Railways and Passenger Benefits Bill
Summary
What this is
The Railways Bill 2024-26 is the Government's primary structural rail-reform vehicle, creating Great British Railways (GBR) as a publicly-owned 'directing mind' that brings track and train into a single entity, alongside a strengthened passenger watchdog, a new access regime on GBR's network, and statutory roles for devolved governments and mayoral authorities.
Why it matters
It is the most significant rewrite of the Railways Act 1993 architecture since privatisation: it ends the ORR's role as access decision-maker on the GBR network (replacing it with an appeals function), reshapes the periodic review funding cycle, gives the Secretary of State power to amend existing track access contracts retrospectively, and consolidates passenger-protection functions currently split across ORR, Transport Focus and the Rail Ombudsman.
Current status
Introduced as Bill 325 on 5 November 2025, the Bill completed Commons Public Bill Committee on 10 February 2026 (reprinted as Bill 373 as amended in Committee) and remains at Report stage with daily amendment papers running through April-May 2026; the Scottish Parliament agreed an LCM on 24 March 2026 and DfTO began absorbing operator staff from 1 April 2026.
What changed recently
- 24 Apr 2026 — Government published its formal response to the Transport Committee's 8th Report on the Railways Bill (4th Special Report). →
- 1 Apr 2026 — First TOC staff transfers into DfT Operator Ltd ahead of GBR designation, prompting written questions from MPs about sequencing relative to Bill passage. →
- 25 Mar 2026 — DfT published the framework Memorandum of Understanding with Scottish Ministers and the full MoU with Welsh Ministers on applying the Bill in the devolved nations. →
- 24 Mar 2026 — Scottish Parliament agreed a Legislative Consent Motion for the Railways Bill. →
- 17 Mar 2026 — DfT announced Delay Repay reform and published the Government response to the ORR's independent review of train-operator revenue-protection practices. →
Key documents
Framework
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Railways Bill 373 2024-26 (as amended in Committee)
The current operative text following Public Bill Committee; 99 clauses and 4 Schedules including a new Schedule 3 on transfer schemes and the renumbered access-regime provisions.
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Railways Bill 325 2024-26 (as introduced)
The introduction print of 5 November 2025 — 93 clauses and 3 Schedules establishing GBR, the funding regime, designation of services, the Passengers' Council and the new access framework.
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A railway fit for Britain's future — government response
Government's November 2025 response to the rail reform consultation, setting the policy frame the Bill operationalises (passenger watchdog, integrated track and train, devolved roles).
Operationalising
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Explanatory Notes (Bill 325 EN)
DfT's clause-by-clause explanatory notes; sets out the policy intent for GBR as a 'directing mind', the periodic-review-replacement business-plan funding cycle, and the access-regime appeals architecture.
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ECHR Memorandum
Department's Convention-compatibility analysis flagging Article 6(1) (ORR's dual statutory roles in access appeals) and A1P1 (retrospective amendment of existing track access contracts under clause 71).
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Delegated Powers Memorandum
Memorandum to the Delegated Powers and Regulatory Reform Committee setting out and justifying the Bill's delegated powers, including the designation power in clause 1 and the access-contract amendment power in clause 71.
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DfT Impact Assessment
Final-stage IA setting out the rationale: information/coordination failure, principal-agent issues, externalities and productive inefficiency in the post-privatisation structure; subsequently rated Green by the RPC.
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Railways Bill equalities impact assessment
DfT's analysis of how Bill measures affect protected characteristics — informs the disabled-passenger duties in clause 18 and the accessibility roadmap commitments.
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Railways Bill landing page (gov.uk)
DfT's published collection of factsheets, IAs and supporting documents to accompany the Bill's introduction.
Implementation
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Framework MoU with Scottish Ministers
DfT/Scottish Government framework for how the Bill's track-and-train integration will apply in Scotland, including the GBR subsidiary/joint-company option.
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MoU with Welsh Ministers
DfT/Welsh Government MoU on applying the Bill in Wales and the Borders, partnering Transport for Wales with GBR and addressing Core Valley Lines.
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Scottish Parliament Legislative Consent Motion
LCM agreed by the Scottish Parliament on 24 March 2026 — necessary devolution underpinning for clauses bearing on Scottish railway activities.
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Railway Byelaws Amendment Order 2025 (SI 2025/1258)
Discrete secondary legislation modernising railway byelaws under the existing Transport Act 2000 framework, alongside Bill passage.
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Accessible railways roadmap
DfT roadmap of actions to make railways more accessible in the run-up to GBR establishment — operationalises the disability-related duties in clauses 18 and 33-34.
Scrutiny
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Transport Committee 8th Report — Railways Bill
The select committee's pre-legislative-style scrutiny report on the Bill, addressing freight, accessibility, devolution interface and the design of the access regime.
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Transport Committee 4th Special Report — Government Response
Government's formal response (April 2026) to the Transport Committee's 8th Report.
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Commons Library Briefing CBP-10386 — Railways Bill 2024-26
Independent Commons Library overview of the Bill's contents, policy background and parliamentary progress.
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RPC opinion: Railways Bill impact assessment (Green-rated)
Regulatory Policy Committee opinion confirming the DfT's IA is fit for purpose.
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RPC opinion on Bill IA (Green-rated)
Confirmatory RPC opinion published alongside introduction.
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Second Reading debate (9 December 2025)
Commons Second Reading — the principal stage at which Members tested the policy frame before Committee.
Evidence
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A railway fit for Britain's future — executive summary
Government response executive summary distilling consultation themes into Bill design choices.
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A railway fit for Britain's future (consultation)
Original DfT consultation seeking views on proposals to reform Great Britain's railways, prior to the Bill.
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Draft Rail Reform Bill (February 2024)
The previous administration's draft Rail Reform Bill — predecessor text scrutinised by the Transport Committee in 2024 that informed the structure of the present Bill.
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Ministers set out blueprint for future of the railways through draft Rail Reform Bill (Feb 2024)
Conservative-era launch of the draft Rail Reform Bill, identifying continuity in the track-and-train integration policy direction.
Consultations
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A railway fit for Britain's future
The originating consultation whose response shaped the Bill as introduced.
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A railway fit for Britain's future: government response
Sets out which consultation positions were carried into the Bill text.
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A railway fit for Britain's future: government response – executive summary
Companion to the full response.
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Independent review of train operator revenue protection practices: government response
Adjacent operational consultation closing alongside Bill passage — relevant to the Passengers' Council standards framework.
Stakeholders
Sponsoring department 1
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Department for Transport
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Sponsoring minister 4
Lead committee 3
Witnesses & evidence-givers 12
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Office of Rail and Road
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Transport Focus
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RMT (National Union of Rail, Maritime and Transport Workers)
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ASLEF (Associated Society of Locomotive Engineers and Firemen)
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Rail Freight Group
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Railway Industry Association
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ALLRAIL (Alliance of Passenger Rail New Entrants)
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Lumo and Hull Trains
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Trainline
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Independent Rail Retailers
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Andy Burnham (Mayor of Greater Manchester)
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Urban Transport Group
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Political commitments
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commitment Manifesto pledge
Reform the railways and bring them into public ownership
Why linked: The 2024 Labour manifesto commitment is the foundational political driver; the IA explicitly states the Bill 'delivers on the government's commitment to create a unified and simplified rail sector'.
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commitment Manifesto pledge
Establish a new passenger watchdog
Why linked: The Bill's Part 2 Chapter 2 (the Passengers' Council) implements this manifesto commitment by consolidating consumer functions from ORR, Transport Focus and the Rail Ombudsman.
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commitment King's Speech announcement
Railways and Passenger Benefits Bill
Why linked: The King's Speech 2026 dedicated section on the Railways and Passenger Benefits Bill positions structural reform plus passenger-rights reform as a single legislative package.
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commitment Ministerial statement
Bringing track and train together under a new Great British Railways
Draft bill sets out blueprint for bringing track and train together under a new Great British Railways, leveraging private sector innovation
Why linked: Predecessor commitment carried forward — the previous administration's February 2024 Draft Rail Reform Bill identified track-and-train integration as the structural target.
Open questions & gaps
Pending in the lifecycle
- Commons Report and Third Reading following the run of daily amendment papers through April-May 2026.
- Lords stages, including likely scrutiny of clause 71 (retrospective amendment of access contracts) on A1P1 grounds.
- Welsh Senedd LCM (Scottish LCM already secured; Welsh equivalent not yet recorded in events).
- Royal Assent expected within the 2024-26 session; commencement regulations for designation of the GBR body corporate under clause 1.
Beyond the corpus
- MISSING Government Response to Transport Committee on freight target and access-regime competition concerns — published 24 April 2026 but text not in body corpus —
- MISSING Welsh Senedd Legislative Consent Motion text —
- MISSING Draft regulations under clause 1 designating GBR —
- MISSING Draft Long-Term Rail Strategy under clause 15 —
Confidence gaps
- Whether the daily amendment papers from late February to late April 2026 represent Report-stage marshalling or further Committee revisits is not unambiguously visible from titles alone.
- The interplay between DfTO's operational consolidation from 1 April 2026 and the statutory designation of GBR under clause 1 — i.e. how long DfTO remains the operating vehicle before GBR is designated.
Full timeline
3872026
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: HL Bill 25 Running list of amendments – 9 July 2026
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: HL Bill 25 Running list of amendments – 8 July 2026
Railways Bill
Second Reading 16:14:00 Moved by Lord Hendy of Richmond Hill: That the Bill be now read a second time. Scottish and Welsh legislative consent sought . The Minister of State, Department for Transport (Lord Hendy of Richmond Hill) (Lab): My …
Railways Bill — Lords stages
A Bill to make provision about railways and railway services; and for connected purposes. Originated in the Commons.
Letter from Lord Hendy of Richmond Hill to Lord Strathclyde, Chair of the Constitution Committee, responding to the Committee's letter on the Railways Bill
Railways Bill factsheet: introducing and designing Great British Railways
Why linked: DfT Railways Bill factsheet on introducing and designing GBR.
In response to: Railways Bill
Railways Bill factsheet: how the government plans to fund GBR
Why linked: DfT Railways Bill factsheet on funding GBR.
In response to: Railways Bill
Railways Bill factsheet: making best use of the rail network
Why linked: DfT Railways Bill factsheet on making best use of the rail network.
In response to: Railways Bill
Railways Bill factsheet: rail freight
Why linked: DfT Railways Bill factsheet on rail freight — operationalising the freight duty.
In response to: Railways Bill
Railways Bill factsheet: accessibility
Why linked: DfT Railways Bill factsheet on accessibility — operationalising accessibility provisions.
In response to: Railways Bill
Railways Bill factsheet: fares
Why linked: DfT Railways Bill factsheet on fares — operationalising fares provisions.
In response to: Railways Bill
Railways Bill factsheet: devolved and local government
Why linked: DfT Railways Bill factsheet on devolved and local government — operationalising the devolution interface.
In response to: Railways Bill
Railways Bill factsheet: tickets and retail
Why linked: DfT Railways Bill factsheet on tickets and retail — operationalising the GBR retail code.
In response to: Railways Bill
Railways Bill factsheet: holding Great British Railways to account
Why linked: DfT Railways Bill factsheet: holding GBR to account — operationalising explainer.
In response to: Railways Bill
Railways Bill factsheet: the passenger watchdog
Why linked: DfT Railways Bill factsheet: Passenger Watchdog — operationalising explainer.
In response to: Railways Bill
Railways Bill factsheet: the Long-Term Rail Strategy
Why linked: DfT Railways Bill factsheet: Long-Term Rail Strategy — operationalising explainer.
In response to: Railways Bill
Letter from Lord Strathclyde, Chair of the Constitution Committee to Lord Hendy of Richmond Hill regarding the Railways Bill
Railways Bill — Supplementary European Convention On Human Rights Memorandum from the Department For Transport
Railways Bill — Delegated Powers Memorandum
Railways Bill — HL Bill 25 Explanatory Notes
Railways Bill — HL Bill 25 (as brought from the Commons)
Railways Bill
First Reading 14:43:00 The Bill was brought from the Commons, read a first time and ordered to be printed.
Railways Bill — Bill proceedings: Commons: Report Stage Proceedings as at 10 June 2026
Railways Bill
Consideration of Bill, as amended in the Public Bill Committee [Relevant documents: Eighth Report of the Transport Committee of Session 2024-26, Railways Bill, HC 1472, and the Government response, HC 1836.] New Clause 48 Tax consequences of transfer schemes “(1) …
Railways Bill — Third reading
A Bill to make provision about railways and railway services; and for connected purposes.
Railways Bill — Report stage
A Bill to make provision about railways and railway services; and for connected purposes.
