Comment rail@bauermedia.co.uk
@RAIL
IT’S 20 years since the Department for Transport published a White Paper called The Future of Rail, in which it detailed the problems with a lack of accountability and strategic direction, cost and performance, and the gap in the relationship between Britain’s rail infrastructure provider and train operators.
In a section titled ‘What we are going to do’, the White Paper said: “The government will take charge of setting the strategy for the railways.” In doing this, it abolished the arm’s-length guiding mind it had created just a few years earlier called the Strategic Rail Authority.
It also pledged that Network Rail would be given clear responsibility for operating the network and its performance, that train and track companies would work more closely together, and that there…
