‘No real hope’ of avoiding biggest rail strike in 30 years, says Network Rail

Passengers across Great Britain told not to attempt to travel on 21, 23 and 25 June unless necessary

Network Rail said there was “no real hope” of avoiding the biggest railway strike in 30 years next week, as it told passengers to plan ahead and only travel if necessary.

The walkouts are on 21, 23 and 25 June and a special timetable will be in operation from 20 to 26 June. The full timetable will be published on Friday but several operators including Southern, Northern and Transport for Wales have already told passengers not to attempt to travel on strike days.

Network Rail confirmed that large parts of Great Britain would have no passenger services at all on strike days, including locations such as Penzance in Cornwall, Bournemouth in Dorset, all of Wales west or north of Cardiff, and no passenger trains running north from Glasgow or Edinburgh.

With backup staff for signalling, about 20% of trains will run on mainlines and urban areas on the strike days, while services will start later in the morning, with about 60% of the schedule on the subsequent days.

Network Rail’s chief executive, Andrew Haines, described the strike by 40,000 RMT workers as a “high-stakes gamble” by unions, and said it would cost the industry £150m and make a pay increase harder.

Haines said proposals to modernise to increase safety and productivity were meeting “intransigence … even when terms and conditions are patently anachronistic”.

He said talks would continue but added: “We haven’t yet seen movement that gives us real hope.”

The RMT called for direct talks with the government, saying it was “clear that the Treasury is calling the shots”.

Mick Lynch, the RMT’s general secretary, wrote to the transport secretary, Grant Shapps, to seek an urgent meeting, saying: “In effect, in recent weeks the union has been negotiating with the government but the government have not been in the room.’’

The last meeting between unions and the government was with the rail minister Wendy Morton in March.

Labour accused the government of a “dereliction of duty” for failing to hold talks to resolve the strike. The shadow transport secretary, Louise Haigh, said it was “frankly extraordinary” and wrote to Shapps calling on him to convene urgent talks.

Sign up to the daily Business Today email or follow Guardian Business on Twitter at @BusinessDesk

In a Commons debate later on Wednesday, Shapps said it was a “red herring”, adding: “These negotiations are a matter between the employer and the union.”

The transport secretary said the strikes were “entirely pointless, counterproductive” and the industry needed to be modernised.

He told MPs: “Our railway needs a new direction. It has lost 20% of its passengers and 20% of its revenue too.

“We protected the railway with £16bn during the pandemic … not a single railway worker lost their jobs or were furloughed. This level of subsidy cannot continue forever.”

The former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn responded: “The rail companies were preserved and supported and did very well, as did many others in the private sector. Why is he now punishing those people that kept the railway system working, that do all the difficult jobs on the railway, with job losses, inadequate pay and a loss of morale?”

Grant Shapps said he paid tribute to those people but a train driver had a median salary of £59,000, and the median within the rail sector was £44,000. He added that rail workers had seen wages rise by 39% over the last 10 years compared with 7% for police.

In response, Haigh said that no one wanted strikes, but they were not inevitable. She said: “The bad news is that it require ministers to step up, to show leadership, and get employers and unions round the table.”

The number of passenger services on the strike days is expected to be limited to about 4,500 compared with 20,000 normally

The last services between London and Scotland will leave by 2pm, while most intercity trains in England will have their final departure mid-afternoon.

Steve Montgomery, who chairs the Rail Delivery Group, representing train operators, said: “Working with Network Rail, our plan is to keep as many services running as possible but significant disruption will be inevitable and some parts of the network will not have a service, so passengers should plan their journeys carefully and check their train times.”

Contributor

Gwyn Topham Transport correspondent

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Union threatens ‘biggest rail strike in modern UK history’
RMT to ballot more than 40,000 workers at Network Rail and train firms in dispute over jobs and pay

Jane Clinton and agency

20, Apr, 2022 @5:11 PM

Article image
Great Britain faces biggest rail strike in 30 years
Disruption to start on Monday evening before RMT action begins in much of northern and south-west England, Wales and Scotland

Gwyn Topham Transport correspondent

20, Jun, 2022 @6:09 AM

Article image
Only one in five British trains to run on final day of planned strikes
Industrial action over pay and working conditions has caused almost four weeks of disruption

Gwyn Topham Transport correspondent

07, Jan, 2023 @5:00 AM

Article image
UK ministers ‘losing argument’ over rail strikes, says Mick Lynch
RMT leader says public support for unions has ‘taken a dent’ but is still high despite travel disruption

Gwyn Topham Transport correspondent

06, Jan, 2023 @3:36 PM

Article image
Rail unions hope to find solution to strikes ‘together’ with UK government
Aslef leader’s comment echoes new transport minister’s change in tone as driver dispute hits network

Gwyn Topham Transport correspondent

05, Oct, 2022 @11:39 AM

Article image
Rail industry and RMT resume talks amid hopes of end to strikes
But drivers’ union Aslef set to reject initial pay offer from train operators, meaning resolution is some way off

Gwyn Topham Transport correspondent

16, Jan, 2023 @5:49 PM

Article image
Train drivers to hold first of three rail strikes in England this week
Aslef members will hold widespread stoppages on Wednesday and Saturday, while RMT crew and station staff will strike on Friday

Joe Middleton

30, May, 2023 @4:00 PM

Article image
Rail strikes: showdown talks planned as country comes to a standstill
Unions, ministers and industry bosses to meet amid wide-scale disruption caused by only 20% of rail services running

Joe Middleton and Joanna Partridge

14, Dec, 2022 @6:07 PM

Article image
Delays hit rail passengers rushing to beat Christmas Eve strike
Sympathy and irritation from public as thousands of RMT union members at Network Rail prepare to strike

Gwyn Topham Transport correspondent

24, Dec, 2022 @3:03 PM

Article image
Second union ballots Network Rail members over strike action
TSSA demanding a guarantee of no compulsory redundancies this year and pay increase reflecting inflation

Gwyn Topham Transport correspondent

14, Jun, 2022 @4:09 PM