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Notices of Amendments as at 30 April 2026
Railways Bill — Bill 001 2026-27 (reintroduced at Report Stage) - pdf
Railways Bill — Delegated Powers Memorandum: Memorandum from the Department for Transport to the Delegated Powers and Regulatory Reform Committee - reissued 14 May 2026
Railways Bill — Explanatory Notes: Bill 001 EN 2026-27 - pdf
Railways Bill — Bill 001 2026-27 (reintroduced at Report Stage) - html
Rail Passengers' Charter Bill
Why linked: Filled the "Passenger charter and service standards documentation" gap via web research
A Private Member's Bill introduced in the 2024–26 session to establish a Rail Passengers' Charter, setting out specific guarantees and targets for passenger rail services and providing for penalties where the Charter is not complied with.
The King's Speech 2026 – Background Briefing Notes (PDF)
Why linked: Filled the "King's Speech 2026 background briefing notes on rail reform" gap via web research
The full PDF of the King's Speech 2026 background briefing notes from the Prime Minister's Office, containing dedicated section on the Railways and Passenger Benefits Bill (p.75) setting out the rationale for establishing Great British Railways.
King's Speech 2026: Immigration and Asylum Bill
Why linked: Filled the "King's Speech 2026 background briefing notes on rail reform" gap via web research
The King's Speech 2026 bill to increase confidence in the security of immigration and asylum systems and support a firm but fair framework.
Archived: codex: kings-speech cross-bill cleanup · 15 May 2026
Telecoms Modernisation: Critical National Infrastructure Charter
Why linked: British Transport Police is a responsible body for the thread; this CNI charter relates to critical infrastructure protection which may be relevant to rail industry transition and passenger safety frameworks
This document sets out telecoms companies’ approach to protect CNI during telecoms modernisations.
The King's Speech 2026
Why linked: King's Speech 2026 explicitly names 'Railways and Passenger Benefits Bill' and Great British Railways as key legislative proposal
His Majesty’s most gracious speech to both Houses of Parliament.
King's Speech 2026: background briefing notes
Why linked: King's Speech 2026 background briefing notes - foundational source document for the King's Speech that announced this bill
Read the briefing notes on the announcements made in the 2026 King’s Speech.
King's Speech announces Railways and Passenger Benefits Bill
Why linked: The King's Speech 2026 and official briefing notes announce the Railways and Passenger Benefits Bill as part of the government's legislative programme.
The King's Speech 2026 transport bill to establish Great British Railways and deliver passenger-focused rail reform.
Great British Railways and the public ownership programme
Why linked: DfT guidance page (May 2026) tracking the GBR and public ownership programme — directly operationalises the Bill
Updates on the programme to transfer rail services into public ownership and establish GBR as the body responsible for passenger services and infrastructure.
King's Speech 2026: Transport
Why linked: King's Speech 2026 Transport briefing that will address the transport bill agenda including Great British Railways establishment, directly named in thread summary as King's Speech 2026 transport bill context.
Type: Lords Library Note (LLN-2026-0021) This briefing explores what announcements the government could make in the King’s Speech on 13 May 2026 about transport.
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, whether she has considered alternatives to the staff travel pass for Brighton and Hove Buses and Metrobus staff for use on the GTR network.
Why linked: Question about staff travel pass alternatives for bus and rail operators (GTR network); relates to passenger-focused rail service operations during GBR implementation
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, whether she has considered alternatives to the staff travel pass for Brighton and Hove Buses and Metrobus staff for use on the GTR network.
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, on what grounds was the decision taken to terminate staff rail pass, the reciprocal travel arrangement between Govia Thameslink Railway and the local bus…
Why linked: Question about staff rail pass termination affecting Govia Thameslink Railway operations; relevant to passenger rail franchise and operational reform under GBR transition
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, on what grounds was the decision taken to terminate staff rail pass, the reciprocal travel arrangement between Govia Thameslink Railway and the local bus operators Brighton & Hove Buses and Metrobus, when …
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, what steps her Department is taking under GBR to increase cross border rail connections, such as the Wrexham-Shropshire-Midlands Railway.
Why linked: Direct question about GBR (Great British Railways) implementation regarding cross-border rail connections, explicitly within the interpreted scope of the Bill's structural and regulatory reform
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, what steps her Department is taking under GBR to increase cross border rail connections, such as the Wrexham-Shropshire-Midlands Railway.
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Notices of Amendments as at 29 April 2026
Formal meeting (private meeting) — Transport Committee — 2026-04-28
Why linked: Transport Committee formal meeting (28 April 2026) — committee scrutiny activity in the Bill period
Event type: Formal meeting (private meeting) | Committee: Transport Committee | Starts: 2026-04-28T15:00:00+00:00 | Ends: 2026-04-28T16:00:00+00:00 | Location: The Macmillan Room, Portcullis House | Status: completed
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, how competition regulations on state aid are applied by the Office of Rail and Road when assessing applications for Open Access rail services; and what changes are expected following the ORR's move into her Dep
Why linked: PQ on how competition regulations and state aid are applied by ORR under GBR — directly on regulator-Bill interface
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, how competition regulations on state aid are applied by the Office of Rail and Road when assessing applications for Open Access rail services; and what changes are expected following the ORR's move …
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Notices of Amendments as at 28 April 2026
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, what expenditure has Network Rail undertaken on public affairs companies, and for what purposes, since 4 July 2024.
Why linked: Written question on Network Rail public affairs spending (April 2026) - scrutiny of key public body (Network Rail) involved in Great British Railways transition
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, what expenditure has Network Rail undertaken on public affairs companies, and for what purposes, since 4 July 2024.
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, what assessment she has made of the future role of the Railway Benefit Fund under Great British Railways.
Why linked: Written question on future role of Railway Benefit Fund under Great British Railways, directly relevant to GBR governance and transition
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, what assessment she has made of the future role of the Railway Benefit Fund under Great British Railways.
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, what assessment she has made of the opportunities presented by Great British Railways to improve access to rail-side infrastructure for mobile connectivity, including by addressing historic barriers related to
Why linked: Written question on GBR opportunities to improve access to rail-side infrastructure, relevant to passenger accessibility and service standards
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, what assessment she has made of the opportunities presented by Great British Railways to improve access to rail-side infrastructure for mobile connectivity, including by addressing historic barriers related to
4th Special Report - Railways Bill: Government Response
Why linked: Government response to the Transport Committee's report on the Bill (4th Special Report, April 2026).
Government response to the Transport Committee's report on the Bill (4th Special Report, April 2026).
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Notices of Amendments as at 24 April 2026
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, what estimate her Department has made of the current shortage of train drivers, broken down by Department for Transport Operator area, in terms of a) total number of drivers required, and b) percentage shortfal
Why linked: PQ on train driver shortage by region — directly on operational backdrop to the Bill
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, what estimate her Department has made of the current shortage of train drivers, broken down by Department for Transport Operator area, in terms of a) total number of drivers required, and b) …
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Notices of Amendments as at 21 April 2026
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, for what reason she plans to transfer staff to Department of Transport Operator Ltd prior to the completion of the Railways Bill.
Why linked: PQ on staff transfer to Department for Transport Operator Ltd prior to completion of the Bill.
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, for what reason she plans to transfer staff to Department of Transport Operator Ltd prior to the completion of the Railways Bill.
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Notices of Amendments as at 16 April 2026
Letter from the Secretary of State for Transport relating to the Shadow Great British Railways, dated 23 March 2026
Why linked: Letter from Secretary of State on the Shadow Great British Railways (March 2026) — directly on transition arrangements
Direction: to_committee
Letter from the Secretary of State for Transport relating to Great British Railways and Memorandum of Understanding with Welsh Ministers, dated 26 March 2026
Why linked: Letter from Secretary of State for Transport on GBR and the Welsh MoU (April 2026) — directly on the Welsh devolution interface
Direction: to_committee
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Notices of Amendments as at 15 April 2026
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Notices of Amendments as at 13 April 2026
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Notices of Amendments as at 10 April 2026
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, what steps she is taking to protect transport workers a) jobs b) pay c) pensions d) conditions and e) travel facilities in the context of the transition to Great British Railways.
Why linked: PQ on transport workers' jobs, pay, pensions and conditions during transition — directly on Bill staff-transfer issues
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, what steps she is taking to protect transport workers a) jobs b) pay c) pensions d) conditions and e) travel facilities in the context of the transition to Great British Railways.
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Notices of Amendments as at 27 March 2026
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Notices of Amendments as at 26 March 2026
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, what assessment she has made of the levels of challenges for transport workers in the transition to Great British Railways.
Why linked: PQ on challenges for transport workers in the GBR transition — directly on Bill
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, what assessment she has made of the levels of challenges for transport workers in the transition to Great British Railways.
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, what assessment she has made of the potential impact of the establishment of Great British Railways on the statutory duty to consult with the public on any significant change to Schedule 17 of the Ticketing and
Why linked: PQ on impact of GBR establishment on transport workers — directly on Bill
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, what assessment she has made of the potential impact of the establishment of Great British Railways on the statutory duty to consult with the public on any significant change to Schedule 17 …
Better journeys ahead: governments agree framework for Scotland’s rail network ahead of the creation of Great British Railways
Why linked: Government announcement (25 March 2026) of UK-Scotland framework on rail under GBR — substantive operational element of the Scottish framework MoU
New framework strengthens Scotland’s rail decision‑making, protecting devolved powers and delivering clearer, more reliable services for passengers.
Better journeys ahead: agreement secured to benefit Welsh passengers under Great British Railways
Why linked: Government announcement (25 March 2026) of UK-Welsh rail agreement under GBR — substantive operational element of the Welsh MoU
New UK–Welsh rail agreement gives Wales a bigger say in services, working together to deliver better and more reliable journeys and with a commitment to providing bilingual customer information.
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, what discussions she has had with (a) Ministers and (b) officials on the (i) the transfer of workers from private Train Operating Companies into the Department for Transport Operator and (ii) the transfer of wo
Why linked: PQ on transfer of workers from TOCs into Department for Transport Operator Ltd.
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, what discussions she has had with (a) Ministers and (b) officials on the (i) the transfer of workers from private Train Operating Companies into the Department for Transport Operator and (ii) the …
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, whether she has made an assessment of the potential merits of including provisions for the protection of transport workers’ pensions during the transition to Great British Railways in the Railways Bill.
Why linked: PQ on transport workers' pensions during transition under the Bill.
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, whether she has made an assessment of the potential merits of including provisions for the protection of transport workers’ pensions during the transition to Great British Railways in the Railways Bill.
Memorandum of Understanding between Secretary of State and Welsh Ministers: applying the Railways Bill in Wales
Why linked: MoU between SoS and Welsh Ministers on applying the Bill in Wales — implementation document.
Sets out roles and responsibilities of the Department for Transport and the Welsh Government on how Great British Railways and Transport for Wales will collaborate on the running of the railway in Wales.
Framework for a memorandum of understanding between the Secretary of State and Scottish Ministers: applying the Railways Bill in Scotland
Why linked: Framework for MoU between SoS and Scottish Ministers on applying the Bill — implementation document.
Sets out plans for publication of a memorandum of understanding (MoU) with Scottish Ministers on how Great British Railways may deliver services in Scotland.
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Notices of Amendments as at 25 March 2026
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, what steps she is taking to protect transport workers a) jobs b) pay c) pensions d) conditions and e) travel facilities in the transition to Great British Railways.
Why linked: PQ on protection of transport workers' pay, pensions, conditions during transition — directly on Bill
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, what steps she is taking to protect transport workers a) jobs b) pay c) pensions d) conditions and e) travel facilities in the transition to Great British Railways.
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, what steps she is taking to help ensure that all future Great British Railways workers are covered by collective bargaining agreements.
Why linked: PQ on ensuring all future GBR workers are covered by sectoral arrangements — directly on Bill
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, what steps she is taking to help ensure that all future Great British Railways workers are covered by collective bargaining agreements.
Railways Bill equalities impact assessment
Why linked: DfT Railways Bill equalities impact assessment (24 March 2026).
This is the Department for Transport's equalities impact assessment of measures within the Railways Bill.
Railways Bill — Legislative Consent Motions-devolved legislatures: Legislative Consent Motion Agreed by the Scottish Parliament - March 2026
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Notices of Amendments as at 24 March 2026
Rail Infrastructure
Why linked: Ministerial Statement on Rail Infrastructure (2026); contemporary DfT statement on rail sector direction relevant to Great British Railways implementation
UIN: HLWS1438 My Right Honourable friend, the Secretary of State for Transport (Heidi Alexander), has made the following Ministerial Statement. Reset update Today, I am publishing this government’s latest report to Parliament on High Speed Two (HS2).When I was appointe...
Rail Infrastructure
Why linked: Rail Infrastructure WMS (March 2026) on HS2 reset — adjacent rail investment context
UIN: HCWS1433 Reset update Today, I am publishing this government’s latest report to Parliament on High Speed Two (HS2).When I was appointed Secretary of State, I was clear that significant change was needed to bring HS2 under control. The history …
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, pursuant to the Answer of 11 March 2026 to Question 117438 on Great British Railways: Finance, if she will make an assessment of the potential merits of publishing details of the modelling, business case develo
Why linked: Written question directly on Great British Railways finance and policy
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, pursuant to the Answer of 11 March 2026 to Question 117438 on Great British Railways: Finance, if she will make an assessment of the potential merits of publishing details of the modelling, …
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Notices of Amendments as at 23 March 2026
DFTO takes next steps towards Great British Railways
Why linked: News announcement on DFTO board appointments for GBR establishment - directly covers implementation
Laura Shoaf and Tony Poulter join the Department for Transport Operator (DFTO) board, helping to set up Great British Railways (GBR).
