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Daily Record
Daily Record
National
Alan Jones & Jon Brady

Train operator cuts Scottish services to one an hour as strikes see staff walk out

Rail passengers travelling to and from Scotland faced fresh travel misery on Saturday because of a strike which hit services on some of the busiest routes in the country.

Members of the Rail, Maritime and Transport union (RMT) on Avanti West Coast walked out for 24 hours in a row over rosters. The company advised passengers to check before they travel, warning of a "significantly reduced" timetable during limited operating hours.

Avanti West Coast says it will run one train an hour from London Euston to Glasgow, Manchester and Liverpool. The first train of the day left Euston just before 7.30am and the last train of the day from Euston will depart mid-afternoon.

Major upgrade works will also mean services to some destinations will have longer journey times, as trains are diverted. The significantly reduced timetable means Edinburgh will have no Avanti West Coast services. The train managers involved in the dispute will also strike on November 6.

Barry Milsom, executive director of Operations and Safety at Avanti West Coast said: "We're disappointed by the RMT's decision to go on strike this Saturday and again on November 6. Our customers are facing another weekend of disruption and I would like to thank them for their continued patience and understanding.

Avanti West Coast services are limited today (Avanti West Coast)

"We all need to be working together for the long-term benefit of our people and customers. So, we ask RMT to engage in meaningful industry reform talks around modernising working practices and developing a railway fit for the 21st century."

The RMT said staff were suffering "dreadfully low morale" and were feeling "completely neglected" as the company increases services after being criticised for reducing its timetable in the summer.

RMT general secretary Mick Lynch said: "Avanti continue to be totally unreasonable in negotiations and seem incapable of taking responsibility for the mess they have caused. They show little concern for the health and safety of our members as some of their rostering proposals would lead to unacceptable levels of fatigue amongst train managers.

"This strike is the end result of months of neglect and the only way our train managers feel they can voice their concerns. Avanti should never have been given any extension to their franchise contract for all the chaos they have caused the travelling public.

"We remain open for meaningful talks to resolve the dispute but be in no doubt our industrial campaign will continue for as long as it takes."

Avanti runs the West Coast Mainline services linking Glasgow and London (Avanti West Coast)

Meanwhile, Scotrail services face "widespread disruption" next Saturday as RMT members walk out on October 29. The operator says over 2,000 conductors, ticket examiners, hospitality and station staff as well as depot and CCTV operators could take action.

As a result of the action, Scotrail is only able to run half-hourly services between Milngavie and Edinburgh via Glasgow Queen Street Low Level, alongside hourly services between Glasgow Central and Lanark and Larkhall. The strike clashes with Scotland's match against Australia at Murrayfield, and fans have been advised to consider alternative methods of travel.

David Simpson, Scotrail's service delivery director, said the operator was "really disappointed" that the action was going ahead after RMT-affiliated staff rejected a five percent pay rise. The RMT says it wants members to get a pay rise in line with inflation.

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