The Herald

Scotrail punctualit­y at lowest since franchise began

- LEWIS MCKENZIE

SCOTRAIL’S performanc­e level is at its lowest since the franchise began, according to latest figures.

An official report published by the company showed 81.8 per cent of services were on time between September 16 and October 13.

It comes as a freedom of informatio­n request revealed Scotrail’s performanc­e benchmarks had been waived until June 2019 by Scottish Transport Secretary Michael Matheson.

The waiver included the caveat that “any further drop-off in performanc­e will be unacceptab­le”.

The figures also put Scotrail’s Moving Annual Average for punctualit­y at a franchise low of 87.5%, below the agreed breach level of 88.22%.

Scotrail was fined more than

£2.2 million for performanc­e breaches in the first half of 2018.

Scottish Labour has called for the reinstatem­ent of franchise benchmarks and said the figures highlight the need to bring Scotland’s railways back into public ownership.

The party’s transport spokesman, MSP Colin Smyth, said: “These are shocking figures, but it is little wonder performanc­e is plummeting after the SNP gave Scotrail a licence to fail until June next year.

“Far from being punished for their failings, Scotrail are being let off the hook.

“Enough is enough, passengers deserve better than the contempt being showed to them by Scotrail and the SNP Government.”

Scotrail Alliance managing director Alex Hynes said significan­t disruption was caused by strong winds during Storm Ali in September.

He added: “Everyone at Scotrail and Network Rail worked flat out to keep people moving and to get services returned to normal as quickly as possible. We are investing billions in improved infrastruc­ture and hundreds of millions of pounds on new and upgraded trains as we continue to do everything we can to improve performanc­e.

“It’s part of our plan to build the best railway Scotland has ever had.”

The firm yesterday started running its new electric trains on the country’s busiest route between Glasgow and Edinburgh.

Scotrail’s 70 new Hitachi trains are expected to transform the rail network.

They will reduce journey times between the two main cities to 42 minutes by next year.

 ??  ?? „ Figures show 81.8% of train services were on time.
„ Figures show 81.8% of train services were on time.

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