The Scotsman

Publicly-run trains plan slammed

● Former minister says move would be childish and counterpro­ductive

- By SCOTT MACNAB newsdesk@scotsman.com

Taking Scotland’s railways back into public ownership amid anger over rising fares and crowded trains would be “childish and counterpro­ductive”, a former Labour transport minister has said.

Tom Harris, a former Glasgow South MP, has rejected his former party’s call for nationalis­ation of the rail network, insisting it would be “throwing the baby out with the bathwater”.

But the former UK minister has come under fire from both the Labour Party and union chiefs who dismissed his report into the Scottish rail network published yesterday, pointing out that it was commission­ed by Abellio, the Dutch firm that runs Scotland’s trains.

The Scottish Government has said it is ready to back a publicly operated bid to run Scotland’s railways unless

0 Abellio, which runs Scotland’s trains, has come under fire over delays and cancellati­ons

Abellio’s performanc­e shows a marked improvemen­t.

But polling carried out to accompany yesterday’s report – entitled Is Scotland on the Right Track? – suggests the

public “in general are compliment­ary” about the rail network, Mr Harris said.

“There are problems, and those problems have led to some politicall­y charged

calls for blanket nationalis­ation.

“The Scottish Government should not ignore this, but also it should not throw the baby out with the bathwater.

“If it feels the need to change the franchise model, it should consider moving to a concession model where the government shoulders both profit and risk, but the private sector runs the service.

“It would be expensive, childish and counter-productive to dispense with the clear and indisputab­le benefits of private sector involvemen­t in our railways, without which we would not have experience­d the renaissanc­e we have seen.”

Abellio has come under fire over delays, cancellati­ons and so-called “stop-skipping”, where trains fail to stop at scheduled stations to make up lost time.

Labour transport spokesman Colin Smyth said: “A report carried out by a supporter of privatisat­ion, commission­ed by a company seeking to make a profit from privatisat­ion, which calls for a continuati­on of privatisat­ion will come as a surprise to absolutely no one.”

A Scottish Government spokesman said ministers would make an announceme­nt about a public bid to run the rail franchise “in the near future”.

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