Train drivers are to stage a fresh strike next month amid their long-running dispute over pay, threatening more travel chaos for passengers.
Members of union Aslef will walk out on September 1 and will ban overtime on September 2 - the same day as a strike by the Rail, Maritime and Transport union (RMT).
Announcing the strike on Friday, Aslef said its walk-out will force train companies across England to cancel all services, while the ban on overtime will “seriously disrupt” the network.
The union maintains that none of the privatised train-operating companies employs enough drivers to provide a “proper service” without drivers working on their days off.
The companies affected are Avanti West Coast; Chiltern Railways; c2c; CrossCountry; East Midlands Railway; Greater Anglia; GTR Great Northern Thameslink; Great Western Railway; Island Line; LNER; Northern Trains; Southeastern; Southern/Gatwick Express; South Western Railway; TransPennine Express; and West Midlands Trains.
Mick Whelan, Aslef general secretary, said: “We don’t want to take this action but the train companies, and the Government which stands behind them, have forced us into this place because they refuse to sit down and talk to us and have not made a fair and sensible pay offer to train drivers who have not had one for four years – since 2019 – while prices have soared in that time by more than 12 per cent.
“The Government appears happy to let passengers – and businesses – suffer in the mistaken belief that they can bully us into submission.
“They don’t care about passengers, or Britain’s railway, but they will not break us.
“Train drivers at these companies have not had a pay rise for four years, since 2019, while inflation has rocketed,
“We haven’t heard a word from the employers – we haven’t had a meeting, a phone call, a text message, or an email – since April 26 and we haven’t had any contact with the government since January 6.
“This shows how the contempt in which the companies, and the government, hold passengers and staff and public transport in Britain.
“They are happy to let this drift on and on, but we are determined to get a fair pay rise for men and women who haven’t had one for four years while inflation has reached double figures.
“Our members, perfectly reasonably, want to be able to buy now what they could buy back in 2019.
It will be the 12th one-day strike by Aslef members since the dispute started over a year ago.
Mr Whelan warned of further industrial action if the deadlocked row continues, saying Aslef members were pressing the union to go “harder and faster.”
The RMT is also striking on August 26 in its dispute over pay, jobs and conditions.
The rail unions are also campaigning against controversial plans to close most railway ticket offices.
More than 300,000 people have responded to a consultation, which ends on September 1.