Manchester railway stations among worst in UK for train delays
Two railway stations in central Manchester have been named as among the worst in the whole of the UK for train delays. Manchester Victoria came in as second worst and Manchester Oxford Road was joint third.
More than two out of five train services in Britain during the first half of the year were delayed, according to new figures compiled from official statistics.
Some 41 per cent of services in that period were at least one minute late, reveals BBC analysis of industry data collated by website On Time Trains.
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A further three per cent were cancelled, while 56 per cent were on time. Stations in Wales had the highest cancellations rate between January and July, at 7 per cent.
Across English regions, the highest figure was in the North East (six per cent).
Of Britain’s 100 busiest stations, Huddersfield had the highest rate of cancellations (13 per cent) with more than 5,500 trains due to serve the station axed.
(Image: Adam Vaughan)
This was followed by Manchester Victoria (10 per cent), while York, Newcastle and Manchester Oxford Road all had the joint third highest figure (9 per cent).
All these stations are in the TransPennine Express (TPE) area.[2] Its reliability was badly affected by drivers’ union Aslef banning overtime.
Services have improved since this ended on June 15, after the operation of trains was nationalised on May 28.[3] Paul Tuohy, of pressure group Campaign for Better Transport, said: “We want people to travel by train so high rates of cancellations are unacceptable.
“The Government and industry need to sort this out and ensure services run to schedule so that passengers can travel with confidence.”
Reliability of services across Britain has been affected by a series of issues, including infrastructure failures and strikes by staff. There was widespread disruption on Saturday due to a walkout by members of the Rail, Maritime and Transport union (RMT) at 14 train operating companies and drivers in the Aslef union refusing to work overtime shifts.
(Image: Gary Oakley/Manchester Evening News)
A Department for Transport spokeswoman said: “Ministers have been clear with operators they need to deliver punctual services, keeping delays to a minimum.
“To help make our railways more reliable, it’s crucial unions agree to reforms that will modernise the industry.”
A spokeswoman for industry body the Rail Delivery Group said: “The rail industry is working hard to make sure that customers have reliable and punctual train services.
“This includes significant investment to improve infrastructure and rolling stock reliability. Services can be cancelled or delayed due to a variety of causes, including adverse weather, infrastructure issues such as track or signalling faults, train faults and external incidents such as trespass.
“The ongoing national dispute involving the rail unions has caused disruption to services both on strikes days and on the days either side of them, but operators have tried to run as many services as possible.”
References
- ^ by clicking here (www.manchestereveningnews.co.uk)
- ^ TransPennine Express (TPE) area. (www.manchestereveningnews.co.uk)
- ^ after the operation of trains was nationalised on May 28. (www.manchestereveningnews.co.uk)