Rail (UK)

London Assembly scrutinise­s Transport for London finances

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Transport for London’s budgeting came under fire at a London Assembly meeting dedicated to discussing the organisati­on’s £1 billion deficit.

Opponents of London Mayor Sadiq Khan have often blamed the debt on his decision to partially freeze fares on the Tube and bus network for five years, while TfL’s Commission­er Mike Brown previously admitted that income from the Undergroun­d network is being used to pay for road repairs ( RAIL 852).

In addition, the 2018-19 financial year marks the first time TfL will not receive a Government subsidy. Last year, it received £228 million from central Government, while the grant used to stand at £700m a year.

TfL has previously stated it aims to get rid of the debt by 2022, with the help of opening the Elizabeth Line (Crossrail) later this year and stopping all-but essential roadworks.

However, Professor Tony Travers, from the London School of Economics and Political Science, said recent forecasts have been out by several hundred million pounds, saying: “The challenge TfL has to balance its books has a great deal to do with the difficulty of predicting fare income in the short and medium term. If you look at the last three forward projection­s they have been significan­tly overly optimistic.”

Travers said while passengers may be prepared to pay more than at present to use the Tube, they would want to see improvemen­ts. He suggested a ring-fenced funding increase may help the public perception.

Gareth Bacon, chairman of the London Assembly Budget and Performanc­e Committee, claimed: “Londoners are now paying the price for the Mayor’s reckless policies.

“His partial fares freeze has resulted in cuts to vitally important infrastruc­ture projects.”

In a previous meeting to discuss the organisati­on’s budget, TfL said it had hoped to increase advertisin­g revenues by 50%.

Richard Anderson, co-director of the Railway & Transport Strategy Centre at Imperial College, said: “It would be quite heroic to assume that revenue could be grown significan­tly to offset the need to freeze fares.”

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