MP Hugh Bayley calls for new look at East Coast franchise

BIDDING for the East Coast Mainline franchise should be stopped in light of the West Coast Mainline fiasco, York Central MP Hugh Bayley has said.

Mr Bayley said that before the franchise was handed over to the private sector, the Government should take the opportunity to compare private and public sector running of rail franchises.

He said: “The Government needs to re-examine the merits of franchising more fundamentally. We on the East Coast have suffered a hiatus twice for collapsed franchise.”

The Government admitted mistakes had been made in the bidding process for the West Coast Main Line franchise and pulled the contract from FirstGroup, which won the bid in August claiming it could run the franchise more efficiently than existing operator Virgin Trains, which subsequently launched a judicial review.

Mr Bayley said: “We should build on the stability that users of the East Coast mainline have had since East Coast took over running it. We need to rigorously evaluate the costs and benefits of a private franchise against a public franchise by comparing the East Coast Mainline with the West Coast Mainline, rather than taking the ideological view that the private sector is best in all circumstances.”

He said East Coast should remain in public sector hands and run for the length of the West Coast Mainline franchise for a fair comparison.

Comments(11)

Micklegate says...
9:15am Mon 8 Oct 12

I really don't know why Hugh Bayley claims the cycling allowance, he seems to go everywhere by bandwagon.

* well ok I do, it's because he's historically been one of the most expensive MPs and is out for every penny he can get.

Richard1958 says...
9:42am Mon 8 Oct 12

What makes you think that the Government can run a railway efficiently when they cannot even run a procurement exercise. Leave it to the private sector you Marxist.

pedalling paul says...
10:20am Mon 8 Oct 12

Micklegate wrote:
I really don't know why Hugh Bayley claims the cycling allowance, he seems to go everywhere by bandwagon.

* well ok I do, it's because he's historically been one of the most expensive MPs and is out for every penny he can get.
Would you rather he travelled locally round the Constituency by car, helping to clog up roads and claiming a far bigger car allowance?

Ignatius Lumpopo says...
10:39am Mon 8 Oct 12

Hugh Bayley has an incredible selective - and short term - memory. East Coast didn't create the 'stability' - that was Project Eureka which has been in the pipeline for years, and had nothing to do with DOR, the people who took over operation after GNER and NX copped out.

Micklegate's opening sentence hits the nail on the head...

Pete the Brickie says...
11:15am Mon 8 Oct 12

Micklegate wrote:
I really don't know why Hugh Bayley claims the cycling allowance, he seems to go everywhere by bandwagon.

* well ok I do, it's because he's historically been one of the most expensive MPs and is out for every penny he can get.
Spot on.

perplexed says...
2:10pm Mon 8 Oct 12

Richard1958 wrote:
What makes you think that the Government can run a railway efficiently when they cannot even run a procurement exercise. Leave it to the private sector you Marxist.
Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha!

bloodaxe says...
4:20pm Mon 8 Oct 12

Richard1958 wrote:
What makes you think that the Government can run a railway efficiently when they cannot even run a procurement exercise. Leave it to the private sector you Marxist.
Like the banks perhaps ? Funny that every other western European country runs railways well and for public benefit. You don't let the government run the railways, you allow the people who know about railways to run the railways and, unlike the old BR, you allow them to access capital on the markets, lease rolling stock on the markets and let them make the best judgment on what is required. Johnnie Major's rushed privatisation was a warning which other governments have heeded. I'm surprised that he wasn't awarded the Legion d'honneur.

Haywire says...
5:05pm Mon 8 Oct 12

The usual nonsense being trotted out by all the railway "experts" for narrow political reasons.

To quote Christian Wolmar, who does know something about railways, "What is railway franchising actually for?"

John Major, that other well-known railway expert, asserted that, "British Railways are deeply inefficient!" This was his cover story for rail privatisation, but the principal point of the exercise was to get the cost of running the rail system away from the public purse.

Amazingly enough, we are now spending about three to four times as much public money in real (should it be rail) terms to support the rail system.

I have no great axe to grind regarding a public or privately run rail system (but I'm certainly not too keen on warm beer and cricket), but I believe that the present way of doing it is unsustainable.

At the present time, nearly all the major franchises are in "Revenue Support" (this means that taxpayers' money is funding the profits of the private train operating companies, including Virgin West Coast). Meanwhile, East Coast Trains have actually provided quite a lot of money for the taxpayer.

For a reasoned view of the situation, I suggest that all those interested in a proper debate on the future of the rail system should read the article on page 6 of the October edtion of the magazine, "Modern Railways". It is headed "Time to end a failed experiment."

bob the builder says...
7:41pm Mon 8 Oct 12

It's virgin on the ridiculous, at least they can run businesses to budget, efficiently and at a profit. Virgin Britain has a ring to it!

Haywire says...
8:59pm Mon 8 Oct 12

bob the builder says...
7:41pm Mon 8 Oct 12
It's virgin on the ridiculous, at least they can run businesses to budget, efficiently and at a profit. Virgin Britain has a ring to it

Bob, I don't know how to put this to you, but you seem to have been taken in by the Branson (I leave you to work the next word out, but it starts with B). Virgin West Coast are in Revenue Support, i.e., they are not operating at a profit; they are not operating to budget; you (probably) and I are contributing to their profit as taxpayers.

Magicman! says...
2:47am Tue 9 Oct 12

GNER itself didn't fail to run the franchise, their parent company went up the swanny and the government of the time got cold feet and pulled the franchise away from them because there was no financial fallback if GNER couldn't make payments. NXEC failed because it bid too much and the government just saw the pound signs rather than actually thinking if it would work in the real world.

DOR stepped in to run a franchise where morale, customer satisfaction, and reliability were low - and recently it was announced that reliability is climbing and customer satisfaction is the highest it has been for the East Coast since privatisation, which is ironic as it's not technically 'private' at the moment!

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