RMT Demands Scrapping Of Thameslink Siemens Deal Following West Coast Mainline Fiasco

RAIL UNION RMT today demanded that the Government call a halt to the 18 month long saga of the Siemens/Thameslink fleet contract after it emerged that it has been stitched together by the same group of Ministers and Government officials responsible for the collapse of the West Coast main line franchising deal.

RMT is calling for the Thameslink contract, which will not be signed off until the New Year at the earliest, 18 months after it was awarded in principle to German outfit Siemens, to be handed to Bombardier in Derby, protecting the future of the last train builder in the nation that gave the railways to the world.

RMT, which this morning called for the West Coast route to be handed to the publicly owned Directly Operated Railways, also wants to see an investigation into the relationship between the DFT, the train operators and other private rail companies in the wake of today’s Government humiliation.

RMT General Secretary Bob Crow said today:

“The game is up for rail privatisation, the casino should be closed and the multi-billion pound lottery that has brought Britain’s railways to their knees should now be shut down for good.

“RMT wants to see the current mess of individual franchises brought under one single, publicly-owned umbrella run in the public interest and not for private gain. We now have that opportunity. The renationalistaion of West and East Coast’s should be just a part of that process.

“Meanwhile, the botched Thameslink deal should be the next fiasco called to a halt and that work should be redirected as a matter of urgency to Bombardier in Derby to protect the future of UK train building.

“An investigation into the relationship between all of these private companies and the DFT is also essential if we are going to clean out the stables. A starting point would be a forensic look at why everyone around the industry knew that First were going to get the West Coast deal well before the Government even announced it. The whole sordid process stinks.”

> RMT National News

Friday, 21st November
RMT members on Docks, Ports and Waterways have revealed deep concerns about their pay, safety, and overall working conditions in a new survey.
Friday, 21st November
RMT will take strike action on CrossCountry next month after the company failed to resolve long-running issues on pay, staffing and previously agreed commitments.
Wednesday, 19th November
RMT today exposed widespread failures in welfare provision for transport workers, with new survey evidence and frontline testimony showing that women in particular are being denied safe, clean and accessible toilet facilities, leaving employers in breach of basic dignity and clear legal duties.
Wednesday, 19th November
Tube union RMT, will demonstrate outside City Hall tomorrow calling on the Mayor and Transport for London to stop the re-tendering of the London Underground cleaning contract and bring the workforce back in-house.
Wednesday, 19th November
Rail union, RMT today laid bare the safety critical importance of a second person onboard train services after a dispute erupted on East West Rail.