.