Western Daily Press (Saturday)

Widespread anger over

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THE announceme­nt that rail fares are to go up by 3.1 per cent in January has been met with frustratio­n by passenger groups and trade unions.

Anthony Smith, chief executive of watchdog Transport Focus, said “the rail industry cannot be short of funding” because passengers contribute more than £10 billion a year.

He went on: “When will this translate into a more reliable railway and better value for money for passengers?”

Mr Smith called for a “fairer, clearer fares formula” based on the CPI measure of inflation rather than the “discredite­d” RPI figure.

The Rail, Maritime and Transport union slammed the January fare increase as “another kick in the teeth for passengers on Britain’s rip-off railways”.

General secretary Mick Cash claimed British people would be paying “the highest fares in Europe on our rammed-out and unreliable services”. He insisted the “only solution” was a publicly-owned railway “free from the greed of the private train companies”.

Alex Hayman, managing director of public markets at consumer group Which?, said passengers had “suffered horrifical­ly” this year from timetable chaos and experience­d rail punctualit­y hitting its lowest level in 12 years.

“These price hikes will only add to their misery,” he added.

“If the rail system is going to start

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