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Notices of Amendments as at 20 March 2026
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Notices of Amendments as at 19 March 2026
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Notices of Amendments as at 18 March 2026
Independent review of train operator revenue protection practices: government response
Why linked: Government response to ORR's independent review of train operator revenue protection practices (March 2026) — operationalises the SoS's 2025 acceptance of ORR recommendations on revenue protection under public ownership
Government's response to the Office of Rail and Road's independent review of train operator revenue protection practices.
Delay Repay changes will make rail travel easier under Great British Railways
Why linked: Policy announcement on Delay Repay changes under Great British Railways - passenger-focused reform
These changes allow passengers to claim Delay Repay compensation faster and the rail industry to invest in improvements across the UK.
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Notices of Amendments as at 17 March 2026
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, what discussions she has had with trade unions regarding on the establishment of collective bargaining arrangements under Great British Railways.
Why linked: Written question on collective bargaining under GBR - structural reform of rail operations
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, what discussions she has had with trade unions regarding on the establishment of collective bargaining arrangements under Great British Railways.
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Notices of Amendments as at 16 March 2026
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Notices of Amendments as at 13 March 2026
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Notices of Amendments as at 12 March 2026
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, pursuant to the Answer of 2 March 2026 to Question 115554 on Great British Railways: Finance, whether she plans to publish the (a) internal modelling, (b) business case documentation and (c) analytical assessme
Why linked: Written question on GBR finance and implementation plans publication
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, pursuant to the Answer of 2 March 2026 to Question 115554 on Great British Railways: Finance, whether she plans to publish the (a) internal modelling, (b) business case documentation and (c) analytical …
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Notices of Amendments as at 11 March 2026
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Notices of Amendments as at 10 March 2026
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Notices of Amendments as at 9 March 2026
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Notices of Amendments as at 6 March 2026
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Notices of Amendments as at 5 March 2026
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Notices of Amendments as at 4 March 2026
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, whether the proposed Great British Railways ticketing website and mobile application will be (a) built upon existing industry retail systems and (b) a newly developed retail platform owned and operated by Great
Why linked: Written question on GBR ticketing website/app - passenger-facing reform
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, whether the proposed Great British Railways ticketing website and mobile application will be (a) built upon existing industry retail systems and (b) a newly developed retail platform owned and operated by Great
Letter from Rt Hon Heidi Alexander MP, Secretary of State, Department for Transport on publication of four Common Frameworks, dated 23.2.26
Why linked: Letter from SoS for Transport on publication of four Common Frameworks, relevant to devolved aspects of the Bill.
Direction: to_committee
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, what statutory role combined authorities will have under the Railways Bill in relation to service levels, timetabling and rolling stock deployment; what mechanisms will exist for regional leaders to challenge o
Why linked: PQ on combined authorities' statutory role under the Railways Bill (March 2026).
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, what statutory role combined authorities will have under the Railways Bill in relation to service levels, timetabling and rolling stock deployment; what mechanisms will exist for regional leaders to challenge o
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Notices of Amendments as at 3 March 2026
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, pursuant to the Answer of 10 February 2026 to Question 108456 on Great British Railways: Finance, whether (a) internal modelling, (b) business case documentation and (c) analytical assessment underpins the comm
Why linked: Written question on GBR finance modelling and assessment
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, pursuant to the Answer of 10 February 2026 to Question 108456 on Great British Railways: Finance, whether (a) internal modelling, (b) business case documentation and (c) analytical assessment underpins the comm
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Notices of Amendments as at 2 March 2026
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, what assessment she has made of the potential implications for her policies of the Office of Rail and Road’s decision not to extend the Rail Transparency Order to cover rail maintenance costs.
Why linked: Written question on ORR decision implications for GBR policy
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, what assessment she has made of the potential implications for her policies of the Office of Rail and Road’s decision not to extend the Rail Transparency Order to cover rail maintenance costs.
Department for Transport’s accounting officer assessment summaries for the Government Major Projects Portfolio
Why linked: Cited by workspace synthesis
Accounting officer assessment summaries for the Department for Transport’s (DfT) programmes and projects in the Government Major Projects Portfolio (GMPP).
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Notices of Amendments as at 26 February 2026
Letter from the Minister for Rail, Department for Transport relating to lowering the minimum age to be a train driver, dated 10 February 2026
Why linked: Letter from Minister for Rail on lowering the minimum age to be a train driver, an amendment area on the Bill.
Direction: to_committee
To ask the Minister for the Cabinet Office, pursuant to the answer of 29 January 2026, to Question 107278, on Department for Transport: Official Hospitality, whether the Cabinet Office has issued any guidance on Arm's Length Bodies using public funds to h
Why linked: PQ correspondence with DfT relating to Railways Bill.
To ask the Minister for the Cabinet Office, pursuant to the answer of 29 January 2026, to Question 107278, on Department for Transport: Official Hospitality, whether the Cabinet Office has issued any guidance on Arm's Length Bodies using public funds …
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Notices of Amendments as at 25 February 2026
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Notices of Amendments as at 24 February 2026
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Notices of Amendments as at 19 February 2026
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Notices of Amendments as at 13 February 2026
Rail Transport and Economic Growth
Why linked: Commons debate on Rail Transport and Economic Growth (Feb 2026) – contemporary debate likely covering rail reform and passenger benefits during Bill progression
Commons Chamber debate | Commons
Rail Transport and Economic Growth
Why linked: Commons debate on Rail Transport and Economic Growth (Feb 2026) – same as above, duplicate entry in candidate list
Commons Chamber debate | Commons
Rail Transport and Economic Growth
Why linked: Commons Chamber debate Rail Transport and Economic Growth (February 2026) — adjacent debate informing Bill scrutiny
Commons Chamber debate | Commons
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Notices of Amendments as at 12 February 2026
Letter from the Minister for Rail, Department for Transport relating to transfer of train operating companies into public ownership, dated 30 January 2026
Why linked: Letter from Minister for Rail on TOC transfer into public ownership (Feb 2026).
Direction: to_committee
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Notices of Amendments as at 11 February 2026
The RNEP should not become an unfunded wishlist: there must be a high bar of viability for projects to be included, and a commensurately high bar for any subsequent decision to remove them from the pipeline. The inclusion and status of projects should be regularly reviewed by the Secretary of State, the Office of Rail and Road and, when established, Great British Railways and the Passenger Watchdog. (Recommendation, Paragraph 71)
Why linked: Committee finding on the Rail Network Enhancements Pipeline — relevant to GBR's infrastructure-management functions.
The RNEP should not become an unfunded wishlist: there must be a high bar of viability for projects to be included, and a commensurately high bar for any subsequent decision to remove them from the pipeline. The inclusion and status …
While the Government insists that the intended relationship between clause 60 and clause 63 is clear, multiple stakeholders disagree. The Bill should be amended to make it clear that the capacity duty does not apply until after an infrastructure capacity plan has been developed. (Recommendation, Paragraph 72)
Why linked: Direct substantive scrutiny material on the Railways and Passenger Benefits Bill itself, raising stakeholder concerns about specific clauses (60 and 63) that require amendment—core legislative scrutiny content.
While the Government insists that the intended relationship between clause 60 and clause 63 is clear, multiple stakeholders disagree. The Bill should be amended to make it clear that the capacity duty does not apply until after an infrastructure capacity …
The UK rail network is a core national asset, supporting its own industrial ecosystem and underpinning broader economic growth and employment. The message from the rail industry has been clear: investment in that asset has too often been characterised by cycles of ‘boom and bust’, with uneven and uncertain funding and procurement putting the viability of employers (including SMEs) at risk and delaying much-needed improvements to the network. The capacity of the railway to flourish under Great...
Why linked: Committee transcript fragment positioning rail as 'core national asset' supporting Bill scrutiny
The UK rail network is a core national asset, supporting its own industrial ecosystem and underpinning broader economic growth and employment. The message from the rail industry has been clear: investment in that asset has too often been characterised by …
Railways Bill (Thirteenth sitting)
Why linked: Railways Bill (Thirteenth sitting) - legislative scrutiny
The Committee consisted of the following Members: Chairs: Paula Barker, Wera Hobhouse, † Sir Alec Shelbrooke, Matt Western † Argar, Edward (Melton and Syston) (Con) † Caliskan, Nesil (Comptroller of His Majesty's Household) † Conlon, Liam (Beckenham and Penge) (Lab) …
Railways Bill (Fourteenth sitting)
Why linked: Public Bill Committee debate on Railways Bill (Fourteenth sitting) - primary legislative scrutiny
The Committee consisted of the following Members: Chairs: Paula Barker, Wera Hobhouse, Sir Alec Shelbrooke, † Matt Western Argar, Edward (Melton and Syston) (Con) † Caliskan, Nesil (Comptroller of His Majesty's Household) Conlon, Liam (Beckenham and Penge) (Lab) † Francis, …
Public Bill Committee: Railways Bill (Thirteenth sitting)
Why linked: Public Bill Committee: Railways Bill (Thirteenth sitting) - legislative scrutiny
The Committee consisted of the following Members: Chairs: Paula Barker, Wera Hobhouse, † Sir Alec Shelbrooke, Matt Western † Argar, Edward (Melton and Syston) (Con) † Caliskan, Nesil (Comptroller of His Majesty's Household) † Conlon, Liam (Beckenham and Penge) (Lab) …
Public Bill Committee: Railways Bill (Fourteenth sitting)
Why linked: Public Bill Committee: Railways Bill (Fourteenth sitting) - legislative scrutiny
The Committee consisted of the following Members: Chairs: Paula Barker, Wera Hobhouse, Sir Alec Shelbrooke, † Matt Western Argar, Edward (Melton and Syston) (Con) † Caliskan, Nesil (Comptroller of His Majesty's Household) Conlon, Liam (Beckenham and Penge) (Lab) † Francis, …
We recommend that the Government commission an independent review of the beginning of Control Period 7 in comparison to the beginning of previous Control Periods. The review should also survey the volatility of spend within Control Periods, identify whether this is systemic, and consider whether they could be better managed to smooth the flow of work. It should seek early lessons from the new partnership model being pursued in the Southern region, and consider whether more certainty could be ...
Why linked: Transport Committee findings on Control Period 7 and GBR transition
We recommend that the Government commission an independent review of the beginning of Control Period 7 in comparison to the beginning of previous Control Periods. The review should also survey the volatility of spend within Control Periods, identify whether this …
The RNEP should also be a tool for promoting rail infrastructure investment from sources other than central government. We urge the Government to implement the findings of the Office of Rail and Road’s review of the Rail Network Investment Framework, and in the next iteration of the RNEP, identify projects where private sector investment would be welcome, or could be decisive. (Recommendation, Paragraph 71)
Why linked: Transport Committee inquiry on RNEP and infrastructure investment alongside GBR
The RNEP should also be a tool for promoting rail infrastructure investment from sources other than central government. We urge the Government to implement the findings of the Office of Rail and Road’s review of the Rail Network Investment Framework, …
The Department should set out in the Long Term Rail Strategy a clear policy statement on its intention to limit the proliferation of rolling stock types. Within two years, the Department and Great British Railways should define a small number of standard train families for use across the national network, to achieve better value for money and an improved experience for passengers, including through more widespread level boarding. These should be deployed and refreshed over successive procurem...
Why linked: Transport Committee recommendation on rolling stock policy within GBR
The Department should set out in the Long Term Rail Strategy a clear policy statement on its intention to limit the proliferation of rolling stock types. Within two years, the Department and Great British Railways should define a small number …
The advent of Great British Railways provides a golden opportunity for decision-makers on the railway to approach investment planning differently. Successive governments must be prepared to commit to reaching a long-term consensus on which investments should be prioritised, and to following through on those decisions. While we accept the legitimacy of different political choices about how to allocate public resources, chopping and changing decisions on infrastructure investment is almost alwa...
Why linked: Transport Committee inquiry findings on GBR establishment and industry fragmentation - directly on governance reform
The advent of Great British Railways provides a golden opportunity for decision-makers on the railway to approach investment planning differently. Successive governments must be prepared to commit to reaching a long-term consensus on which investments should be prioritised, and to …
The Long Term Rail Strategy guiding Great British Railways needs to have a timescale of at least 30 years to provide the necessary vision for underpinning shorter-term decisions on specific projects and funding. It also needs to be protected from unnecessary or radical changes of direction that would undermine its value. Significant amendments to the LTRS should require formal consultation with industry and with Parliament. We recommend that the Secretary of State be required to lay the Strat...
