The Public Accounts Committee (PAC) has published its report scrutinising the
Government's programme of rail reform.
The report finds that Government has made little progress in
implementing its ambitious plans for rail, with much of the
proposed reforms and associated benefits now largely on hold
until the next Parliament. In particular, the Department has not
yet established Great British Railways (GBR), the new
organisation intended to act as the ‘guiding mind' for the whole
rail system and which it originally planned to have set up by
March 2024.
The PAC's report finds that no one in Government is putting the
needs of passengers and taxpayers first, with poor performance
persisting across the rail network – in 2022-23, 13.7% of trains
were delayed and 3.8% were cancelled. In the meantime, taxpayers
continue to subsidise passenger rail services at a level that
Government considers unsustainable (£3.1 billion in 2022-23).
You can also read the attached report here.
You can find out more about the inquiry, including oral and
written evidence, here.
All media enquiries to Ed Sheridan on sheridane@parliament.uk /
077190005551.
Conclusions and recommendations
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It has been six years since the Department identified
the need for a root and branch review of the railway, but it
has achieved very little in this time.The Department
set out an ambitious reform programme in response to the
findings of the Williams Review it commissioned in 2018. But it
has not progressed rail reform as it intended and many of the
proposed reforms and associated benefits are largely on hold
until the next Parliament when legislation can be passed.
However, getting legislation through Parliament is just one
element of rail reform. Previous rail reviews over the last 20
years have failed to bring about the improvements needed and,
although the Department says that it now has a whole system
assessment of what needs to improve, we have yet to see
convincing evidence that this reform programme will turn out to
be any different.
Recommendation 1: The Department should set out, as
soon as possible during the next Parliament, how and by when it
will successfully deliver the reforms that are urgently needed in
the rail sector.
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There has been too little focus on passengers and
taxpayers and how to get them a better deal.The
Department claims that improving passenger experience is at the
heart of its reform plans, but poor performance persists across
the rail network. In 2022-23, 13.7% of trains were delayed and
3.8% were cancelled. While the Department is fully aware of
what is important to passengers, it has not delivered on the
basic things that matter most. Taxpayers also continue to
subsidise passenger rail services at a level that the
Department considers unsustainable (£3.1 billion in 2022-23).
It is disappointing to hear that it took a pandemic to make the
Department seriously focus on making efficiency savings and
changes to improve services. The Department know it needs to
increase revenues and reduce costs to get to a more sustainable
position, but its focus is on managing costs, while revenue
goes directly to HM Treasury, along with responsibility for
making up any shortfalls. This means that the Department, train
operating companies and HM Treasury have different priorities
when making decisions which impact revenue, and the current set
up does not create the right incentives to get the best value
for money for taxpayers.
Recommendation 2:
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a)The Department should commit to producing a specific
passenger-focused plan that is clear to passengers what they
should expect from travelling on trains following rail reform,
including clear targets that train operators are expected to
achieve.
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b)The Department should work with HM Treasury to resolve
the disincentives in the system so that it can bring the level
of government subsidy on passenger services to a sustainable
level and improve value for money for taxpayers. The Department
should set out in its Treasury Minute how it is addressing the
disincentives ahead of the next Parliament and full rail
reform.
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It is unacceptable that so much of the rail network
remains so difficult to access for so many people.The
Department committed to improving access to the rail network
and other modes of transport as part of its 2018 inclusive
transport strategy and has been running its Access for All
programme to address the issues faced by disabled passengers
since 2006. However, the Department has made little progress in
improving rail services and station infrastructure and this
affects various groups of people; for example, disabled
passengers, as well as parents with young children, and even
the many passengers and tourists carrying luggage who would
like to have access to lifts. The Department says that it will
be going out to consultation shortly on a national rail
accessibility strategy, but it should already have enough
information about the current condition of stations and where
there are accessibility issues to start tackling problems now
and without further delay.
Recommendation 3: The Department should fulfil its
commitment to improve access to the rail network for all who wish
to use it and does not need to wait for further consultation or
legislation to make improvements to station facilities and train
services. It should report back to the Committee alongside the
Treasury Minute on its plans and timetable for when stations and
trains will be accessible to all.
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We are not convinced that the Department has paid
sufficient attention, in advance of the delayed creation of
Great British Railways, to the changes it can make now to
improve the situation for passengers and taxpayers.The
Department expected its reform programme to result in annual
savings of £1.5 billion. But GBR has not yet been established
and this scale of saving will not materialise for many years.
The Department is framing its ambitions for rail reform around
the introduction of GBR, seeing this as the point at which it
can start to accelerate its reforms. However, it could take up
to 2 years after legislation is enacted before GBR becomes
operational, while passengers and taxpayers must continue to
wait for much-needed improvements. The Department is planning
improvement work that does not require legislation in the
meantime, but we have not seen any real sense of urgency in
what it is trying to do.
Recommendation 4: The Department needs to make
tangible, visible progress in implementing reforms which improve
outcomes for passengers and taxpayers. Its Treasury Minute
response should set out a) what passenger improvements and
outcomes it has delivered and b) an update on the savings it has
made from rail reform in this interim period and how it has made
these savings.
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Six years since the Department started work on rail
reform, it has failed to resolve fundamental disagreements and
clarify key aspects of reform.The Department
acknowledges that, while its white paper set the broad
direction and detail for some areas of reform, there were still
disagreements with HM Treasury and other stakeholders in some
important areas. Unresolved issues remain regarding the extent
of GBR's role and responsibilities including the level of
independence and ability it will have to be a “guiding mind”
for the railways; the future commercial model between GBR and
commercial operators; and how fares would be set. While it may
be quite common in complex policy areas for there to be some
areas of disagreement, it is surprising that the reform
programme got underway without the Department and HM Treasury
agreeing on such core elements. It remains to be seen
how, in practice, GBR will balance providing a “guiding mind"
with stepping in and directing stakeholders to a specific
course of action when required.
Recommendation 5: The Department should urgently
resolve disagreements ahead of taking forward reform in the next
Parliament. Its Treasury Minute response should set out what
areas remain to be agreed and how it and HMT plan to resolve
these.
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The Department has failed to engage with the workforce
to successfully deliver its reform ambitions.Good
policymaking relies on effective stakeholder engagement. The
Williams Rail Review involved extensive consultation with trade
unions and workers across the railway to understand their
perspectives. However, while the Department expects to
implement significant reforms through the workforce, officials
have had little engagement with the workforce on rail reform.
The absence of such engagement means that the Department risks
not having a full understanding of the challenges and practical
realities faced by the staff on the ground responsible for
implementing the reforms. Network Rail notes that it improved
productivity through engaging with its workforce, reaching
agreement on modernisation measures and changes in terms and
conditions, saving around £775 million.
Recommendation 6: The Department should meaningfully
engage with the workforce in order to implement its reforms
successfully. In its Treasury Minute response it should set out
how it plans to engage with the workforce as part of implementing
its reforms.