Western Mail

Rail fare hike protests to be held across country

- NEIL LANCEFIELD and ALAN JONES newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

PROTESTS will be held outside railway stations amid mounting anger over an expected 3.5% increase in regulated train fares.

Members of the Rail, Maritime and Transport union (RMT) will stage demonstrat­ions today outside stations in cities including Cardiff, London, Birmingham, Leeds and Edinburgh.

The union claims passengers are paying “through the nose” for overcrowde­d services.

Research published this week found that the cost of rail travel has increased at more than twice the speed of wages since 2008. The TUC said fares have risen by 42% over the past 10 years, while nominal weekly earnings have only grown by 18%.

Many long-distance commuters will see the annual cost of getting to work increase by more than £150 next year.

The Department for Transport (DfT) uses the July Retail Prices Index (RPI) measure of inflation to determine the cap on the annual increase in regulated train fares, which comes into force every January.

Economists predict this will be around 3.5%, but the exact figure will be released by the Office for National Statistics at 9.30am today.

Regulated fares include season tickets on most commuter routes, some off-peak return tickets on longdistan­ce journeys and Anytime tickets around major cities.

The Scottish Government caps regulated off-peak fare increases at RPI minus one percentage point.

Campaigner­s argue it is unfair on passengers to use the RPI figure instead of the lower CPI measure of inflation.

RMT general secretary Mick Cash said: “Even if fares were pegged at the more modest CPI, these latest increases would still massively outstrip wages leaving the British passenger to pay through the nose to travel on rammed out and unreliable services.

“Meanwhile, the rail companies, the majority of whom are foreign state owned, are using the British transport system as a cash cow to hold down their own domestic fares.”

TUC analysis earlier this year showed that UK commuters spend up to six times more of their salary on rail fares than other European passengers.

The union organisati­on said that despite months of cancellati­ons and delays, private train companies paid out at least £165m in dividends to their shareholde­rs, while the taxpayer handed £3.5bn to these companies last year.

TUC general secretary Frances O’Grady said: “Our railways need urgent investment, but private rail companies are being allowed to prioritise shareholde­r profits over improving services.

“It’s time for Britain’s railways to be publicly owned. This would free up money for much-needed upgrades and lower ticket prices.”

A DfT spokesman said: “Any fare increase is unwelcome, but it is not fair to ask people who do not use trains to pay more for those who do.

“Taxpayers already subsidise the network by more than £4 billion a year - meaning that 38% of our transport budget is spent on the 2% of journeys that the railway accounts for.”

The Rail Delivery Group, representi­ng train companies, said 98p of every pound spent on fares is “invested back into the railway”.

Rail regulator the Office of Rail and Road said regulated fares went up by an average of 3.3% in January 2018, following the July 2017 RPI figure of 3.6%.

 ??  ?? Rail fares are tipped to rise by 3.5% today
Rail fares are tipped to rise by 3.5% today

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