Keep Tyne and Wear Metro public, says RMT
RMT: June 24 2008
Campaign to be launched with public meeting in Newcastle on July 17
THE TYNE and Wear Metro is a public-sector success story and should be kept that way, delegates at the annual conference of Britain's biggest rail union insisted today.
As RMT's AGM called on the government to implement Labour policy on public ownership, RMT general secretary Bob Crow and Northern TUC secretary Kevin Rowan issued a joint plea for an end to the threat to fragment and privatise the northeast's Metro network.
Letters sent today to Transport Secretary Ruth Kelly and Tyne and Wear Passenger Transport Executive (Nexus) director-general Bernard Garner point out that the Metro is already achieving record levels of punctuality and ridership.
The letters express the concern that funding for a welcome upgrade of the network has been made conditional on splitting up and privatising the Metro's operations and infrastructure.
Nexus bulletins indicate that the government has insisted on the break-up, overruling the PTE's preferred option of maintaining Metro as a 'vertically integrated' railway.
"The model now being proposed for the Metro is in danger of repeating the mistakes of railway privatisation," Bob Crow and Kevin Rowan say.
"Safety will be threatened as the Metro will be fragmented into different sectors, meaning less effective control and private companies cutting corners to save money.
"Fragmentation will lead to a less efficient, more expensive railway which is why Nexus were originally opposed to the break up of the Metro and why we remain opposed to it.
"Large amounts of fare revenue and public subsidy will be used to pay dividends to shareholders instead of being used to improve the Metro for the benefit of passengers and the wider community in the North East.
"And of course Metro workers' pensions, jobs and conditions will be under threat as the private sector tries to maximise profits at the expense of Metro workers," the letters say.
ends
Note to editors: Northern TUCsecretary Kevin Rowan and RMT general secretary Bob Crow will be among the speakers at a public meeting at 7pm on July 17 at the Royal Station Hotel, Neville Street, Newcastle
See also:
Union warns against Metro privatisation
Northumberland Gazette: 25th June 2008
The RMT has stepped up its campaign to keep Tyne and Wear Metro under public sector control, warning that safety will be threatened if it is privatised.
The rail workers' union said the North East's Metro system was a public sector success story, and its ownership should not be changed.
At its annual conference in Nottingham, the union agreed to hold a public meeting next month and issued a plea for an end to the threat to fragment and privatise the North East's Metro network.
The union has written to Transport Secretary Ruth Kelly and Tyne and Wear Passenger Transport Executive (Nexus) director-general Bernard Garner pointing out that the Metro is achieving record levels of punctuality and ridership.
RMT general secretary Bob Crow said: "The model being proposed for the Metro is in danger of repeating the mistakes of railway privatisation.
"Safety will be threatened as the Metro will be fragmented into different sectors, meaning less effective control and private companies cutting corners to save money.
"Fragmentation will lead to a less efficient, more expensive railway which is why Nexus were originally opposed to the break-up of the Metro and why we remain opposed to it.
"Large amounts of fare revenue and public subsidy will be used to pay dividends to shareholders instead of being used to improve the Metro for the benefit of passengers and the wider community in the North East.
"Metro workers' pensions, jobs and conditions will be under threat as the private sector tries to maximise profits at the expense of Metro workers."
Comments
I have been with the metro now for 20 years and I would like to know what will happen to my pension and will it be protected? I am 57 years old.
Yours sincerely,
Mr. Roger Harrison.
Posted by: roger harrison | July 19, 2008 11:13 AM