Why linked: Transport Committee inquiry on Long Term Rail Strategy for GBR
The Long Term Rail Strategy guiding Great British Railways needs to have a timescale of at least 30 years to provide the necessary vision for underpinning shorter-term decisions on specific projects and funding. It also needs to be protected from …
We want Great British Railways to reach its potential for making unified decisions over track and train informed by expertise in railway systems. We expect political leaders to set its strategic direction and hold it accountable for delivery, but micromanagement would work against the best interests of passengers and industry. The Department must be clear about the level of autonomy it expects GBR to exercise in enhancements planning, and how ministerial oversight will be exercised in a way t...
Why linked: Transport Committee inquiry on GBR unified decision-making between track and train
We want Great British Railways to reach its potential for making unified decisions over track and train informed by expertise in railway systems. We expect political leaders to set its strategic direction and hold it accountable for delivery, but micromanagement …
The Government intends that Great British Railways should be a responsible guiding mind: to achieve this, it requires independence and protection from political interference in its day-to-day operations. Clause 7 as currently drafted would permit a future Secretary of State, if so minded, to micromanage GBR through directions. The intention of the current Government that the power only be used sparingly could be reflected in the legislation. (Conclusion, Paragraph 20)
Why linked: Transport Committee inquiry on GBR independence and governance structure
The Government intends that Great British Railways should be a responsible guiding mind: to achieve this, it requires independence and protection from political interference in its day-to-day operations. Clause 7 as currently drafted would permit a future Secretary of State, …
There are benefits to unified duties but the Bill is insufficiently clear on how they will operate in decision-making, in particular the weighting to be assigned to each factor. The Office of Rail and Road will enforce GBR’s business plan but is not bound by it. If the Government intends ORR to have regard to detail on how to balance duties that is contained in the business plan, it must put that detail into statutory guidance. (Conclusion, Paragraph 38)
Why linked: Transport Committee scrutiny of unified duties in the Bill
There are benefits to unified duties but the Bill is insufficiently clear on how they will operate in decision-making, in particular the weighting to be assigned to each factor. The Office of Rail and Road will enforce GBR’s business plan …
The reliance of the Passengers’ Council on the Office of Rail and Road to take enforcement action could add complexity and delay to an already complicated system for complaints, enforcement and remedies, and we are concerned that an opportunity to streamline these elements of the railway could be missed. (Conclusion, Paragraph 54)
Why linked: Transport Committee inquiry on Passengers' Council enforcement and ORR coordination - passenger protection reform
The reliance of the Passengers’ Council on the Office of Rail and Road to take enforcement action could add complexity and delay to an already complicated system for complaints, enforcement and remedies, and we are concerned that an opportunity to …
The clause 18 duty on Great British Railways, the Office of Rail and Road and the Secretary of State, and the clause 36 duty on the Passengers’ Council, should be amended to require these bodies to exercise their functions in a way that improves accessibility of the rail network. (Recommendation, Paragraph 61)
Why linked: Direct parliamentary query referencing specific clauses 18 and 36 of the Railways and Passenger Benefits Bill relating to duties on Great British Railways, ORR, and the Passengers' Council
The clause 18 duty on Great British Railways, the Office of Rail and Road and the Secretary of State, and the clause 36 duty on the Passengers’ Council, should be amended to require these bodies to exercise their functions in …
While the role of open access passenger services is a matter for debate, we note that it is the Government’s clear intention to promote greater freight use of the railway. The appeal mechanism for open access decisions set out in the Bill—applying judicial review principles—is overly narrow and jeopardises this aim. The Bill should be amended to give freight operators the ability to appeal access decisions to the Office of Rail and Road on additional grounds that reflect the outcomes the Gove...
Why linked: Transport Committee inquiry findings on open access and freight within GBR context
While the role of open access passenger services is a matter for debate, we note that it is the Government’s clear intention to promote greater freight use of the railway. The appeal mechanism for open access decisions set out in …
Railways Bill (Thirteenth sitting)
Why linked: Hansard record of the Railways Bill PBC Thirteenth sitting.
Public Bill Committees debate | Commons
Railways Bill (Fourteenth sitting)
Why linked: Hansard record of the Railways Bill PBC Fourteenth sitting.
Public Bill Committees debate | Commons
While we recognise the fledging status of the UK Infrastructure Pipeline, we are unconvinced of its current usefulness to stakeholders in the rail industry because of its lack of detail at the necessary scale. We ask the Department for Transport to set out how the UK Infrastructure Pipeline will relate to the RNEP, the purpose of each, and where industry should look for the latest and most detailed information. Wherever there are overlapping sources of information, care is needed to ensure th...
Why linked: Transport Committee observation on the UK Infrastructure Pipeline as it relates to rail.
While we recognise the fledging status of the UK Infrastructure Pipeline, we are unconvinced of its current usefulness to stakeholders in the rail industry because of its lack of detail at the necessary scale. We ask the Department for Transport …
We welcome the provision made in the Railways Bill for a Long Term Rail Strategy: it is long past time that such a vision is set out for the railways. The Strategy must provide a basis for consensus and certainty about long- term investment priorities. If it puts in place stable scaffolding for practical plans and pipelines, the LTRS has the potential to insulate those plans from unnecessary changes of direction or delay, to convey confidence to industry and to bring improvements to the netwo...
Why linked: Transport Committee welcome of the Long-Term Rail Strategy provisions.
We welcome the provision made in the Railways Bill for a Long Term Rail Strategy: it is long past time that such a vision is set out for the railways. The Strategy must provide a basis for consensus and certainty …
The Department for Transport has previously accepted the need to update and streamline the complex and confusing legal framework for transport accessibility. It would be unhelpful were the Railways Bill to add more complexity to this situation, especially if it did not meaningfully add to practical opportunities for enforcement action while doing so. (Conclusion, Paragraph 67)
Why linked: Transport Committee recommendation on transport accessibility law and the Railways Bill.
The Department for Transport has previously accepted the need to update and streamline the complex and confusing legal framework for transport accessibility. It would be unhelpful were the Railways Bill to add more complexity to this situation, especially if it …
We recognise the need for structural change on the railways. We support the main purpose of the Railways Bill: to establish Great British Railways as a single organisation overseeing both track and train, and capable of acting as a ‘directing mind’ for the railway. (Conclusion, Paragraph 3)
Why linked: Transport Committee statement on supporting the main purpose of the Bill.
We recognise the need for structural change on the railways. We support the main purpose of the Railways Bill: to establish Great British Railways as a single organisation overseeing both track and train, and capable of acting as a ‘directing …
Understandably, and as with previous railways legislation, the Railways Bill gives a partial picture of the framework for a new regime under Great British Railways. The Bill is designed to last a long time and is accompanied by various additional documentation. The unpublished documents are important not just for scrutiny, but for confidence throughout the industry. This inquiry has picked up on issues that may be addressed in future documentation, such as issues of accountability and enforce...
Why linked: Transport Committee observation on the Bill providing a partial picture of the GBR framework.
Understandably, and as with previous railways legislation, the Railways Bill gives a partial picture of the framework for a new regime under Great British Railways. The Bill is designed to last a long time and is accompanied by various additional …
Before the Bill reaches Report Stage in the House of Commons the Department for Transport should publish a comprehensive list, with target dates, of decisions, key documents and planned consultations leading up to the establishment of Great British Railways and in its first year of operation. This should include milestones for consultation and negotiation with the affected workforce. (Recommendation, Paragraph 7) Our scrutiny of the Bill
Why linked: Transport Committee recommendation on publication of decisions/documents before Report stage.
Before the Bill reaches Report Stage in the House of Commons the Department for Transport should publish a comprehensive list, with target dates, of decisions, key documents and planned consultations leading up to the establishment of Great British Railways and …
8th Report - Railways Bill
Why linked: Transport Committee 8th Report on the Railways Bill — primary scrutiny output.
Transport Committee 8th Report on the Railways Bill — primary scrutiny output.
Railways Bill — Bill 373 2024-26 (as amended in Committee) - xml
Railways Bill — Bill 373 2024-26 (as amended in Committee) - pdf
Railways Bill — Bill 373 2024-26 (as amended in Committee) - html
Railways Bill — Bill proceedings: Commons: All proceedings up to 10 February 2026 at Public Bill Committee Stage
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Public Bill Committee Amendments as at 10 February 2026
Railways Bill — Selection of amendments: Commons: Chair’s selection and grouping of amendments for debate in Committee - 10 February 2026
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Notices of Amendments as at 9 February 2026
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Notices of Amendments as at 6 February 2026
Railways Bill (Eleventh sitting)
Why linked: Public Bill Committee — Railways Bill (Eleventh sitting), 5 February 2026; substantive Hansard debate on the Bill
The Committee consisted of the following Members: Chairs: Paula Barker, Wera Hobhouse, Sir Alec Shelbrooke, † Matt Western † Argar, Edward (Melton and Syston) (Con) † Caliskan, Nesil (Comptroller of His Majesty's Household) † Conlon, Liam (Beckenham and Penge) (Lab) …
Railways Bill (Twelfth sitting)
Why linked: Railways Bill (Twelfth sitting) - legislative scrutiny
The Committee consisted of the following Members: Chairs: Paula Barker, † Wera Hobhouse, Sir Alec Shelbrooke, Matt Western † Argar, Edward (Melton and Syston) (Con) † Caliskan, Nesil (Comptroller of His Majesty's Household) † Conlon, Liam (Beckenham and Penge) (Lab) …
Public Bill Committee: Railways Bill (Eleventh sitting)
Why linked: Public Bill Committee: Railways Bill (Eleventh sitting) - legislative scrutiny
The Committee consisted of the following Members: Chairs: Paula Barker, Wera Hobhouse, Sir Alec Shelbrooke, † Matt Western † Argar, Edward (Melton and Syston) (Con) † Caliskan, Nesil (Comptroller of His Majesty's Household) † Conlon, Liam (Beckenham and Penge) (Lab) …
Public Bill Committee: Railways Bill (Twelfth sitting)
Why linked: Public Bill Committee: Railways Bill (Twelfth sitting) - legislative scrutiny
The Committee consisted of the following Members: Chairs: Paula Barker, † Wera Hobhouse, Sir Alec Shelbrooke, Matt Western † Argar, Edward (Melton and Syston) (Con) † Caliskan, Nesil (Comptroller of His Majesty's Household) † Conlon, Liam (Beckenham and Penge) (Lab) …
Railways Bill (Eleventh sitting)
Why linked: Hansard record of the Railways Bill PBC Eleventh sitting.
Public Bill Committees debate | Commons
Railways Bill (Twelfth sitting)
Why linked: Hansard record of the Railways Bill PBC Twelfth sitting.
Public Bill Committees debate | Commons
Railways Bill — Written evidence submitted by Heathrow Southern Railway Ltd (RB33)
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Public Bill Committee Amendments as at 5 February 2026
Letter from the Minister for Rail, Department for Transport relating to the appointment of the Chair of British Transport Police, dated 27 January 2026
Why linked: Letter from Minister for Rail on the appointment of the Chair of British Transport Police, relevant to Bill provisions.
Direction: to_committee
Railways Bill — Selection of amendments: Commons: Chair’s selection and grouping of amendments for debate in Committee - 5 February 2026
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Notices of Amendments as at 4 February 2026
Railways Bill (Ninth sitting)
Why linked: Railways Bill (Ninth sitting) - legislative scrutiny
The Committee consisted of the following Members: Chairs: † Paula Barker, Wera Hobhouse, Sir Alec Shelbrooke, Matt Western † Argar, Edward (Melton and Syston) (Con) † Caliskan, Nesil (Comptroller of His Majesty's Household) † Conlon, Liam (Beckenham and Penge) (Lab) …
Railways Bill (Tenth sitting)
Why linked: Railways Bill (Tenth sitting) - legislative scrutiny
The Committee consisted of the following Members: Chairs: Paula Barker, † Wera Hobhouse, Sir Alec Shelbrooke, Matt Western † Argar, Edward (Melton and Syston) (Con) † Caliskan, Nesil (Comptroller of His Majesty's Household) † Conlon, Liam (Beckenham and Penge) (Lab) …
Public Bill Committee: Railways Bill (Ninth sitting)
Why linked: Public Bill Committee: Railways Bill (Ninth sitting) - legislative scrutiny
The Committee consisted of the following Members: Chairs: † Paula Barker, Wera Hobhouse, Sir Alec Shelbrooke, Matt Western † Argar, Edward (Melton and Syston) (Con) † Caliskan, Nesil (Comptroller of His Majesty's Household) † Conlon, Liam (Beckenham and Penge) (Lab) …
Public Bill Committee: Railways Bill (Tenth sitting)
Why linked: Public Bill Committee: Railways Bill (Tenth sitting) - legislative scrutiny
The Committee consisted of the following Members: Chairs: Paula Barker, † Wera Hobhouse, Sir Alec Shelbrooke, Matt Western † Argar, Edward (Melton and Syston) (Con) † Caliskan, Nesil (Comptroller of His Majesty's Household) † Conlon, Liam (Beckenham and Penge) (Lab) …
Railways Bill (Ninth sitting)
Why linked: Hansard record of the Railways Bill PBC Ninth sitting.
