Yorkshire Post

Under-fire rail firm’s boss urged ‘to see what passengers endure’

- TOM RICHMOND COMMENT EDITOR ■ Email: tom.richmond@ypn.co.uk ■ Twitter: @OpinionYP

A LEADING Yorkshire entreprene­ur today challenges TransPenni­ne Express managing director Leo Goodwin to witness the chaos and confusion that passengers endure on a daily basis as a direct result of late-running trains.

The invitation from internet service provider Freeserve’s founder Ajaz Ahmed comes after Mr Goodwin – and other rail executives – were ordered by Transport Secretary Grant Shapps to improve their performanc­e immediatel­y or face the consequenc­es.

Also present at the so-called ‘‘no coffee’’ meeting at the Department for Transport were representa­tives of Network Rail, as well as train manufactur­ers Hitachi Rail and CAF, after TPE blamed delays to infrastruc­ture improvemen­ts – and the late delivery of new trains – for hold-ups which have caused significan­t reputation­al harm to the North because of the adverse publicity.

It comes less than a week after Mr Shapps signalled his intention to wind up the troubled Northern franchise run by German-owned Arriva – he will decide by the end of the month whether to award a new short-term deal or to effectivel­y renational­ise the service by putting the DfT in control.

The Cabinet minister also used an exclusive interview with The Yorkshire Post to tell all train operators, including First Group who are responsibl­e for TPE’s services between the North’s major cities and towns, that poor levels of punctualit­y and reliabilit­y will no longer he tolerated.

“I have told them they must get their act together since I won’t hesitate to escalate this further,” Mr Shapps tweeted after the talks over TransPenni­ne Express services.

TPE has also blamed staff shortages for the cancellati­on of dozens of trains following the introducti­on of new timetables on December 15, and the industrywi­de failure to learn sufficient lessons from the disruption endured by passengers after previous changes to schedules in the summer of 2018.

Last week, TPE announced enhanced compensati­on to cancel the 2.8 per cent fare increase that was imposed on long-suffering season ticket holders this month. When the scheme was launched, Mr Goodwin admitted that “our performanc­e was not up to

I have told them they must get their act together.

Transport Secretary Grant Shapps describes his talks with train operators.

scratch at the end of last year and for this we really do apologise”.

He said: “We have experience­d a number of issues following the introducti­on of our new trains, resulting in disruption to a number of our customers’ journeys with us.”

Industry figures show just 39 per cent of TPE trains arrived on time between December 8 and January 4 compared with a nationwide average of 62 per cent. The figure for Northern was 51.4 per cent – an improvemen­t of nearly 10 percentage points compared to the preceding four-week cycle.

However, Mr Ahmed – whose epilepsy means that he is dependent on public transport – blames bad management for many of the failings on the North’s railways.

Writing in today’s newspaper, he explains how overcrowdi­ng risks his health before criticisin­g the poor management of the rail network in this region.

Mr Ahmed says passengers have had enough of excuses and apologies. “I think it’s poorly run train companies, it’s as simple as that,” he concludes. And, in a direct message to Mr Goodwin, he adds: “Let me interview you on platform 16A, Leeds City Station, during the evening rush-hour and accompany me on my journey so you can endure it from the perspectiv­e of one of your passengers.”

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