This article is from the source 'guardian' and was first published or seen on . The next check for changes will be

You can find the current article at its original source at https://www.theguardian.com/business/2024/apr/17/record-compensation-payouts-passengers-uk-train-delays

The article has changed 4 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.

Version 0 Version 1
Compensation payouts to UK rail passengers for delays hit £100m a year Compensation payouts to UK rail passengers for delays hit £100m a year
(about 2 hours later)
Record sum follows almost 320,000 train services being cancelled or part cancelled in past year in Britain Record sum follows cancellation or part-cancellation of almost 320,000 train services in past year
Compensation paid to passengers for train delays in Britain has reached record levels, with annual payouts surpassing £100m and the number of claims for delayed or cancelled trains continuing to grow.Compensation paid to passengers for train delays in Britain has reached record levels, with annual payouts surpassing £100m and the number of claims for delayed or cancelled trains continuing to grow.
Payouts to passengers for disrupted journeys reached £101.3m in the year to April 2023 – up by 155% from £39m in 2021-22.Payouts to passengers for disrupted journeys reached £101.3m in the year to April 2023 – up by 155% from £39m in 2021-22.
The latest official data from the rail regulator, the Office of Rail and Road, suggests the financial hit is likely to be much higher again in 2023-24. The number of approved claims recorded across all train operators in Britain until early January – 4.6m – exceeded the previous year’s tally with several months remaining.The latest official data from the rail regulator, the Office of Rail and Road, suggests the financial hit is likely to be much higher again in 2023-24. The number of approved claims recorded across all train operators in Britain until early January – 4.6m – exceeded the previous year’s tally with several months remaining.
While the compensation total partly reflects a rebound in train travel after the Covid crisis, the growing figures far outstrip the 40% rise in passenger numbers.While the compensation total partly reflects a rebound in train travel after the Covid crisis, the growing figures far outstrip the 40% rise in passenger numbers.
Almost 320,000 train services were cancelled or part cancelled in the past year in Britain. Strikes, staff shortages, damaged rail infrastructure and mechanical failures on trains all contributed to a year of disruption and delayed journeys across the railway. Almost 320,000 train services were cancelled or part-cancelled in the past year in Britain. Strikes, staff shortages, damaged rail infrastructure and mechanical failures on trains all contributed to a year of disruption and delayed journeys across the railways. Labour said it showed that the taxpayer was “carrying the can” for worsening rail services.
Labour said it showed that the taxpayer was “carrying the can” for worsening rail services. Though wholesale rail reform has been promised, under current contracts, the compensation bill is funded by the taxpayer the government pays operators a management fee regardless of performance and carries the cost of lost revenue.
Though wholesale rail reform has been promised, under current contracts the compensation bill is funded by the taxpayer, with the government paying operators a management fee regardless of performance and carrying the cost of lost revenue. The payouts for delays covered only scheduled services, as trains that are removed from the timetable usually do not trigger compensation a policy that has drawn huge criticism on lines such as Avanti West Coast and TransPennine Express.
The payouts for delays only covered scheduled services, with trains that have been removed from the timetable usually not attracting compensation a policy that has drawn huge criticism on lines such as Avanti West Coast and TransPennine Express. The growing bill partly reflects increasing automated payouts. Some train operators now issue refunds immediately to passengers who have booked advance journeys through their websites, or to registered season ticket holders during disruption. The industry has also improved its response to complaints; more than 99% of claims are resolved within 20 days.
The growing bill partly reflects increasing automated payouts, with some train operators now issuing refunds immediately to passengers who have booked advance journeys through their websites, or to registered season ticket holders during disruption. The industry has also improved its response to complaints with more than 99% of claims resolved within 20 days.
The Department for Transport was approached for comment.The Department for Transport was approached for comment.
Labour said some of the worst operators for cancellations were being rewarded for failure. CrossCountry and Avanti West Coast’s parent companies have paid out millions to shareholders and were awarded contract extensions by ministers last year.
Sign up to Business TodaySign up to Business Today
Get set for the working day – we'll point you to all the business news and analysis you need every morningGet set for the working day – we'll point you to all the business news and analysis you need every morning
after newsletter promotionafter newsletter promotion
Labour said some of the worst operators for cancellations were being rewarded for failure, with CrossCountry and Avanti West Coast’s parent companies paying out millions to shareholders, and being awarded contract extensions by ministers last year.
The shadow transport secretary, Louise Haigh, said: “Thanks to this government, it makes no difference to the management fee private rail operators receive if services are delayed or cancelled – they pick up a lucrative, publicly funded cheque regardless. It is the taxpayer forced to carry the can for our broken, dysfunctional rail network.”The shadow transport secretary, Louise Haigh, said: “Thanks to this government, it makes no difference to the management fee private rail operators receive if services are delayed or cancelled – they pick up a lucrative, publicly funded cheque regardless. It is the taxpayer forced to carry the can for our broken, dysfunctional rail network.”
Labour has said, if elected, it will bring train operations back into public ownership as contracts expire. Labour has said that if elected, it will bring train operations back into public ownership as contracts expire.
The Rail Delivery Group, representing train operators, was approached for comment. A spokesperson for the Rail Delivery Group, representing train operators, said they apologised to everyone affected, adding: “When train delays or cancellations do occur, it’s important that customers know how to claim for compensation. We have taken steps to simplify this process and the ORR [Office of Rail and Road] data confirms that 99.5% of all delay compensation claims were closed within 20 working days.“Performance on the railway is not as good as it should be. The rail industry is working hard to make trains more reliable, and we’re recruiting and training new staff to improve resilience.”