Rail passengers whose journeys are affected by strikes planned for late June will receive refunds for the tickets they have bought, the head of the industry body that represents train firms has said.
“If we cannot provide a service to our customers due to strike action then we will refund customers,” said Steve Montgomery, the chair of the Rail Delivery Group (RDG).
“We need to go and draw up a set of guidance for people and how it is going to work but we will be very flexible,” Montgomery, who is also managing director of First Rail, told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme.
Rail workers belonging to the Rail, Maritime and Transport (RMT) union will stage walkouts on 21, 23 and 25 June, which is expected to shut down much of the national rail system for a week.
The RDG is looking at putting out advice to customers who intend to travel during the strike week, such as recommending they travel on the day before or after the walkout, Montgomery said. He also called on the RMT to hold talks to “resolve” the issue.
The MP Huw Merriman, the Tory chair of parliament’s transport select committee, called on the government to put legislation in place that would have required a minimum rail service even during strikes.
“It was proposed in the Conservative party’s manifesto in 2019 that there would be a minimum service obligation so that trains would have to run, as they do in France, Italy, Spain, during strikes, where a third to a fifth of trains operate,” Merriman told Today.
“That legislation has not been put in place, so without that it will be difficult to negotiate with the unions if the trains grind to halt.”
The planned industrial action – after a successful ballot of 40,000 members across Network Rail and 13 train operating companies
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