The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Direct service could be axed under ScotRail’ s post-pandemic changes

- AILEEN ROBERTSON

ScotRail is planning to axe the direct Kirkcaldy to Perth service under its “post-Covid” timetable shake-up.

From May next year there will be fewer trains on the tracks as the cash-strapped franchise aims to provide a sustainabl­e network.

The proposed shake-up will see the direct service between Kirkcaldy and Perth scrapped.

Travellers can currently board a train in Kirkcaldy and reach Perth in 44 minutes. But under the new timetable, those who want to get to Perth by 9am must leave Kirkcaldy at 7.45am.

They would have to get off at either Ladybank or Markinch and wait half an hour for a connecting train.

Fears have already been raised about the impact of the new timetable on Perth as a destinatio­n for tourists.

ScotRail has launched a consultati­on on the timetable changes.

And questions have been asked about the timing.

Fifer Ingried Boussaroqu­e travels by train from Aberdour to her work at the Quebec Government Office in London.

She says commuters are being asked about their travel needs at a time when they are still unsure of their future working patterns.

Like many others, she is still working from home.

“I think it’s a weird moment to have this consultati­on because we’re just coming out of Covid.

“People have not had to travel and they don’t know yet how we’re going to get out of the pandemic. And when we do, they don’t know how often they will have to work or how often they will have to travel.

“I know I would like more services, but I don’t know how my life will be in six months.” Ms Boussaroqu­e, 44, said

a rail service is cut “it

“The pandemic has changed how people travel across all of Scotland and our services need to reflect that

might be very hard to get it back”.

She added: “They need to offer people another option to travel. To say ‘you won’t need your car’.

“It’s the egg and the chicken. There’s no service if people don’t use it.”

Even before the pandemic, all but one of ScotRail’s services had been running at a loss.

To keep the services going, the Scottish Government has to subsidise some by as much as £25 per passenger – which is the case for the Inverness to Wick route.

Fife Circle services are subsidised by about £5 per passenger, and services between the Central Belt and Dundee and Arbroath by around £11.

The only service that was making a profit before the pandemic hit was Edinburgh to Glasgow via Falkirk High.

ScotRail was only able to keep operating during the pandemic thanks to £400 million in emergency government funding.

The franchise says passenger numbers are now just half of what they were before Covid hit.

A ScotRail spokespers­on said: “The pandemic has changed how people travel across all of Scotland and our services need to reflect that, as well as providing the taxpayer with best value for money.

“Our May 2022 timetable proposals are a new starting point for us to build on as we continue to recover from the pandemic and build a greener, more sustainabl­e railway for the future.”

 ??  ?? TRAVEL: ScotRail has launched a consultati­on on the timetable shake-up.
TRAVEL: ScotRail has launched a consultati­on on the timetable shake-up.

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