Members of the Rail, Maritime and Transport union (RMT) at Avanti West Coast will walk out for the second time this week in a dispute over rest-day working.
The intercity operator will run one train an hour between Euston and each of Wolverhampton (via Birmingham), Crewe and Manchester today. A limited service will run between Glasgow and Preston.
These trains will operate during limited hours with the first train of the day leaving Euston around 8am and the last train of the day from Euston departing before 5pm.
ℹ️Reminder: strike action affecting our services is taking place on 2 January.
We’ll be running a significantly reduced service and trains that do run are expected to be very busy.
We strongly advise that you check your entire journey before you travel 👇…
— Avanti West Coast (@AvantiWestCoast) January 2, 2025
North Wales, Blackpool and Edinburgh will have no Avanti West Coast services on Thursday due to greatly reduced timetables.
Avanti has advised passengers travelling to plan ahead, expect disruption and check the details of their last train home.
RMT members who work as train managers at Avanti West Coast will also be striking every Sunday from January 12 until May 25, 2025.
Kathryn O’Brien, executive director of customer experience at Avanti West Coast, said: “We’re disappointed by the RMT calling strike action on 2 January. Our customers will face significantly disrupted journeys as a result, and I would like to thank them for their patience and understanding.
“On the strike day we’ll have a significantly reduced service, so customers with tickets for January 2 are strongly advised to travel on alternative dates or claim a full fee-free refund. We remain open to working with the RMT to resolve the dispute.”
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An RMT spokesperson said: “It is wholly unacceptable that replacement managers can be paid around £500 per shift, about double what our Avanti members earn—while not providing the same service for passengers.
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“This kind of destructive approach has been seen time and again across train operating companies and is a hangover from the previous Conservative government, which encouraged practices that reward managers with excessive payouts instead of resolving disputes.
“Reaching a fair settlement would be more cost-effective and make far better use of Avanti’s resources.
“At the heart of the problem is a serious staff shortage, which is why there’s such a heavy reliance on overtime in the first place.”