Sunderland Echo

Rail cash needed after ‘horrendous Christmas’

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East rail bosses have called for more transport investment in the region following an “horrendous Christmas” for commuters.

Passengers were hit by travel chaos on some of December’s busiest days, with a combinatio­n of timetable changes and other disruption­s leading to a host of delays and cancellati­ons.

But despite the problems, regional leaders say there is still no proper plan to overhaul and reform the system to make it fit for purpose.

“It has been a horrendous Christmas period, with some of the worst train services being run,” said Coun Carl Marshall, Durham County Council’s cabinet member for economic regenerati­on.

“TransPenni­ne Express ripped up nearly half their services, leaving people not able to make it for work or make it home for Christmas and Northern Rail wasn’t much better. Services in and out of the North East were some of the worst affected and no one had any plan for how to get the network back to credibilit­y for passengers, which is extremely worrying.”

Coun Marshall was speaking at a meeting of the North East Joint Transport ComNorth mittee (JTC). In the new year, transport minister Grant Shapps said services provided by Northern Rail and TransPenni­ne Express had not been “anywhere near acceptable”.

Travel disruption for passengers on Northern Rail, in particular, was so bad over

Christmas he even raised the prospect of stripping the franchise of its contract.

Research released last year found the East Coast Mainline, the primary rail route in and out of the North East, was “very vulnerable to disruption” and “in need of urgent investment”.

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