Rail commuter costs ‘pass £5,000’

Passengers using a rail ticket machineSeason ticket holders around the country are facing average fare rises of 5.8%
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The cost of some annual season tickets will exceed £5,000 for the first time when prices go up on Sunday, the Campaign for Better Transport has said.

Season ticket prices across the UK will rise by an average of 5.8%, while London bus and Tube fares go up 6.8%.

CBT said some Kent commuters would have to bear rises of nearly 13% and warned of people being priced off the trains.

Train operators said “times were tough” for many people, but the increases ensured investment in the railways.

A spokesman for the Association of Train Operating Companies said even with the 2011 increases the money from tickets covered only half the cost of running the railways, with the rest falling to taxpayers.

He said above-inflation fare rises were the result of government policy which has “sought to sustain investment in the railways by reducing the amount that taxpayers contribute and requiring passengers to pay more”.

But CBT said it was unfair millions of commuters already facing pay cuts and reduced hours in their jobs were now having to pay out more to get to work.

It also said higher fares were pricing people off the rail network, risking road congestion in the nation’s cities.

“People simply cannot afford to pay a fifth of their income just to do a day’s work”

Stephen Joseph CBT chief executive

The fare rises meant some travellers were being asked to pay 20% of the average UK salary for their annual season ticket, they said.

This was the equivalent, in percentage terms, of transport secretary Philip Hammond MP being asked to pay £27,034 for a season ticket, said campaigners.

CBT chief executive Stephen Joseph said: “Commuters feel like they are being pick-pocketed by the government, expected to pay more year on year for the same poor quality service.

“Even with the promised extra investment, many passengers will see no actual improvement to their daily commute.

“Politicians need to start living in the real world and understand that people simply cannot afford to pay a fifth of their income just to do a day’s work. The government pledged to create fair fares and we all expect them to keep that promise.”

The CBT will launch a campaign entitled Fair Fares Now next week, which is being backed by TV presenter and actor Michael Palin.

It cites an annual season ticket for commuters travelling on high-speed services between London and Tonbridge, in Kent, as one of the worst cases – rising 12.7% to £5,192 in 2011.

A season ticket on the First Capital Connect stopping service between Peterborough and London, which is currently £5,000, will go up to £5,320.

Tickets on the faster East Coast services between the two cities top the £6,000 mark.

Annual tickets between Newcastle and York will also pass the £5,000 mark.

Palin said current fares were “holding travellers to ransom”.

“Regular price hikes are no way for the government and train companies to reward their regular customers. Instead of milking them, they should be thanking them for their loyalty with a better, simpler, more competitive fare structure,” he said.

Jo deBank, of customer watchdog London TravelWatch, said the hikes in the capital were “staggeringly large” and would “hit Londoners hard”.

She added: “Behind these headline [average] figures are some incredibly high increases and some tickets being abolished altogether.”

Ms deBank also said the withdrawal of some one-day Travelcards in London would mean “a massive increase for some people and will affect outer London and non-regular travellers particularly”.

Transport for London (TfL) said that by switching to Oyster cards – plastic “smartcards” used instead of paper tickets – “most customers should see little increase in their travel costs”.

Mayor Boris Johnson said: “I have kept the fares for 2011 at the absolute minimum while still protecting the vital improvements that London’s transport network needs. Those improvements include upgrades to the Tube, the delivery of [the cross-London scheme] Crossrail, and maintenance of London’s bus network.

“I promised to protect free and concessionary travel for those needing it most and this package does exactly that.

“Even in difficult times I am not passing the buck to the travelling public.

“We have stuck with the fare rise we said we would deliver last year and we continue to make efficiencies at TfL in order to make sure Londoners are getting the best value for money possible.”

The 5.8% average main line rail increase in regulated fares – which include season tickets – is based on the July 2010 retail prices inflation (RPI) figure of 4.8% plus 1%. Train companies are allowed, by the government, to use “flex” [flexibility] to average out the increase.

To take account of investment in their line including high-speed Javelin trains, passengers on trains run by the Southeastern company have an annual regulated fare price-rise formula of RPI plus 3%.

This means commuters in the Kent area will be paying an average of 7.8% more for season tickets from Sunday.

The RPI plus 3% formula will be introduced across the whole network from January 2012.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

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