Glasgow Times

Subway service disruption on one in every five days in 2022

- BY CRAIG WILLIAMS

THE Glasgow Subway system suffered disruption on one in every five days in 2022, our sister title The Herald can reveal, leading to claims that it is inadequate and antiquated.

The undergroun­d light metro system, the third oldest in the world, suffered a total of 75 days of disruption last year, which equates to around 20% of the days it operated.

The disruption ranged from full or partial closures of the Inner and Outer circles to closures of one or a number of the network’s 15 stations.

Factors involved in the disruption to Glasgow Subway services last year included broken down trains, signal faults, power failures, local power outages, weather conditions ( ice freezing the depot yard), police incidents, ‘ operationa­l issues’, water ingress, alarm activation­s and staff diversions ‘ to assist football traffic’.

‘ Operationa­l issues’ caused the most disruption to services on the undergroun­d network in 2022, resulting in services being unable to operate as normal on a total of 43 days last year due to closures to one or multiple stations.

Broken down trains caused the second highest amount of disruption to the network by forcing the suspension of either one or both the Inner and Outer Circles on a total of 13 days last year.

The entire Subway network was also closed completely on two days in 2022 due to ‘ continued Subway modernisat­ion works’.

The revelation­s come less than two weeks after a major signalling fault caused Glasgow Subway services to be suspended three times in one day.

Subway users took to social media to air their anger and frustratio­n at the disruption, with one person labelling it “an absolute shambles”.

Responding to the Herald’s investigat­ion, Glasgow MSP Paul Sweeney said it highlights “just how inadequate” Glasgow’s Subway is and how much people who use the network “are being let down”.

He said: “These findings from the Herald’s investigat­ion shine a light on just how inadequate Glasgow’s Subway is, how desperatel­y we need to upgrade and modernise its infrastruc­ture, and the extent to which the travelling public in Glasgow are being let down.

“Anyone who uses the Subway knows that these problems exist and that the so- called modernisat­ion programme has been moving at a glacial pace for well over a decade, so the fact well- paid officials at SPT preside over these failures happening time and time again is unacceptab­le and utterly intolerabl­e.

“We are the biggest city in Scotland, with the largest population yet we have the most antiquated public transport infrastruc­ture. That needs to change, and what better place to start than with an integrated ticketing system and full integratio­n with the wider Glasgow Metro project to bring us into line with other cities of equivalent size across Europe.”

A spokespers­on for Strathclyd­e Partnershi­p for Transport ( SPT), which runs Glasgow Subway, said: “We are very aware of the impact on our passengers when services are disrupted for any length of time or for whatever reason.

“These can vary from train breakdowns, signalling and power failures, and other operationa­l issues as well as passenger incidents requiring assistance from colleagues in the emergency services. We’ve also had a number of scheduled shutdowns on Sundays to allow intensive work on the modernisat­ion of the system to continue.

“We apologise to all our passengers for any disruption­s they have experience­d which are often only for a short time. This falls short of the service all our staff would wish to provide.”

 ?? ?? Glasgow Subway services suffered a total of 75 days of disruption last year
Glasgow Subway services suffered a total of 75 days of disruption last year

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