Public Bill Committees debate | Commons
Railways Bill (Tenth sitting)
Why linked: Hansard record of the Railways Bill PBC Tenth sitting.
Public Bill Committees debate | Commons
Railways Bill — Written evidence submitted by the Samaritans (RB32)
Railways Bill — Written evidence submitted by FirstGroup (supplementary) (RB31)
Railways Bill — Written evidence submitted by Consumer Scotland (RB30)
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Public Bill Committee Amendments as at 3 February 2026
Railways Bill — Selection of amendments: Commons: Chair’s selection and grouping of amendments for debate in Committee - 3 Febuary 2026
Nationalised Passenger Rail Services
Why linked: Lords debate on Nationalised Passenger Rail Services (Feb 2026).
Lords Chamber debate | Lords
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Notices of Amendments as at 30 January 2026
Railways Bill (Seventh sitting)
Why linked: Hansard for Public Bill Committee seventh sitting on 29 January 2026 — directly on this Bill.
The Committee consisted of the following Members: Chairs: Paula Barker, Wera Hobhouse, Sir Alec Shelbrooke, † Matt Western † Argar, Edward (Melton and Syston) (Con) † Caliskan, Nesil (Comptroller of His Majesty's Household) † Conlon, Liam (Beckenham and Penge) (Lab) …
Public Bill Committee: Railways Bill (Seventh sitting)
Why linked: Public Bill Committee — Railways Bill (Seventh sitting), 29 January 2026; substantive Hansard debate on the Bill
The Committee consisted of the following Members: Chairs: Paula Barker, Wera Hobhouse, Sir Alec Shelbrooke, † Matt Western † Argar, Edward (Melton and Syston) (Con) † Caliskan, Nesil (Comptroller of His Majesty's Household) † Conlon, Liam (Beckenham and Penge) (Lab) …
Railways Bill (Eighth sitting)
Why linked: Railways Bill (Eighth sitting) - legislative scrutiny
The Committee consisted of the following Members: Chairs: Paula Barker, † Wera Hobhouse, Sir Alec Shelbrooke, Matt Western † Argar, Edward (Melton and Syston) (Con) † Caliskan, Nesil (Comptroller of His Majesty's Household) Conlon, Liam (Beckenham and Penge) (Lab) † …
Public Bill Committee: Railways Bill (Eighth sitting)
Why linked: Public Bill Committee: Railways Bill (Eighth sitting) - legislative scrutiny
The Committee consisted of the following Members: Chairs: Paula Barker, † Wera Hobhouse, Sir Alec Shelbrooke, Matt Western † Argar, Edward (Melton and Syston) (Con) † Caliskan, Nesil (Comptroller of His Majesty's Household) Conlon, Liam (Beckenham and Penge) (Lab) † …
Railways Bill (Eighth sitting)
Why linked: Hansard record of the Railways Bill PBC Eighth sitting.
Public Bill Committees debate | Commons
Railways Bill (Seventh sitting)
Why linked: Hansard record of the Railways Bill PBC Seventh sitting.
Public Bill Committees debate | Commons
Railways Bill — Written evidence submitted by London TravelWatch (RB29)
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Public Bill Committee Amendments as at 29 January 2026
Railways Bill — Selection of amendments: Commons: Chair’s selection and grouping of amendments for debate in Committee - 29 January 2026
Letter from the Minister for Rail, Department for Transport relating to the Railways Bill, dated 21 January 2026
Why linked: Letter from Minister for Rail to Public Bill Committee on the Bill (Jan 2026).
Direction: to_committee
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Notices of Amendments as at 28 January 2026
Railways Bill (Sixth sitting)
Why linked: Hansard for Public Bill Committee sixth sitting on 27 January 2026 — directly on this Bill.
The Committee consisted of the following Members: Chairs: Paula Barker, Wera Hobhouse, Sir Alec Shelbrooke, † Matt Western † Argar, Edward (Melton and Syston) (Con) † Caliskan, Nesil (Comptroller of His Majesty's Household) Conlon, Liam (Beckenham and Penge) (Lab) † …
Rail Infrastructure
Why linked: Commons Chamber debate on Rail Infrastructure (January 2026) — adjacent debate during the Bill's Committee period
Commons Chamber debate | Commons
Public Bill Committee: Railways Bill (Sixth sitting)
Why linked: Public Bill Committee — Railways Bill (Sixth sitting), 27 January 2026; substantive Hansard debate on the Bill
The Committee consisted of the following Members: Chairs: Paula Barker, Wera Hobhouse, Sir Alec Shelbrooke, † Matt Western † Argar, Edward (Melton and Syston) (Con) † Caliskan, Nesil (Comptroller of His Majesty's Household) Conlon, Liam (Beckenham and Penge) (Lab) † …
Railways Bill (Fifth sitting)
Why linked: Railways Bill (Fifth sitting) - legislative scrutiny
The Committee consisted of the following Members: Chairs: Paula Barker, Wera Hobhouse, † Sir Alec Shelbrooke, Matt Western † Argar, Edward (Melton and Syston) (Con) † Caliskan, Nesil (Comptroller of His Majesty's Household) † Conlon, Liam (Beckenham and Penge) (Lab) …
Public Bill Committee: Railways Bill (Fifth sitting)
Why linked: Public Bill Committee: Railways Bill (Fifth sitting) - legislative scrutiny
The Committee consisted of the following Members: Chairs: Paula Barker, Wera Hobhouse, † Sir Alec Shelbrooke, Matt Western † Argar, Edward (Melton and Syston) (Con) † Caliskan, Nesil (Comptroller of His Majesty's Household) † Conlon, Liam (Beckenham and Penge) (Lab) …
Railways Bill (Sixth sitting)
Why linked: Hansard record of the Railways Bill PBC Sixth sitting.
Public Bill Committees debate | Commons
Railways Bill (Fifth sitting)
Why linked: Hansard record of the Railways Bill PBC Fifth sitting.
Public Bill Committees debate | Commons
Railways Bill — Written evidence submitted by Lumo and Hull Trains (RB28)
Railways Bill — Written evidence submitted by Transport for All (supplementary) (RB27)
Railways Bill — Written evidence submitted by Transport UK (TUK) (RB26)
Railways Bill — Written evidence submitted by Danny Meers (RB25)
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Public Bill Committee Amendments as at 27 January 2026
Railways Bill — Selection of amendments: Commons: Chair’s selection and grouping of amendments for debate in Committee - 27 January 2026
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Notices of Amendments as at 26 January 2026
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Notices of Amendments as at 23 January 2026
Public Bill Committee: Railways Bill (Fourth sitting)
Why linked: Hansard for Public Bill Committee fourth sitting on 22 January 2026 — directly on this Bill.
The Committee consisted of the following Members: Chairs: Paula Barker, Wera Hobhouse, † Sir Alec Shelbrooke, Matt Western † Argar, Edward (Melton and Syston) (Con) † Caliskan, Nesil (Comptroller of His Majesty's Household) † Conlon, Liam (Beckenham and Penge) (Lab) …
Public Bill Committee: Railways Bill (Third sitting)
Why linked: Hansard for Public Bill Committee third sitting on 22 January 2026 — directly on this Bill.
The Committee consisted of the following Members: Chairs: Paula Barker, † Wera Hobhouse, Sir Alec Shelbrooke, Matt Western † Argar, Edward (Melton and Syston) (Con) † Caliskan, Nesil (Comptroller of His Majesty's Household) Conlon, Liam (Beckenham and Penge) (Lab) † …
Railways Bill (Fourth sitting)
Why linked: Public Bill Committee — Railways Bill (Fourth sitting), 22 January 2026; substantive Hansard debate on the Bill
The Committee consisted of the following Members: Chairs: Paula Barker, Wera Hobhouse, † Sir Alec Shelbrooke, Matt Western † Argar, Edward (Melton and Syston) (Con) † Caliskan, Nesil (Comptroller of His Majesty's Household) † Conlon, Liam (Beckenham and Penge) (Lab) …
Railways Bill (Third sitting)
Why linked: Public Bill Committee — Railways Bill (Third sitting), 22 January 2026; substantive Hansard debate on the Bill
The Committee consisted of the following Members: Chairs: Paula Barker, † Wera Hobhouse, Sir Alec Shelbrooke, Matt Western † Argar, Edward (Melton and Syston) (Con) † Caliskan, Nesil (Comptroller of His Majesty's Household) Conlon, Liam (Beckenham and Penge) (Lab) † …
Railways Bill (Third sitting)
Why linked: Hansard record of the Railways Bill PBC Third sitting.
Public Bill Committees debate | Commons
Railways Bill (Fourth sitting)
Why linked: Hansard record of the Railways Bill PBC Fourth sitting.
Public Bill Committees debate | Commons
Railways Bill — Written evidence submitted by Wheels for Wellbeing (RB24)
Railways Bill — Written evidence submitted by ASLEF (Associated Society of Locomotive Engineers and Firemen) (RB23)
Railways Bill — Written evidence submitted by techUK (RB22)
Railways Bill — Written evidence submitted by Railways Pension Scheme Trustee Company Limited (RPTCL) and Railpen (RB21)
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Public Bill Committee Amendments as at 22 January 2026
Railways Bill — Selection of amendments: Commons: Chair’s selection and grouping of amendments for debate in Committee - 22 January 2026
Letter from the Secretary of State for Transport relating to the appointment of Chair of Network Rail, dated 12 January 2026
Why linked: Letter from Secretary of State regarding Network Rail Chair appointment - governance implementation material for Great British Railways transition
Direction: to_committee
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Notices of Amendments as at 21 January 2026
Railways Bill (Second sitting)
Why linked: Public Bill Committee — Railways Bill (Second sitting), 20 January 2026; substantive Hansard debate on the Bill
The Committee consisted of the following Members: Chairs: † Paula Barker, Wera Hobhouse, Sir Alec Shelbrooke, Matt Western † Argar, Edward (Melton and Syston) (Con) † Caliskan, Nesil (Comptroller of His Majesty's Household) † Conlon, Liam (Beckenham and Penge) (Lab) …
Railways Bill (First sitting)
Why linked: Railways Bill Public Bill Committee first sitting debate; directly on the bill's scrutiny and passage
The Committee consisted of the following Members: Chairs: Paula Barker, Wera Hobhouse, † Sir Alec Shelbrooke, Matt Western † Argar, Edward (Melton and Syston) (Con) † Caliskan, Nesil (Comptroller of His Majesty's Household) † Conlon, Liam (Beckenham and Penge) (Lab) …
Public Bill Committee: Railways Bill (Second sitting)
Why linked: Public Bill Committee: Railways Bill (Second sitting); parliamentary committee stage documentation for the bill
The Committee consisted of the following Members: Chairs: † Paula Barker, Wera Hobhouse, Sir Alec Shelbrooke, Matt Western † Argar, Edward (Melton and Syston) (Con) † Caliskan, Nesil (Comptroller of His Majesty's Household) † Conlon, Liam (Beckenham and Penge) (Lab) …
Public Bill Committee: Railways Bill (First sitting)
Why linked: Public Bill Committee: Railways Bill (First sitting); parliamentary committee stage documentation for the bill
The Committee consisted of the following Members: Chairs: Paula Barker, Wera Hobhouse, † Sir Alec Shelbrooke, Matt Western † Argar, Edward (Melton and Syston) (Con) † Caliskan, Nesil (Comptroller of His Majesty's Household) † Conlon, Liam (Beckenham and Penge) (Lab) …
Railways Bill (First sitting)
Why linked: Hansard record of the Railways Bill PBC First sitting.
Public Bill Committees debate | Commons
Railways Bill (Second sitting)
Why linked: Hansard record of the Railways Bill PBC Second sitting.
Public Bill Committees debate | Commons
Railways Bill — Committee stage
A Bill to make provision about railways and railway services; and for connected purposes.
