Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Evening Standard
Evening Standard
World
Sami Quadri

Rail and Tube strikes to bring week of travel chaos

Travellers face a week of disruption as rail services are hit by a fresh round of walkouts by train drivers and London Underground workers in a long-running dispute over jobs and pay.

Virtually no services will run on England’s rail network on Saturday and Wednesday as members of the train drivers’ union Aslef go on strike. There will also be an overtime ban from Monday to Friday next week.

The train drivers of 16 operators in England are embroiled in a long-running dispute over pay, with no sign of a breakthrough.

Operators running no services include Avanti West Coast, CrossCountry, Northern, Southeastern and Transpennine Express.

Mick Whelan, Aslef’s general secretary, said: “Our members have not had a pay rise for four years – since 2019 – and that’s not right when prices have soared in that time.

“Train drivers, perfectly reasonably, want to be able to buy now what they could buy four years ago.”

He accused Transport Secretary Mark Harper of “hiding”, saying the two had not met since last December despite a series of strikes this year which have caused huge disruption.

“He holds the purse strings. The train operating companies have told us they cannot act without his say-so. He’s the puppet master, but he’s in hiding.”

A spokesperson for Rail Delivery Group said: “Our offer to Aslef would take average driver salaries to £65,000 for a four-day week – that’s more than double the average UK salary and many drivers top up their income further by working overtime.

“We are ready and willing to talk to Aslef’s leaders so we can end this damaging dispute but any talks about pay also need to address working practices that date back decades.

“The industry depends on a monthly injection of up to £175 million from the taxpayer because revenues are still 30% below pre-pandemic levels – while simultaneously facing unprecedented changes in customer travel patterns.

“It is obvious that the sector can only fund a pay rise by changing how it delivers services so it can respond to that transformation in how the public use the railway.

“That means putting managers – rather than unions – in charge of planning shifts.

“It means allowing managers to respond to unexpected staff absences so they can reduce the last-minute cancellations that so frustrate our customers.

“It means giving our customers more reliable train services when they actually want to use them – particularly on Sundays. That is how any industry survives and thrives.”

A Department for Transport spokesperson said: “The Government spent £31 billion of taxpayers’ money – £1,000 per household – to protect rail workers’ jobs during the pandemic.

“There is a fair and reasonable offer on the table that would take train drivers salaries from £60,000 to £65,000 for a 35-hour, four-day week.

“Aslef’s leaders won’t put this offer to their members and instead continue to strike – damaging their own industry in the process.”

Members of the Rail, Maritime and Transport union (RMT) on London Underground will strike on October 4 and 6 in a separate row over jobs and conditions which will cause disruption across the Tube network.

London Underground said most services will be severely affected or will not run on strike days, with disruption the morning after the walkouts.

Director of customer operations Nick Dent said: “We have been in ongoing discussions with our unions for some time to reach a resolution in the dispute over changes we are proposing to how our stations operate.

“We have made positive steps and made agreements on many points, but this planned strike action will cause disruption for Londoners and the city if it goes ahead and we apologise for this.”

An RMT spokesperson said: “It is positive that Transport for London have agreed with RMT that their cuts have had a detrimental impact on our members and the service we provide.

“However, we still have a long way to go to agree on solutions to these problems. We remain in talks with management to try and make further progress.”

Which lines are affected?

- Avanti West Coast

- Chiltern Railways

- CrossCountry

- East Midlands Railway

- Gatwick Express

- Greater Anglia

- Heathrow Express

- LNER

- London Underground

- London Northwestern

- Southeastern

- Southern

- Thameslink

- Transpennine Express

- West Midlands Railway

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.