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Mick Cash

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Date of birth February 17,1960
Zodiac sign Aquarius
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About Mick Cash


Michael Joseph Cash is the former general secretary of the National Union of Rail, Maritime and Transport Workers, a British trade union.

Coronavirus: Widen rules on where face covers must be used, say British doctors

Coronavirus: Widen rules on where face covers must be used, say British doctors
Jun 5,2020 3:24 am

... But Mick Cash, the Rail, Maritime and Transport union, said the new rules were long overdue ...

Coronavirus: unions warn of increasing motion rail services

Coronavirus: unions warn of increasing motion rail services
May 4,2020 2:16 am

... We therefore call on the Federal government and the railway operators to work with us to establish to increase where there is a real need for services, and where there is demand, how it can be delivered safely, says the letter, signed by the General secretaries of Aslef, the RMT and TSSA - Mick Whelan, Mick Cash, and Manuel Cortes...

Coronavirus: the transport of workers must not work without measures

Coronavirus: the transport of workers must not work  without measures
Apr 18,2020 9:20 pm

... General Secretary Mick Cash said that it was members of the railway-and bus-mentioned sectors in all over the country to stop work for safety reasons, when the employer to provide protection against Covid-19 ...

South Western Railway workers to hold 27 days of strikes

South Western Railway workers to hold 27 days of strikes
Feb 16,2020 7:51 am

... The union has told its members not to book on for duty: RMT general secretary Mick Cash said: At the last meeting we held with SWR, principles in agreements were made in good faith with the company s negotiating team and we now feel hugely let down again...

What has gone wrong with rail franchising?

What has gone wrong with rail franchising?
Feb 16,2020 5:21 am

... But the RMT union s general secretary, Mick Cash, described it as a another political fix by a government whose privatised franchise model is collapsing around their ears ...

FirstGroup replaces Virgin to run West Coast route

FirstGroup replaces Virgin to run West Coast route
Feb 16,2020 5:18 am

... Flawed franchising system The RMT s general secretary, Mick Cash, described it as a another political fix by a government whose privatised franchise model is collapsing around their ears and warned it was doomed to failure and sure to result in yet more rail chaos ...

Arriva Rail North: Strikes halted by 'breakthrough'

Arriva Rail North: Strikes halted by 'breakthrough'
Feb 16,2020 2:47 am

... Break the deadlock RMT general secretary Mick Cash said his members had shown resilience and determination ...

What has gone wrong with rail franchising?

Feb 16,2020 2:47 am

The Debate over The Future of running Britain's rail network flared up Once More This Week .

While the government tepidly defended its system, unions and passengers united to attack it as prices were hiked again above the government's own preferred measure of inflation.

Even The Department for Transport called the current model as it announced that FirstGroup was to take over the running of the London Euston to Glasgow Central route.

The Transport Secretary, Grant Shapps , hailed The Deal as a shift to a new model for rail.

But the RMT union's General Secretary , Mick Cash , described it as a "another political fix by a government whose privatised franchise model is collapsing around their ears".

It all comes as rail punctuality across the country languishes at a 13-year low.

And despite growing passenger anger, fares will rise next year, rather than the lower Consumer Prices Index.

"The System is clearly not working, everybody agrees that it's not working," rail writer Christian Wolmar tells the BBC.

What's Going Wrong ?

The Department for Transport maintains that privatisation has worked. It points out that passenger numbers have doubled, while the rail system has attracted £6. 7bn of private investment and added 4,600 new daily services.

But the mounting criticism of The System was clearly not what the government had hoped for when it privatised The Network in the 1990s.

Network Rail , then known as Railtrack, was Set Up to look after the tracks, tunnels and signalling. Meanwhile, private companies could compete to run the trains.

At the time, the government hoped that those private firms would compete on most routes through a system known as "open access". Rather than bidding for entire lines, services themselves were on offer.

It also asked firms to bid to run subsided franchises on loss-making routes.

But that left the taxpayer to pick up the tab for all loss-making services. When The Network was publicly-owned, these would have been subsidised by the profitable ones.

As a result, franchises for entire lines became The Norm to stop the cornering of profitable services, and now less than 1% of passengers travel on open-access services.

'Little control'

The effect of that has been a lack of competition among train operators which is bad for consumers, says Professor Mark Barry from Cardiff University .

"We've got a system that was meant to bring competition to railways post-privatisation and provide some means for companies to innovate, take a risk In Return to procure some value.

"The reality is though, there isn't a lot of competition on the railway - Apart from the franchising system itself. "

This might suggest that train operators are having an easy ride and raking in profit, but The Opposite is often the case.

As Mr Wolmar points out, in reality rail companies have very little control over their revenues. They can introduce wi-fi on their trains and launch advertising campaigns but much of their fortune depends on factors beyond their control, such as employment levels and Economic Growth .

Fares will rise by up to 2. 8% next year

In a competitive tendering environment, that can mean that the rail firms make a loss over the course of rail franchise, which typically lasts seven years.

And that explains, in part, the failure of Stagecoach and Virgin Trains ' East Coast Main Line franchise, which was last year.

Prof Barry thinks the franchising model should change so that the franchisee is not left with the revenue risk.

Instead, he argues, the government should award contracts by telling the bidders how much money is available and asking them to compete on quality.

He said Transport for Wales had experimented with that model successfully.

The Man charged with reviewing The Franchise system, former British Airways boss Keith Williams , may have an even more radical suggestion.

Punctuality on UK trains is at a 13 year low

He has said a independent from government, should be in charge of day-to-day operations.

Mr Williams has also said he believes that, in The Future , rail franchises should be underpinned by punctuality and other performance-related targets.

The government launched the review after passengers in northern and southern England experienced chaos over several weeks Last Summer following the introduction of a new timetable.

His review of the rail system will be published this autumn.

A Department for Transport spokesperson said: "The recently awarded West Coast Partnership represents a decisive shift towards a new model for rail. It is a partnership supported by Keith Williams , built with the flexibility to respond to his recommendations and deliver fundamental reform to a flawed system.

"The transport secretary has asked Keith to produce his recommendations for a White Paper, with fearless proposals that will deliver a consumer focussed railway system fit for the 21St Century . "



national rail, network rail, rail travel

Source of news: bbc.com

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