Bletchleyite
Veteran Member
There's no practical way of distinguishing between different types of Open Access operators.
If people want to allow freight, services from devolved authorities or local councils, and charters, but not allow private commercial Open Access operators, then I don't see a 'good law' way of doing it.
It'd be fairly easy to do.
Freight = allowed, subject to passenger paths not being needed that conflict - for instance I have a big issue with the way freight wastes paths over Shap crawling to the summit with a single 66 rather than an electric locomotive or two 66s, and I would get strict on that - the rule in my book would be that if the train when fully functional physically cannot maintain the lower of linespeed or its own specified maximum speed then it should not be allowed on the network at all.
Passenger services = allowed, subject to being contracted or operated on behalf of a state body of some kind and subject to GBR not requiring the paths.
Charters = allowed, again subject to the paths not being required by GBR*. A charter being defined as a service that:
1. Does not operate over the same route more than ten times per rolling 12 month period (you could use any number instead of 10, but the key is that it's not a timetabled service which would typically operate at least daily);
2. Does not sell tickets via Rail Settlement Plan, nor accept Rail Settlement Plan tickets.
* e.g. there aren't any to Windermere despite this being nominally attractive because it could only be done by cancelling the service train for a couple of hours. Though you could permit it where the charter took up the service train's path with the same calling points and accepted the service train's tickets.
That do?