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McCartney demands Great Northern restore services

Created on
11 May 2023

McCartney demands Great Northern restore services

London Assembly Member Joanne McCartney is demanding Great Northern restore the service it provided before March 2020.

Enfield’s representative at City Hall has slammed a railway company for failing to restore services to their pre-pandemic levels after describing its latest timetable change “very disappointing”.

Joanne McCartney – a Labour politician representing both Enfield and Haringey boroughs on the London Assembly – has long been calling for Great Northern to reintroduce the four-trains-per-hour off-peak service provided before 2020 along the Hertford Loop, but the rail firm has again ignored her pleas with its new summer timetable.

Speaking about the timetable announced last week by Great Northern, Joanne said: “We had four-trains-per-hour in the off-peak [before the pandemic] but we are now down to two-trains-per-hour and the new timetable does not increase capacity at all for services northwards of Alexandra Palace.

“I am very disappointed. This is my local train service and there is overcrowding during peak times, when there is standing room only, and off-peak there are just two-trains-per-hour.

“We are still at half the service we had prior to the pandemic.”

Joanne has also been campaigning for Great Northern’s services to be transferred to Transport for London’s control, to become part of the London Overground network. However, the government has recently blocked this move.

In the meantime, the Labour AM wants to see Great Northern restore pre-pandemic service levels. But in a letter to her explaining the decision, the rail franchise’s managing director Tom Moran wrote: “[We] need to ensure we match our level of service to demand, particularly given the ongoing loss-making status of our railway, which continues to be subsidised by the Department for Transport.”

Joanne said she recognises that demand for services is still lower than it was pre-pandemic, but warned: “Part of this is because the government will not fund extra capacity, but there is a danger of a vicious circle – if people think there is a poor service, they won’t use it.

“Passengers won’t come back if they think they can’t rely on it. This is a growing area and a world class city and we should be doing better than two-trains-per-hour.”


Notes to editors

  • Joanne McCartney AM is the Labour London Assembly Member for Enfield and Haringey.

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