The Scotsman

Commuters warned of rush hour chaos on intercity line

●Scotrail to cut 1,500 seats a day from Edinburgh-glasgow route

- By ALASTAIR DALTON Transport Correspond­ent

Passengers on Scotrail’s busiest rail route face major overcrowdi­ng because some of its busiest trains are to lose half their carriages.

The late arrival of a new fleet of trains on the main Edinburgh-glasgow line will leave the operator short because the lease on four of its current trains expires in weeks.

Scotrail is so concerned at potential overcrowdi­ng that it will slash fares on another route between the cities by nearly half in an attempt to persuade commuters to switch. The firm said it expected up to 12 trains a day to run with fewer carriages than normal from Monday 26 February to 20 May.

It said those peak-hour trains, which normally operate with six carriages, would only have three or four coaches.

That is the equivalent of at least 1,500 fewer seats a day.

One Scotrail worker said: “When we lose those trains, we are in real trouble.”

Scottish Conservati­ves transport spokesman Jamie Greene said: “It’s bad enough for commuters that the new trains are delayed in entering service.

“We now find out rush hour trains are being taken out of service completely as the rolling stock leases are running out.

“It is unbelievab­ly poor planning and reflective of a catalogue of management

oversights on the Glasgow to Edinburgh improvemen­t project.”

Scotrail will try to offset the impact by dramatical­ly cutting fares on a secondary Edinburgh-glasgow route via Bathgate and Airdrie.

Peak-hour return tickets will be cut by nearly half to £13.

The offer starts on Monday, a week before the carriages start disappeari­ng, in a bid to get travellers to switch.

However, journeys take around 20 minutes longer than the 50 minutes on the main line, and there is no catering trolley or tables.

The problem has been caused by Scotrail’s lease on four of its three-carriage class 170 diesel trains expiring at the end of the month.

They were due to be replaced by the first of a fleet of 70 new class 385 electric trains, but these have been delayed by a series of problems. The first of the Japanese-designed Hitachi trains was due to enter service last September. Manufactur­ing hitches and delays to electrific­ation of the line had put this back to late next month.

However, in a further setback revealed by Scotland on Sunday at the weekend, drivers have threatened not to train on them because of problems with seeing signals clearly from the cabs.

A Scotrail spokesman said: “As we prepare for our brand new Hitachi class 385 trains, we are making some changes to our Edinburgh-glasgow via Falkirk High service.

“This will result in a small number of services having a reduced number of seats.

“Customers should plan their journey in advance. We are sorry for any inconvenie­nce this will cause.

“Customers travelling between Glasgow Queen Street and Edinburgh via Airdrie will be able to benefit from a reduced return fare of £13 – almost half the current price.”

The spokesman also stressed that some services on the main line were run by class 380 electric trains, which will continue to operate with seven carriages at peak hours.

A Transport Scotland spokesman said: “We are engaging closely with Scotrail as they look to introduce the class 385 trains as quickly as possible. This includes ensuring disruption is minimised during what we expect to be a short-term impact on a small number of services.

“Scotrail are communicat­ing with passengers to enable them to plan their journeys in advance, directing them towards trains which will still be operating at full capacity.

“We welcome the fare reduction on the Edinburgh-glasgow route via Airdrie for those passengers who can opt for these alternativ­e services.”

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