The Fact Compiler rather generously give the last word to Tom Harris MP in the thread We are the masters now!
As a man of his word The Fact Compiler will not reopen that topic.
However, as Tom was kind enough to suggest the Eye's latest exciting poll here are some additional reader reflections:
This from The Major....
"Like Captain Deltic, most people become annoyed when someone says one thing and does another.
"DfT says it does not manage rolling stock.
"Train operators say it does.
"They can't both be right.
"Take a look at any franchise agreement and you'll find a table listing the precise number of coaches allocated to that franchise. This agreement will be signed by the operator and the DfT.
"To change this list requires DfT approval because it is a signatory to the agreement.
"Therefore, DfT does control the stock allocated to that franchise.
"In the good old days of the Strategic Rail Authority, ministers could tell parliament that the SRA controlled rolling stock.
"When the SRA was abolished by government, its functions were split. Network Rail for example took on route utilisation strategies while DfT took on the bulk of SRA's duties.
"I do not recall that allocation of rolling stock was a duty passed to train operators but that is what ministers now tell us.
"Look at it another way. Britain's railways are short of stock. They are running more trains and carrying more people. That's a good thing.
In such a situation, and with franchises set by government, then it must be government that controls allocation of rolling stock - unless ORR fancies a go.
"It would be more honest of ministers if they said: 'Yes, we do control stock allocation because it's scarce and we want to make sure we make best use of it.'
"We might not like their decisions (passengers writing to their MPs certainly don't) but the whole process would be far easier to understand."
In for a penny in for a pound. Anyone else care to comment?
UPDATE: Tom Harris MP writes...
"The Major says 'Take a look at any franchise agreement and you'll find a table listing the precise number of coaches allocated to that franchise. This agreement will be signed by the operator and the DfT'
"Correct - but take a look at any Invitation to Tender and you will see that the DfT does not specify rolling stock.
"Towards the end of that process, the DfT naturally and sensibly requires TOCs to say what rolling stock it will use.
"As you rightly say, stock is scarce, and who do you think would get the blame if a TOC won a bid with a commitment to rolling stock that wasn't available to it.
"That the franchise agreement contains details of rolling stock is obvious. That it is signed by both parties is, I would have thought, a legal requirement."
Any more for any more?
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