The Scotsman

Never a dull moment on Scotland’s railways

- Alastair Dalton adalton@scotsman.com

There’s never a dull day on the railways – and that makes it such a fascinatin­g part of my beat to cover. I’m continuall­y surprised by sudden and unexpected developmen­ts at Scotrail, with disparate events having a habit of snowballin­g to cause major disruption.

At the beginning of last week, its train drivers surprised many by threatenin­g their first strike in 21 years after rejecting a pay offer. Seven days on, and their discontent has led to an unofficial overtime ban which sabotaged Sunday services that rely on such staff working on their “rest days”.

Combine that with a rare train derailment, which has had a widespread knock-on effect on some of Scotrail’s busiest routes, and you have hundreds of services cancelled across the country.

But that wasn’t all. The disruption coincided with another major line through Glasgow being closed for engineerin­g work, leaving passengers used to only having to wait a few minutes for the next train being left with just one service an hour.

Then there’s the personal safety issue, raised by the RMT union this week after one train crew member took on a gang of violent yobs single handedly and gave up waiting for the police to arrive.

It came days before Scotrail launches on Monday one of its biggest ever seat sales to encourage passengers back onto the trains after the pandemic drasticall­y cut the numbers travelling.

My guess is that despite concerns about anti-social behaviour if the fare’s right, people will travel.

Those tempted to try rail again for the first time since the pandemic, or perhaps for years, may be pleasantly surprised by the comfort of Scotrail’s new fleet of electric trains operating across the Central Belt, and its refurbishe­d Inter7city trains between there and Aberdeen and Inverness.

The events of the past week have shown how Scotrail’s post-covid recovery can be a stopstart affair – and literally be derailed. But if its halfprice seat sale is a roaring success, the operator will have to be equally mindful of not immediatel­y scaring away its new hordes of passengers should it result in unpleasant­ly overcrowde­d trains.

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