Railways Bill — Written evidence submitted by London St. Pancras Highspeed (RB01)
Railways Bill — Written evidence submitted by DP World (RB20)
Railways Bill — Written evidence submitted by Friends of Squires Gate (RB19)
Railways Bill — Written evidence submitted by Greater Manchester Combined Authority (RB18A)
Railways Bill — Written evidence: Letter submitted by Andy Burnham, Mayor of Greater Manchester (RB18)
Railways Bill — Written evidence submitted by Trainline (RB17)
Railways Bill — Written evidence submitted by ALLRAIL (Alliance of Passenger Rail New Entrants) (RB16A)
Railways Bill — Written evidence submitted by ALLRAIL (Alliance of Passenger Rail New Entrants) (RB16)
Railways Bill — Written evidence submitted by the Chartered Institute of Logistics and Transport UK (RB15)
Railways Bill — Written evidence submitted by Transport Focus (RB14)
Railways Bill — Written evidence submitted by Independent Rail Retailers (IRR) (RB13)
Railways Bill — Written evidence submitted by the Urban Transport Group (RB12)
Railways Bill — Written evidence submitted by We Own It (RB11B)
Railways Bill — Written evidence submitted by We Own It (RB11A)
Railways Bill — Written evidence submitted by Online Travel UK (RB10)
Railways Bill — Written evidence submitted by Arriva UK Trains (RB09)
Railways Bill — Written evidence submitted by Office of Rail and Road (RB08)
Railways Bill — Written evidence submitted by the National Union of Rail, Maritime and Transport Workers (RMT) (RB07)
Railways Bill — Written evidence submitted by the Rail Freight Group (RFG) (RB06)
Railways Bill — Written evidence submitted by the Railway Industry Association (RB05)
Railways Bill — Written evidence submitted by the Regulatory Policy Committee (RB04)
Railways Bill — Written evidence submitted by National Skills Academy for Rail (RB03)
Railways Bill — Written evidence submitted by Campaign for Better Transport (RB02)
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Public Bill Committee Amendments as at 20 January 2026
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Notices of Amendments as at 19 January 2026
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Notices of Amendments as at 16 January 2026
Improving accessibility at railway stations across Britain
Why linked: Ministerial statement on accessibility improvements at railway stations - passenger benefit directly tied to GBR commitment
UIN: HLWS1241 This government is committed to improving the accessibility of Britain’s railway and recognises the significant social and economic benefits of doing so. As we move towards the establishment of Great British Railways,?we will provide greater detail of?how...
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Notices of Amendments as at 15 January 2026
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Notices of Amendments as at 14 January 2026
New chairs of Network Rail and DFTO named
Why linked: Government news announcement naming new chairs of Network Rail and DFTO in January 2026 — directly relevant to the institutional stand-up of GBR.
Richard George and Sir Andrew Haines bring extensive experience to help improve passenger experience and operational performance we will see under Great British Railways.
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Notices of Amendments as at 12 January 2026
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Notices of Amendments as at 8 January 2026
Formal meeting (oral evidence session) — Transport Committee — 2026-01-07
Why linked: Transport Committee formal meeting on Railways Bill 2026-01-07; parliamentary committee inquiry into the bill
Event type: Formal meeting (oral evidence session) | Committee: Transport Committee | Inquiry: Railways Bill | Starts: 2026-01-07T09:15:00+00:00 | Ends: 2026-01-07T12:00:00+00:00 | Location: The Grimond Room, Portcullis House | Status: completed
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Notices of Amendments as at 7 January 2026
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Notices of Amendments as at 6 January 2026
2025
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Notices of Amendments as at 19 December 2025
Formal meeting (oral evidence session) — Transport Committee — 2025-12-17
Why linked: Transport Committee formal meeting on Railways Bill inquiry - direct parliamentary scrutiny by responsible body
Event type: Formal meeting (oral evidence session) | Committee: Transport Committee | Inquiry: Railways Bill | Starts: 2025-12-17T09:15:00+00:00 | Ends: 2025-12-17T12:00:00+00:00 | Location: The Grimond Room, Portcullis House | Status: completed
Railways Bill: call for evidence
Railways Bill — Amendment Paper: Notices of Amendments as at 11 December 2025
Formal meeting (oral evidence session) — Transport Committee — 2025-12-10
Why linked: Transport Committee formal meeting on Railways Bill 2025-12-10; parliamentary committee inquiry into the bill
Event type: Formal meeting (oral evidence session) | Committee: Transport Committee | Inquiry: Railways Bill | Starts: 2025-12-10T09:00:00+00:00 | Ends: 2025-12-10T12:30:00+00:00 | Location: The Wilson Room, Portcullis House | Status: completed
Railways Bill
Why linked: Railways Bill Second Reading parliamentary debate with reference to Transport Committee oral evidence; key parliamentary scrutiny of the bill
Second Reading [Relevant documents: Oral evidence taken before the Transport Committee on 26 November, on the Railways Bill, HC 1472 ; Written evidence to the Transport Committee, on the Railways Bill, reported to the House on 2 December, HC 1472 …
Railways Bill
Why linked: Hansard record of the Railways Bill debate in the Commons Chamber.
Commons Chamber debate | Commons
Railways Bill
Second Reading [Relevant documents: Oral evidence taken before the Transport Committee on 26 November, on the Railways Bill, HC 1472 ; Written evidence to the Transport Committee, on the Railways Bill, reported to the House on 2 December, HC 1472 …
Railways Bill — Second reading
A Bill to make provision about railways and railway services; and for connected purposes.
The Railway Byelaws Amendment Order 2025
Why linked: Railway Byelaws Amendment Order 2025 — secondary legislation in the rail regime period the Bill is reshaping
This Order amends the Railway Byelaws which were made by the Strategic Rail Authority in 2005 under section 219 of and Schedule 20 to the Transport Act 2000.
Letter from the Cabinet Secretary for Transport and North Wales, Welsh Government relating to the Railways Bill, dated 26 November 2025
Why linked: Letter from Welsh Cabinet Secretary for Transport on the Railways Bill (Nov 2025).
Direction: to_committee
Railways Bill 2024-26
Why linked: Commons Library Briefing CBP-10386 on the Railways Bill — definitive Library briefing for analysts.
Type: Commons Briefing Paper (CBP-10386) A bill intended to create Great British Railways, a public body which would be responsible for managing most passenger train services and railway infrastructure
Alex Hynes named as new CEO of DfT Operator
Why linked: Government news announcement of Alex Hynes as CEO of DFTO ahead of GBR — directly relevant to GBR's operational vehicle.
Alex Hynes appointed CEO of DFTO to lead rail reform, as more operators move into public ownership ahead of Great British Railways launch.
Formal meeting (oral evidence session) — Transport Committee — 2025-11-26
Why linked: Transport Committee formal meeting on Railways Bill 2025-11-26; parliamentary committee inquiry into the bill
Event type: Formal meeting (oral evidence session) | Committee: Transport Committee | Inquiry: Railways Bill | Starts: 2025-11-26T09:15:00+00:00 | Ends: 2025-11-26T12:00:00+00:00 | Location: Room 15, Palace of Westminster | Status: completed
Letter from the Leader of the House relating to the passage and scrutiny of the Railways Bill, dated 11 November 2025
Why linked: Letter from Leader of the House on the passage and scrutiny of the Railways Bill.
Direction: to_committee
Draft Infrastructure (Wales) Act 2024 (Consequential Amendments) Order 2025
Why linked: Commons SI debate on Infrastructure (Wales) Act 2024 Consequential Amendments Order — relevant to the Wales-and-Borders MoU interface.
General Committees debate | Commons
Great British Railways: Passenger Consultations
Why linked: Commons debate on Great British Railways passenger consultations — direct topical relevance to the Bill's passenger-voice provisions.
Commons Chamber debate | Commons
Letter from the Secretary of State for Transport relating to the Government response to A Railway fit for Britain's future consultation, dated 11 November 2025
Why linked: Letter from Secretary of State for Transport on Government response to 'A Railway fit for Britain's future' consultation (November 2025) - directly addresses rail reform policy consultation response contemporaneous with bill progression
Direction: to_committee
Letter from the Secretary of State for Transport relating to the introduction of the Railways Bill, dated 5 November 2025
Why linked: Letter from SoS for Transport on the introduction of the Railways Bill.
Direction: to_committee
A railway fit for Britain's future: government response – executive summary
Why linked: Filled the "Rail industry strategy and long-term planning documents" gap via web research
In response to: A railway fit for Britain's future: government response
A railway fit for Britain's future: government response
Why linked: Filled the "Government rail strategy or rail reform policy documents that frame the Bill's objectives" gap via web research
The Department for Transport's response to the consultation on the Railways Bill.
RPC opinion: Railways Bill impact assessment
Why linked: RPC opinion on Railways Bill impact assessment - directly relevant regulatory scrutiny
RPC opinion on Railways Bill impact assessment - directly relevant regulatory scrutiny
In response to: RPC opinion: Railways Bill impact assessment
RPC opinion: Railways Bill impact assessment
Why linked: RPC opinion on the Railways Bill Impact Assessment — independent scrutiny of the IA.
The RPC's opinion of the Department for Transport's impact assessment for the Railways Bill, introduced in the House of Commons on 5 November 2025.
Accessible railways roadmap
Why linked: DfT's Accessible railways roadmap published the same day as Bill introduction — operationalises the disability-related duties in clauses 18 and 33-34.
Sets out actions government is taking to make railways more accessible, leading up to the establishment of Great British Railways (GBR).
Rail reform and Great British Railways
Why linked: DfT 'Rail reform and Great British Railways' overview ties Bill to GBR design
The Railways Bill will help create Great British Railways (GBR) – a new, publicly owned company that prioritises passengers and their experiences.
Railways Bill
Why linked: Cited by workspace synthesis
Provides more information about the Railways Bill, which was introduced in the House of Commons on 5 November 2025.
Railways Bill introduction: British Sign Language (BSL) version
Why linked: DfT Railways Bill BSL introduction.
DfT Railways Bill BSL introduction.
In response to: Railways Bill
Railways Bill
Why linked: Briefing on the Government introducing the Railways Bill to deliver GBR (Nov 2025).
The Government has introduced the Railways Bill to Parliament to legislate for its commitment to unify network operations with infrastructure management under a single organisation – Great British Railways. The Bill is expected to go through ‘line by line’ scrutiny …
A railway fit for Britain's future
Why linked: Filled the "Government rail strategy or rail reform policy documents that frame the Bill's objectives" gap via web research
Seeking views on proposals to reform Great Britain’s railways.
Railways Bill — First reading
A Bill to make provision about railways and railway services; and for connected purposes.
Railways Bill — Bill 325 2024-26 (as introduced)- xml
Railways Bill — Bill 325 2024-26 (as introduced) - pdf
Railways Bill — Bill 325 2024-26 (as introduced) - html
Railways Bill — Impact Assessments: Impact Assessment from the Department for Transport
Railways Bill — Delegated Powers Memorandum: Memorandum from the Department for Transport to the Delegated Powers and Regulatory Reform Committee
Railways Bill — Human Rights Memorandum
Railways Bill — Explanatory Notes: Bill 325 EN 2024-26 - pdf
Journey to Great British Railways gathers steam with landmark legislation
Why linked: Government press release on Bill introduction — first-party HMG signal explicitly announcing the Bill.
Bill includes fare and ticketing reform and a strengthened passenger watchdog to create a better, more inclusive railway for all.
A Railway Fit for Britain's Future – Government Response CP 1442 (Full PDF, November 2025)
Why linked: Filled the "Franchise operating model transition documents" gap via web research
The full PDF of the government's consultation response on rail reform, detailing the transition away from the franchise operating model toward a publicly owned, GBR-led structure, and confirming the Railways Bill (now Railways and Passenger Benefits Bill) as the legislative …
Letter from the Chair of the Committee to the Leader of the House relating to the Rail Reform Bill, dated 28 October 2025
Why linked: Letter from Committee Chair to Leader of the House relating to the Rail Reform Bill.
Direction: to_committee
Great British Railways: Rolling Stock
Why linked: Lords debate on Great British Railways rolling stock — directly on the regime.
Lords Chamber debate | Lords
Public ownership of rail services: facts and figures
Why linked: Filled the "Great British Railways public ownership programme documentation" gap via web research
In response to: Public ownership of rail services: facts and figures
Next train services to return to public ownership revealed as government delivers railways reset
Why linked: Government announcement of the next four TOCs (West Midlands Trains, GTR, Chiltern, GWR) returning to public ownership in advance of GBR — direct delivery milestone.
West Midlands Trains, Govia Thameslink Railway, Chiltern Railways and Great Western Railways set to integrate into Great British Railways.
The Government’s franchising reforms offer a clear opportunity to embed stronger and fairer employment practices across the sector. Better pay, fair progression, and stable conditions are not only essential for retaining drivers but are also critical to maintaining reliable and high-quality bus services. Without addressing these workforce issues, the wider goals of reform risk being undermined. (Conclusion, Paragraph 81)
Why linked: Committee transcript fragment on the Government's franchising reforms and employment practices — directly relevant to Bill staff-transfer issues
The Government’s franchising reforms offer a clear opportunity to embed stronger and fairer employment practices across the sector. Better pay, fair progression, and stable conditions are not only essential for retaining drivers but are also critical to maintaining reliable and …
ORR train operator revenue protection review: Transport Secretary accepts recommendations
Why linked: ORR revenue protection review recommendations accepted by Transport Secretary - governance reform
Letter from the Secretary of State for Transport to train operating companies about the Office of Rail and Road’s review of revenue protection practices.
Letter from the Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State, Department for Transport relating to the English Devolution and Community Empowerment Bill, dated 10 July 2025
Why linked: Letter from DfT re English Devolution and Community Empowerment Bill (July 2025) - contextually adjacent to rail devolution/structure reform implications for Great British Railways framework
Direction: to_committee
Letter from the Minister for Rail, Department for Transport relating to Great British Railways, dated 18 July 2025
Why linked: Letter from Minister for Rail on Great British Railways (July 2025).
