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Rail fares to soar in new year – and it's all down to today's inflation



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Published Date: 01 July 2008
RAIL passengers face huge rises in fares in the new year because of the current high level of inflation, it was revealed yesterday.
Train companies base their annual increases for regulated fares, which includes annual season tickets, on the retail price index (RPI) for July plus 1 per cent.

Next month's RPI is likely to be about 4.5 per cent, which will mean thousands of rail
passengers facing 5.5 per cent annual increases in January 2009 – adding hundreds of pounds to the price of an annual season ticket.

Although no official figures have been decided, it is thought some fares could rise by even more.

Theresa Villiers, the shadow transport secretary, warned yesterday: "All the signs are that the July inflation figures will mean more rail-fare misery for commuters."

Gerry Doherty, the general secretary of the TSSA transport union, said: "It is a scandal that the rail companies have this trigger which allows them to put up fares every year."

About 40 per cent of rail fares are regulated and fall into the RPI plus 1 per cent regime, with train companies limited as to how much they can raise prices annually.

Anthony Smith, the chief executive of rail customer watchdog body Passenger Focus, said: "We strongly support the principle of regulated fares, but what we are worried about is that rail companies need only bring out fares that average RPI plus 1 per cent.

"This means that passengers can sometimes face a 10 per cent hike in a fare that is supposed to be regulated. We want the government to sort this out."

A concerned Mr Smith went on: "It looks as if passengers will have to dig deep into their pockets to pay for the new fares in the new year."

Norman Baker, the Liberal Democrats' transport spokesman, said: "Passengers are repeatedly being asked to cough up for above-inflation fare increases at a time when they need to be encouraged to use the railways and not the roads.

"With more train operators having to pay a premium to the government to get a franchise, it seems that the government is introducing a railway stealth tax. Gordon Brown likes to talk green, but this is another example of the environment being put to one side when it is inconvenient.

"Once again, the environmentally-friendly option is becoming the expensive option.

"The government used to have a fuel duty escalator for motorists and now it has a fare escalator for rail passengers. It needs to come off this escalator immediately."



The full article contains 438 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 30 June 2008 10:18 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: The railways
 
1

albanman,

Edinburgh 01/07/2008 10:26:21
I've just returned from a school trip to the Catalonia region of Spain. Our group of 15 took a return train journey to Barcelona (1hour 15 mins each way). We asked if there was a special deal even though we are from a Scottish school - no problem, I was told, and filled out the appropriate form (try that in the UK).

The total cost was 57euros (44.97 pounds) - for 15 people! OK, you might think, we received a school discount, and this is true; so how much would have a full fare cost? The answer: 142 euros (112 pounds). At full price this works out at about 7.50 pounds each.

No British railway company has a discount for school groups, and I'll bet none of them could even match the full price for a 1 hour 15 minutes return trip. Spain promotes public transport which is better for the environment - we don't. End of story.
2

The Former Mr. Angry,

Perth 01/07/2008 10:35:43
The sooner everyone realises the fuel situation and green escalator stuff is just rubbish and another excuse for us to be ripped off as taxpayers and purchasers the better. Then we can take appropriate action.
3

Stewarty,

01/07/2008 12:04:06
For some years the Labour government in Westminster has colluded with train operating companies in allowing them to raise fares by well above the inflation rate.

The prime culprit is Tom Harris, Minister for railways who recently said "In ‘real’ terms, regulated train fares had fallen since privatisation". Simply not true, as any schoolboy with some basic maths will have told you.

The dissembling Harris is MP For Glasgow Cathcart. It reflects poorly upon his constituents and their judgement that they did not see through him at the last election. I rather feel that they have now got him sussed and will send him into the political wilderness at the next.
4

Freddie boy,

01/07/2008 19:47:58
I have just returned from a holiday in Italy, we traveled from Rome to Assisie a distance of over 120 kilometers it cost the sum of 37 euros for two, yes, two returns.
Trains were clean, and ran on time
5

JT,

01/07/2008 20:32:50
I looked into getting a train from Edinburgh to Wales this summer, it was over a £100 each as I couldnt wait to see if I could get a possible apex fare when I wanted to travel. We are flying some of the way and train the rest, the cost some £30 less each. Once again train does not take the strain. I have stopped going to Glasgow by train as its too expensive, now go on the bus.
6

Stewarty,

01/07/2008 20:54:10
JT #5
Apex or cheap fares are practically non-existent - another ruse foisted upon the travelling public aided and abetted by the UK Government, and with a blind eye also turned by Transport (Scotland) whose interests (supposedly) are to advance the interests of the public. Air travel is a lot cheaper and you can book up to a year in advance - not so rail, where you can only book up to 3 months in advance of date of travel.

Continental railways are largely unprivatised, unlike what we are lumbered with in the UK, and this almost certainly explains why the public receive such a raw deal whilst the shareholders of the train operating companies laugh all the way to the bank!

And all this from a Labour Government! The sooner they are ousted, the better.

 

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