Thanks a lot for your explanation! So the earliest the government could take a franchise into public ownership would be 8th December, 84 days after the CTED for Greater Anglia and WMT?The standard National Rail Contracts have a final contract end date but also a Core Term Expiry Date (CTED). The DfT can, at three railway periods notice, terminate these contracts at any date between the CTED and the final expiry date, at no cost to the DfT.
As the CTED dates are all between 2024 and 2027, the new Government can take these contracts back fairly quickly.
There are only two contracts that are on the old contract term + extension terms. These are SWR and c2c. Both are now in the extension periods so presumably will not move to a new NRC with their current Owning Groups when these contracts finally end in 2025.
There has been a bit of sabre rattling over TOCs such as Avanti being taken back for non performance but since the DfT are so involved in setting resource levels, that has potential difficulties. Given that Avanti has a CTED of 18/10/26, why go through all that bother?
It's the Core Term date. But as mentioned I'd take that with a pinch of salt for some operators as they can terminate early if targets aren't met.Labour's plan is to take passenger operations into public ownership when contracts with the TOCs expire, when will this be? Wikipedia lists "Core Term Expiry Dates" and "End Dates" - I'm not sure of the difference between the two.
Northern are clear evidence that being under DOLR is no guarantee of any better performance.The standard National Rail Contracts have a final contract end date but also a Core Term Expiry Date (CTED). The DfT can, at three railway periods notice, terminate these contracts at any date between the CTED and the final expiry date, at no cost to the DfT.
As the CTED dates are all between 2024 and 2027, the new Government can take these contracts back fairly quickly.
There are only two contracts that are on the old contract term + extension terms. These are SWR and c2c. Both are now in the extension periods so presumably will not move to a new NRC with their current Owning Groups when these contracts finally end in 2025.
There has been a bit of sabre rattling over TOCs such as Avanti being taken back for non performance but since the DfT are so involved in setting resource levels, that has potential difficulties. Given that Avanti has a CTED of 18/10/26, why go through all that bother?
Where as TPE has massively improved.Northern are clear evidence that being under DOLR is no guarantee of any better performance.
Almost definitely linked to the reduced timetable they are now running though, lets see how they perform once any significant service increase is undertaken.Where as TPE has massively improved.
Where as TPE has massively improved.
A much tidied up version of the DfTs war and peace courtesy of the Bring Back British Rail website...
DfT rail contract expiry dates:
15/09/2024 – Greater Anglia
15/09/2024 – West Midlands / LNR
13/10/2024 – South Eastern*
01/03/2025 – Northern*
01/04/2025 – Govia Thameslink
01/04/2025 – Chiltern
25/05/2025 – TransPennine Express*
25/05/2025 – SWR
22/06/2025 – GWR
23/06/2025 – LNER*
20/07/2025 – c2c
18/10/2026 – Avanti
18/10/2026 – EMR
15/10/2027 – XC
*denotes DfT-OLR operator
Although it should be noted Louise Haigh has already mentioned booting Avanti out first.
Source
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News - Bring Back British Rail
www.bringbackbritishrail.org
The same deal that was previously in place for several years before it was withdrawn.By offering a whopping great Rest Day Working payment.
Thanks a lot for your explanation! So the earliest the government could take a franchise into public ownership would be 8th December, 84 days after the CTED for Greater Anglia and WMT?
But with a much fatter pay packetNo, the Government can take a contract back on the CTED by giving three periods notice prior to that date.
P.s. - they aren’t franchises. They are just management contracts. The current TOC MD’s have about as much power as an Area Manager did in pre-sector BR days, i.e. not a lot!
To be fair, they’ve got a lot more responsibility than BR era Area Managers x more stations, more services, more staff.But with a much fatter pay packetMakes the wage inflation since privatisation for traincrew look miniscule!
Do you think the GBR equivalent managers will be paid any less?But with a much fatter pay packetMakes the wage inflation since privatisation for traincrew look miniscule!
Nope! The change in circumstances to a glorified area manager has both tickled me and horrified me somewhat in the last few years. Personally I'd find having DfT wonks imposed on me soul destroying regardless of the salary.Do you think the GBR equivalent managers will be paid any less?
DfT's OLR operation is run by highly paid consultants.
To be fair, they’ve got a lot more responsibility than BR era Area Managers x more stations, more services, more staff.
The resource mostly exists within the TOCs and part of the structure, at least, exists in the shadow GBR Transition Team.Do OLR/GBR/GSWR have the resource, structure and organisation to take all these TOCs on?
Increase in service will be interesting since all the Nova3s have gone. Wonder what the plans are? Scarborough needs better than the current shuttle service.Almost definitely linked to the reduced timetable they are now running though, lets see how they perform once any significant service increase is undertaken.
Legislation is not required to move contracts over to OLR.Legislation will need passing before renationalisation so it wouldn’t be a surprise if those expiring later this year were extended into next year to allow time for legislation to get through parliament.
Out of all the TOCs, GA is the one to leave well alone, top of the TOCs in service reliability and paying money into the treasury for the privilege.Working for GA I understood we are now 2026 so don’t know why this shew on X as 2024.
And?By offering a whopping great Rest Day Working payment.
The fact that the money goes into the Treasury is a good reason for change - it needs to stay in the industry.Out of all the TOCs, GA is the one to leave well alone, top of the TOCs in service reliability and paying money into the treasury for the privilege.
Legally, OLR is supposed to be a temporary home for TOCs in difficulty, prior to re-contracting to the private sector.Legislation is not required to move contracts over to OLR.
Yes, I know all that. But it doesn't make a case for extending current contracts that are expiring soon. As you'll be aware some of the contracts held "temporarily" by OLR have been held by them for years.Legally, OLR is supposed to be a temporary home for TOCs in difficulty, prior to re-contracting to the private sector.
Legislation is required to make OLR/GBR ownership permanent and allow them to let rail contracts instead of DfT.
Legislation is also required to change the status and powers of Network Rail and ORR within the wider rail industry.