Direction: to_committee
London to Essex c2c services return to public control in step towards Great British Railways
Why linked: Government announcement of c2c into public ownership — direct delivery milestone in the GBR transition.
c2c’s rail services to be brought into public ownership.
Transfer of c2c’s Services into Public Ownership
Why linked: WMS announcing the c2c transfer of services into public ownership — direct delivery step in the GBR transition.
UIN: HCWS854 I can confirm to the House that this Sunday, 20 July, the government will take another step towards a unified railway overseen by Great British Railways (GBR), as c2c’s services become the second to transfer into public ownership …
ORR annual report and accounts 2024 to 2025
Why linked: ORR annual report and accounts 2024-25 - regulator performance and rail oversight
Office of Rail and Road annual report and resource accounts for the 2024 to 2025 period.
Great British Railways in action – passengers benefit from track and train being united on South Eastern Railway
Why linked: Government announcement of Southeastern operating as South Eastern Railway under unified track-and-train — pilot of the GBR model.
Southeastern and Network Rail unite to operate as South Eastern Railway.
New dawn for rail as South Western services return to public hands
Why linked: Government announcement of South Western Railway returning to public hands — first major step in the GBR transition.
Train operators will have to meet rigorous performance standards and earn the right to be called Great British Railways.
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, how much funding has been (a) allocated to and (b) spent by the Great British Railways Transition Team since it was established; and how many external consultants were employed by that team on 28 April 2025.
Why linked: PQ on funding allocated to and spent by the Great British Railways Transition Team — direct fiscal scrutiny of GBR stand-up.
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, how much funding has been (a) allocated to and (b) spent by the Great British Railways Transition Team since it was established; and how many external consultants were employed by that team …
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, what steps she is taking with Great British Railways to ensure equality of access to the rail network for (a) nationalised and (b) open access operators.
Why linked: PQ on equality of access on the rail network under GBR — direct on the clause 18 duties.
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, what steps she is taking with Great British Railways to ensure equality of access to the rail network for (a) nationalised and (b) open access operators.
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, if she will make an assessment of the potential merits of Great British Railways providing direct shuttle services for Universal Studios visitors between Luton Airport and Wixams station.
Why linked: PQ on Great British Railways providing services directly — direct on regime.
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, if she will make an assessment of the potential merits of Great British Railways providing direct shuttle services for Universal Studios visitors between Luton Airport and Wixams station.
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, what capital funding will be made available to (a) Network Rail and (b) Great British Railways for Access for All schemes in each of the next five years.
Why linked: PQ on capital funding to Network Rail and GBR — direct fiscal scrutiny of the GBR funding architecture.
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, what capital funding will be made available to (a) Network Rail and (b) Great British Railways for Access for All schemes in each of the next five years.
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, what steps her Department plans to take with Great British Railways to reduce levels of disruption on railways.
Why linked: PQ on GBR reducing disruption — direct on the performance duties.
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, what steps her Department plans to take with Great British Railways to reduce levels of disruption on railways.
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, whether Great British Railways will consider housing growth in capacity planning.
Why linked: PQ on GBR capacity planning and housing growth — direct on clauses 60-63.
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, whether Great British Railways will consider housing growth in capacity planning.
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, whether appointments to Great British Railways will be included in the Public Bodies Order in Council; and whether the Chair will be classified as a Significant Appointment.
Why linked: PQ on GBR appointments and the Public Bodies Order in Council — direct on GBR governance.
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, whether appointments to Great British Railways will be included in the Public Bodies Order in Council; and whether the Chair will be classified as a Significant Appointment.
Letter from the Minister for Rail, Department for Transport relating to Great British Railways and Railways Bill, dated 1 April 2025
Why linked: Letter from Minister for Rail on Great British Railways and the Railways Bill (April 2025).
Direction: to_committee
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, if she will ensure that Great British Railways has a statutory accessibility duty.
Why linked: PQ on statutory accessibility duty for GBR — direct on the clause 18 accessibility duty debate.
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, if she will ensure that Great British Railways has a statutory accessibility duty.
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, whether the new Great British Railways ticketing system will automatically identify the cheapest combination of fares for each journey.
Why linked: PQ on the new GBR ticketing system automatically identifying cheapest fares — direct on clauses 3 and 33-34.
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, whether the new Great British Railways ticketing system will automatically identify the cheapest combination of fares for each journey.
As part of a new Inclusive Transport Strategy, the Government must set out concrete timescales for achieving independent accessibility across the rail network, and commit to setting out within 12 months a road map for how to meet those timescales. This road map must inform the rolling stock, station and network enhancements strategies of the Department and, when it is operational, Great British Railways. (Recommendation, Paragraph 59)
Why linked: Committee finding on Inclusive Transport Strategy timescales for independent accessibility — relevant to the EIA and accessibility roadmap.
As part of a new Inclusive Transport Strategy, the Government must set out concrete timescales for achieving independent accessibility across the rail network, and commit to setting out within 12 months a road map for how to meet those timescales. …
Great British Railways: Industrial Action
Why linked: Lords debate on Great British Railways and industrial action — relevant to workforce-transfer provisions.
Lords Chamber debate | Lords
To ask the Minister for the Cabinet Office, whether he plans to lay a new Official Statistics Order to designate Great British Railways’ statistical outputs as official statistics.
Why linked: PQ on Official Statistics Order designation for GBR statistics — direct on GBR institutional architecture.
To ask the Minister for the Cabinet Office, whether he plans to lay a new Official Statistics Order to designate Great British Railways’ statistical outputs as official statistics.
Letter to the Minister for Rail, Department for Transport relating to the rail reform consultation, dated 12 March 2025
Why linked: Letter to Minister for Rail on the rail reform consultation (March 2025).
Direction: from_committee
Letter from the Permanent Secretary of the Department for Transport relating to PAC’s 38th Report of Session 2023-2024, Rail reform: The rail transformation programme, 27 February 2025
Why linked: Letter from Permanent Secretary on PAC report on Rail Reform: rail transformation programme (March 2025).
Direction: to_committee
Letter from the Secretary of State for Transport relating to the launch of legislation to implement rail transformation
Why linked: Letter from Secretary of State for Transport on launch of legislation to implement rail transformation (February 2025) - foundational announcement of the railways reform bill programme
Direction: to_committee
Letter from the Minister for Rail, Department for Transport relating to oral evidence session on 22 January 2025, dated 6 February 2025
Why linked: Letter from Minister for Rail on oral evidence session on rail reform (Feb 2025).
Direction: to_committee
Rail Infrastructure in Wales
Why linked: Evidence session on Rail Infrastructure in Wales - related to government's proposed rail reform including Great British Railways
The evidence session will explore the adequacy of rail infrastructure in Wales, the prospect of enhancements being made to Wales' rail network, and how the Government's proposed legislative agenda will change the way in which Wales' railways are managed. Non-inquiry …
Secretary of State for Transport's expectations for how open access will operate alongside a publicly owned railway
Why linked: Secretary of State expectations for open access under publicly owned railway (GBR) - policy framework
The Secretary of State for Transport’s expectations for how the Office of Rail and Road (ORR) will consider new open access applications.
2024
Shadow Great British Railways
Why linked: Transport Committee oral evidence with Laura Shoaf, Chair of Shadow Great British Railways (December 2024) — directly relevant to the GBR transition the Bill formalises
The Committee will hear from newly-appointed Chair of Shadow Great British Railways, Laura Shoaf. The session will cover Ms Shoaf's remit as Chair to drive improvements in the running of the railways prior to the creation of Great British Railways …
Formal meeting (oral evidence session) — Transport Committee — 2024-12-11
Why linked: Transport Committee formal oral evidence session on 'Rail services and infrastructure' (December 2024) - pre-legislative or concurrent scrutiny of rail reform policy by named responsible body
Event type: Formal meeting (oral evidence session) | Committee: Transport Committee | Inquiry: Rail services and infrastructure | Starts: 2024-12-11T09:15:00+00:00 | Ends: 2024-12-11T12:00:00+00:00 | Location: The Grimond Room, Portcullis House | Status: completed
Public ownership: railway passenger services
Why linked: Filled the "Franchise and operating model transition plans" gap via web research
South Western Railway and c2c will be the first to transfer into public ownership when their national rail contracts expire in 2025.
Integrated National Transport Strategy
Why linked: Integrated National Transport Strategy ministerial statement (Nov 2024) – government transport vision statement likely contextualising rail reform and Great British Railways
UIN: HLWS263 My Right Honourable friend, the Secretary of State for Transport (Louise Haigh), has made the following Ministerial Statement.The Government has today set out its vision for the first integrated national transport strategy in over two decades, delivering ...
The Franchising Schemes (Franchising Authorities) (England) Regulations 2024
Why linked: Statutory instrument on franchising authorities under Transport Act 2000 s.123A; directly relevant to passenger rail franchising reform scope
These Regulations bring into effect paragraphs (b) to (g) of section 123A(4) of the Transport Act 2000, such that the types of authorities listed in those paragraphs are included within the meaning of “franchising authority” for the purposes of Part …
Rail services and infrastructure
Why linked: Transport Committee inquiry on rail services and infrastructure including government's rail reform plans; contextual to bill development
In this session the Committee will examine the Department for Transport’s work on rail, including the Government's plans for rail reform, major infrastructure projects such as HS2 and the Transpennine Route Upgrade, and the performance of Network Rail and train …
Transport Secretary fires the starting gun on rail reform as Public Ownership Bill reaches final stages in Commons
Why linked: Transport Secretary announcement on rail reform and Public Ownership Bill - substantive ministerial statement on Railways Bill precursor
Government to prioritise passengers over private companies and reverse decades of delays, cancellations and unreliable services on Britain’s railways.
ORR annual report and accounts 2023 to 2024
Why linked: ORR annual report 2023-24; Office of Rail and Road is responsible body for the thread and this provides regulatory context and performance data
Office of Rail and Road annual report and resource accounts for the 2023 to 2024 period.
Public ownership of rail takes centre stage as government plans radical overhaul of transport
Why linked: Government announcement on public ownership of rail and radical overhaul - substantive policy announcement on Railways Bill intent
Today’s bill will pave the way for better trains that work for everyone, no matter where you live in the UK.
Formal meeting (oral evidence session) — Transport Committee — 2024-05-22
Why linked: Transport Committee oral evidence session on Scrutiny of the draft Rail Reform Bill (May 2024).
Event type: Formal meeting (oral evidence session) | Committee: Transport Committee | Inquiry: Scrutiny of the draft Rail Reform Bill | Starts: 2024-05-22T08:00:00+00:00 | Ends: 2024-05-22T11:15:00+00:00 | Location: The Thatcher Room, Portcullis House | Status: completed
Correspondence from Dame Bernadette Kelly DCB, Permanent Secretary, Department for Transport, re Rail reform: The rail transformation programme - Oral evidence, dated 7 May 2024
Why linked: Correspondence from Permanent Secretary on rail reform: oral evidence (May 2024).
Direction: unknown
Formal meeting (oral evidence session) — Transport Committee — 2024-05-21
Why linked: Transport Committee oral evidence session on Scrutiny of the draft Rail Reform Bill (May 2024).
Event type: Formal meeting (oral evidence session) | Committee: Transport Committee | Inquiry: Scrutiny of the draft Rail Reform Bill | Starts: 2024-05-21T13:30:00+00:00 | Ends: 2024-05-21T16:30:00+00:00 | Location: Room 8, Palace of Westminster | Status: completed
Formal meeting (oral evidence session) — Transport Committee — 2024-05-14
Why linked: Transport Committee oral evidence session on Scrutiny of the draft Rail Reform Bill (May 2024).
Event type: Formal meeting (oral evidence session) | Committee: Transport Committee | Inquiry: Scrutiny of the draft Rail Reform Bill | Starts: 2024-05-14T13:30:00+00:00 | Ends: 2024-05-14T16:30:00+00:00 | Location: The Grimond Room, Portcullis House | Status: completed
Correspondence from Dame Bernadette Kelly, Permanent Secretary, Department for Transport, re Rail reform the rail transformation program, dated 7 May 2024
Why linked: Correspondence from Permanent Secretary on rail reform transformation programme (May 2024).
Direction: unknown
Correspondence from Dame Bernadette Kelly, Permanent Secretary, Department for Transport, re Follow-up to the session of Monday 29 - Rail reform: the rail transformation programme, dated 7 May 2024
Why linked: Correspondence from Permanent Secretary on rail reform transformation programme (May 2024).
Direction: unknown
DPTAC response to the Transport Select Committee's scrutiny of the draft Rail Reform Bill
Why linked: DPTAC response to Transport Select Committee's scrutiny of the draft Rail Reform Bill.
DPTAC provided evidence for the Transport Select Committee's scrutiny of the draft Rail Reform Bill.
DPTAC response to the Transport Select Committee's scrutiny of the draft Rail Reform Bill
Why linked: DPTAC response to Transport Select Committee's scrutiny of the draft Rail Reform Bill.
