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Network Rail probe over Northern and TransPennine routes


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Northern passengers faced rail chaos when new timetables were introduced in May 2018

Network Rail is being investigated over its poor service on routes used by troubled train operators Northern and TransPennine Express.

The government-owned firm has been put “on a warning” for routes in the North West and central region of England, the Office of Rail and Road (ORR) said.

The regulator said it was “not good enough” in those areas and was probing Network Rail’s contribution to delays.

Network Rail apologised for “very poor service” in the Midlands and the North.

ORR said its performance deteriorated in 2018 and “failed to substantially recover during 2019”.

Figures supplied by ORR show the proportion of scheduled train stops made on time in the last 12 months up to 4 January by Northern was 55% and 41% by TransPennine Express.

This compares to the national average of 65%.

Northern passengers have faced rail chaos since new timetables were introduced in May 2018, prompting the government to warn the firm it could lose its franchise over “unacceptable delays“.

In December, commuters using TransPennine Express and Northern trains faced more delays as the new winter timetables were launched.

TransPennine Express announced a number of cancellations on routes until the end of January – including cuts to services between Liverpool and Edinburgh that stop at cities including Newcastle, Leeds, Manchester and Liverpool.

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Recent poor performance by TransPennine Express was “largely the result of train operations”, says ORR

ORR chief executive John Larkinson, said: “The top priority for passengers is that their train arrives on time and that isn’t happening consistently enough across the country.

“ORR is responsible for looking at how Network Rail contributes to train delays, and while there are areas of very good performance such as in Wales and Western region, Network Rail’s performance in North West and Central region is not good enough.

“That is why we are putting the company on a warning to make sure its improvement plans deliver for passengers.”

The ORR is to investigate Network Rail’s recovery plan and whether the organisation is doing “all it reasonably can to improve service for passengers”.

The regulator added it had also analysed the recent poor performance by TransPennine Express and found it was “largely the result of train operations”.

Analysis

BBC Transport correspondent, Tom Burridge

Performance on Northern, TransPennine Express and West Midlands Railways has been repeatedly poor.

The government has threatened to strip Northern of its franchise. But more than half of delays on the entire UK rail network are down to problems with the infrastructure – like signalling.

Now the Office of Rail and Road says it will investigate the work done by Network Rail to try to improve performance in the north of England last year, work which ultimately did not yield positive results.

Network Rail chief executive Andrew Haines told passengers: “We have let you down.”

He said: “For too many months, passengers – particularly in the Midlands and the North – have been coping with very poor train services.

“It simply isn’t good enough and, on behalf of the rail industry, I’d like to apologise.”

He said a cross-industry task force “has been pulled together to tackle the problems head-on” although he said there was “no quick fix”.

“It will need more reliable assets, a much more reliable train plan and more robust operator resource plans.”

Network Rail – which owns and operates rail infrastructure in England, Wales and Scotland – said about a third of the delays attributed to it were caused by external factors such as vandalism, cable theft, trespass and weather.

Railfuture – a campaign group for better rail services – said Northern, Transpennine Express and Network Rail were “not solely to blame for the poor performance”.

It said “they had been dealt a rotten hand of cards to play” citing reasons such as underestimating the increase in passenger numbers resulting in overcrowding and the scaling back of the Ordsall Chord project meaning the Castlefield corridor “has not been increased to accommodate extra services”.

The group said it welcomes the ORR investigation, though, if it results in Northern, Transpennine Express and Network Rail being given the freedom “to define an operational solution which will work across the north”.

Anthony Smith, from independent watchdog Transport Focus, said: “While both Northern and TransPennine have rightly been in the dock over their part in delivering unreliable services across large parts of the north of England, it is only right the spotlight is now shone on Network Rail.

“Passengers will want an action plan from Network Rail that can start to deliver the good news that passengers have long been waiting for – a consistently punctual, reliable railway that delivers more seats on a value for money service.”



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