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Is my journey really necessary? None of the train firms’ business

Is my journey really necessary? None of the train firms’ business


Simon Calder, also known as The Man Who Pays His Way, has been writing about travel for The Independent since 1994. In his weekly opinion column, he explores a key travel issue – and what it means for you

“Please only travel by train if necessary,” rail passengers were told again on Saturday. It was day three of the strike by members of the RMT union in a dispute over pay, jobs and working practices.

“If you do travel, expect severe disruption,” said National Rail, the information service run by the Rail Delivery Group, which represents train operators and Network Rail.

The rail union must be absolutely delighted: even though the train operators are running a reliable, competent service on about half of the British network, prospective passengers are being urged to stay at home or drive instead, with a dire warning of severe disruption for anyone who ventures out on the rails.

This month’s strikes are very different from the last great summer shutdown, in 1989, because that stoppage really did close the rail network.

For people living in vast swathes of the UK, including Cornwall, Dorset, almost all of Wales and much of Scotland, there is no tangible difference. But on the lines that see the most travellers, a perfectly decent service was operating between 7.30pm and 6.30pm.

At Birmingham New Street, trains came and went on links to London Euston, Manchester, Derby, Sheffield, Leeds, York, Newcastle and Edinburgh.

From London Paddington, GWR was running frequent services to Reading, Swindon, Cardiff, Bristol, Exeter and Plymouth, with special departures on the “Glastonbury Express” to Castle Cary in Somerset, the nearest railway station to the festival site. The journey took as little as 98 minutes, with a lowest off-peak fare of £40.30 one way.

Mark Hopwood, managing director of GWR, believes in treating passengers like grown-ups. At a busy Paddington station on the first day of the strike, he told me: “Where we are running trains, we are very happy for people to come and travel, but we really don’t want to have people stranded.

“Just check your times for your journey out – and your journey back.”

His counterpart at state-run LNER, David Horne, tweeted on Saturday morning about London-bound trains from Yorkshire, Newcastle and Edinburgh: “Good to see plenty of customers travelling already this morning, heading to concerts and other events.

“Plenty of customers heading to see Ed Sheeran at Wembley and the Rolling Stones at Hyde Park…

Click Here to Read the Full Original Article at The Independent Travel…