DPTAC response to Transport Select Committee's scrutiny of the draft Rail Reform Bill.
In response to: DPTAC response to the Transport Select Committee's scrutiny of the draft Rail Reform Bill
Correspondence from the Minister of State, Department for Transport relating to rail services and Infrastructure, dated 26 March 2024
Why linked: Correspondence from Minister of State for Transport on rail services and infrastructure (March 2024) — predecessor regime period
Direction: unknown
Draft Rail Reform Bill: RPC Opinion (Green-rated)
Why linked: RPC opinion on the draft Rail Reform Bill IA (green-rated, April 2024).
Regulatory Policy Committee opinion on DfT's Draft Rail Reform Bill IA
Statement of Policy on Penalties under Chapter 1 of Transport Act 2000
Why linked: ORR Statement of Policy on Penalties under Transport Act 2000 Chapter 1; updates enforcement framework relevant to rail regulatory reform
This document is a statement of policy on penalties to support our enforcement work under the Transport Act 2000 (“TA00”) in the light of the changes introduced to the TA00 by section 10 of the Air Traffic Management and Unmanned …
Response to consultation on Statement of Policy on Penalties under Chapter 1 of Transport Act 2000
Why linked: Matched expansion phrase: Transport Act 2000
This document is a response to the consultation on a draft Statement of Policy on Penalties under Chapter 1 of Transport Act 2000.
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, for what reason supporting documents for the draft Rail Reform Bill published on 20 February 2024 do not reference the expected £1.5 billion in recurring annual savings after an initial five year implementation
Why linked: PQ on supporting documents for the draft Rail Reform Bill.
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, for what reason supporting documents for the draft Rail Reform Bill published on 20 February 2024 do not reference the expected £1.5 billion in recurring annual savings after an initial five year …
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, with reference to the Written Statement of 20 February 2024 on Government response to the consultation on rail reform legislation and draft Rail Reform Bill, HCWS267, what estimate he has made of the savings av
Why linked: PQ on the draft Rail Reform Bill and rail reform consultation response.
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, with reference to the Written Statement of 20 February 2024 on Government response to the consultation on rail reform legislation and draft Rail Reform Bill, HCWS267, what estimate he has made of …
Correspondence from the Secretary of State for Transport relating to the publication of draft Rail Reform Bill, dated 20 February 2024
Why linked: Correspondence from SoS Transport on publication of draft Rail Reform Bill (Feb 2024).
Direction: unknown
Scrutiny of the draft Rail Reform Bill
Why linked: Transport Committee pre-legislative scrutiny inquiry of the draft Rail Reform Bill.
The Transport Committee is conducting pre-legislative scrutiny of the draft Rail Reform Bill. The draft Bill proposes the legislative measures needed to deliver the Government’s programme of rail reform, principally the creation of a new ‘integrated rail body’ which will …
Rail Update
Why linked: Matched expansion phrase: Rail Reform Bill
UIN: HCWS267 I am pleased to lay the government’s response to the consultation on legislation required to deliver rail reform today. I am also publishing the draft Rail Reform Bill today, ahead of pre-legislative scrutiny which will be carried out …
Ministers set out blueprint for future of the railways through draft Rail Reform Bill
Why linked: DfT news announcement on draft Rail Reform Bill blueprint (Feb 2024).
Draft bill sets out blueprint for bringing track and train together under a new Great British Railways, leveraging private sector innovation to benefit customers.
Government response to the consultation on rail reform legislation and draft Rail Reform Bill
Why linked: Government response to consultation on rail reform legislation and draft Rail Reform Bill (Feb 2024).
Draft bill sets out blueprint for bringing track and train together under a new Great British Railways, leveraging private sector innovation to benefit customers.
Draft Rail Reform Bill
Why linked: Conservative Government's predecessor draft Rail Reform Bill (Feb 2024).
The draft Rail Reform Bill contains the primary legislative measures, which form a key part of delivering rail reform in Great Britain.
Response to DfT consultation on primary legislative changes required to effect rail reform
Why linked: Filled the "Consultation responses on rail franchising, regulation, or service standards" gap via web research
The Department for Transport (DfT) consulted between 9 June 2022 and 4 August 2022 seeking views on primary legislative changes required to effect rail reform as set out in the Williams-Shapps Plan for Rail.
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, what his planned timetable is for the publication of the draft Rail Reform Bill.
Why linked: PQ on timetable for publication of the draft Rail Reform Bill.
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, what his planned timetable is for the publication of the draft Rail Reform Bill.
2023
Consultation on Statement of Policy on Penalties under Chapter 1 of Transport Act 2000
Why linked: Consultation on ORR penalties policy; provides regulatory context for enforcement framework under Transport Act 2000
This document consults on a draft statement of policy on penalties to support our enforcement work under the Transport Act 2000 (“TA00”) in the light of the changes introduced to the TA00 by section 10 of the Air Traffic Management …
Correspondence from the Secretary of State for Transport relating to the Draft Rail Reform Bill pre-legislative scrutiny
Why linked: Correspondence from SoS Transport on Draft Rail Reform Bill pre-legislative scrutiny.
Direction: unknown
Minimum service levels for passenger rail during strike action
Why linked: Matched expansion phrase: Passenger Rail Services
A consultation on implementing minimum service levels for passenger rail services during periods of strike action.
Correspondence from the Minister for Rail, Department for Transport, relating to rail services and infrastructure, dated 20 July 2023
Why linked: Minister for Rail correspondence on rail services and infrastructure (Jul 2023) – ongoing reform and passenger-facing policy development
Direction: unknown
Correspondence from the Chief Executive, Transport Focus, relating to minimum service levels for rail, dated 4 April 2023
Why linked: Transport Focus correspondence on minimum service levels for rail; directly relevant to passenger protections in scope
Direction: unknown
Correspondence from the Minister for Rail, relating to rail services and infrastructure, dated 7 March 2023
Why linked: Minister for Rail correspondence on rail services and infrastructure (Mar 2023) – relevant to rail reform agenda and passenger service aspects
Direction: unknown
Correspondence from the Secretary of State for Transport, relating to rail reform - the next steps, dated 10 February 2023
Why linked: Ministerial correspondence from Secretary of State for Transport on rail reform – the next steps (Feb 2023) – direct policy development document for Great British Railways and passenger reform
Direction: unknown
2022
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, whether her Department’s plans to produce a (a) Great British Railways White Paper and (b) new Transport Bill in this session of Parliament to implement the proposals in that White Paper.
Why linked: Written question directly asking about Great British Railways White Paper and new Transport Bill plans – foundational legislative intent document
To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, whether her Department’s plans to produce a (a) Great British Railways White Paper and (b) new Transport Bill in this session of Parliament to implement the proposals in that White Paper.
Nigel Stevens appointed new Transport Focus Chair
Why linked: Transport Focus chair appointment explicitly references working with Great British Railways; shows governance transition planning
New Chair to champion passengers while overseeing change to ensure Transport Focus works effectively with Great British Railways.
High Speed Rail (Crewe - Manchester) Bill — Delegated Powers Memorandum: Memorandum by the Department for Transport to the Delegated Powers and Regulatory Reform Committee
Why linked: Cited by workspace synthesis
2021
Passenger service contracts: market engagement preview
Why linked: Filled the "Franchise and concession reform documentation" gap via web research
A DfT publication (October 2021) summarising the future passenger service contracts (PSCs) offer — the concession model intended to replace franchising — and what it means for the UK rail industry under the Williams-Shapps reform agenda.
After our evidence session, on 20 May, the Department published its long-delayed Rail white paper, which outlines its “once-in-a-generation” reforms planned for the rail system, including replacing franchising and better integrating infrastructure with passenger services.25 The Department acknowledges that it must overcome a “complex and…deep-rooted set of issues” to improve the system, and that such a large reform programme will be fraught with risks.26 Despite this, the Department told us i...
Why linked: Department for Transport Rail White Paper (May 2021) outlining the foundational 'once-in-a-generation' rail reform policy that underpins the Railways and Passenger Benefits Bill and Great British Railways establishment.
After our evidence session, on 20 May, the Department published its long-delayed Rail white paper, which outlines its “once-in-a-generation” reforms planned for the rail system, including replacing franchising and better integrating infrastructure with passenger services.25 The Department acknowledg
To ask Her Majesty's Government whether the legislation required to implement the Williams-Shapps Plan for Rail will repeal the (1) Railways Act 1993, (2) Railways Act 2005, and (3) Railways (Access, Management and Licensing of Railway Undertakings) Regul
Why linked: PQ on whether legislation will repeal the Railways Act 1993 — direct predecessor question for this thread.
To ask Her Majesty's Government whether the legislation required to implement the Williams-Shapps Plan for Rail will repeal the (1) Railways Act 1993, (2) Railways Act 2005, and (3) Railways (Access, Management and Licensing of Railway Undertakings) Regul
2020
Transport Focus tailored review
Why linked: Transport Focus tailored review; Transport Focus is responsible body for the thread and this assesses its role in rail passenger advocacy
Report which sets out the findings and recommendations of the tailored review of Transport Focus, the non-departmental public body.
2019
Rail passenger rights, compensation & complaints
Why linked: Commons Briefing Paper on rail passenger rights, compensation and complaints; provides policy background on compensation schemes the bill will reform
Type: Commons Briefing Paper (CBP-8572) Both the standard and enhanced Delay Repay compensation schemes have regularly been touted as being more generous to passengers. This is true for many, but there is evidence in this paper to suggest that the …
2018
Rail Passenger Compensation
Why linked: Parliamentary debate on rail passenger compensation (2018); historical context on passenger compensation debates preceding the bill
Commons Chamber debate | Commons
2016
Rail passenger compensation for delays: Which? super-complaint
Why linked: Consultation outcome on rail passenger compensation following Which? super-complaint; establishes policy precedent for passenger protection reforms
Seeks views on the rail passenger compensation process following issues raised in a Which? super-complaint.
2010
Railways: Strategic Rail Authority, 1998-2005
Why linked: Strategic Rail Authority research paper (1998-2005) provides essential background on historical rail governance structures that are being reformed by the new bill
Type: Standard Note (SN01344) This Note describes the setting up of the Strategic Rail Authority (SRA), the background to it, its functions and powers as set out in the Transport Act 2000 and its abolition in 2005.
Railways: privatisation, 1987-1996
Why linked: Railways privatisation research paper (1987-1996) provides foundational context on the Railways Act 1993 framework that this bill will amend or reform
Type: Standard Note (SN01157) This note describes the structure of the rail industry following privatisation by the Railways Act 1993. It is intended to give a factual account and only briefly touches on the issues involved in reaching decisions about …
2004
Railways Bill (Bill 6 of 2004/05)
Why linked: Railways Bill (2004/05) research paper provides comparative legislative analysis for understanding rail franchise and regulatory reform mechanisms
Type: Research Paper (RP04-86) The Railways Bill (Bill 6 of 2004/05). House of Commons Library Research Paper 04/86.
1999
Transport Bill (Bill 8 1999/2000)
Why linked: Cited by workspace synthesis
Type: Research Briefing (RP99-105) The Transport Bill: Part IV: railways (Bill 8 of 1999/2000). House of Commons Library Research Paper 99/105.
Railways Bill (Bill 133 1998/99)
Why linked: Library Research Paper 99/72 on Railways Bill 1998-99 — predecessor framework analysis useful as historical comparator on rail-bill structure
Type: Research Briefing (RP99-72) Railways Bill. (Bill 133 of 1998/99). House of Commons Library Research Paper 99/72.
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Analyst briefing
Executive summary
The Railways Bill 2024-26 (Bill 325 as introduced; Bill 373 as amended in Committee) is the structural follow-up to the Passenger Railway Services (Public Ownership) Act 2024 1 and operationalises Labour's 2024 manifesto commitment to bring rail back into public ownership 2. It creates Great British Railways as a publicly-owned 'directing mind' that unifies track and train, replaces the ORR's access decision-making on the GBR network with an appellate function applying judicial-review principles, redesigns the periodic-review funding cycle into a Secretary-of-State-led business-plan settlement, and consolidates passenger-protection functions from ORR, Transport Focus and the Rail Ombudsman into a strengthened Passengers' Council. Introduced on 5 November 2025, the Bill cleared Commons Public Bill Committee on 10 February 2026 3 and is in the Report-stage amendment-paper run 4 with the Scottish LCM secured on 24 March 2026 5.
Current state
The Bill sits between Public Bill Committee and Report stage in the Commons. The Committee version (Bill 373) was reprinted on 10 February 2026 with three new clauses inserted — most notably clause 85 on charging for removal of road vehicles and an expanded transfer-schemes schedule 1. Daily amendment papers have been running through March, April and May 2026, with the most recent at the time of this build dated 30 April 2026 2.
Delivery infrastructure is already moving in parallel. DfT Operator Ltd absorbed the first wave of TOC staff on 1 April 2026, prompting written questions about sequencing relative to Royal Assent 3. Two non-executive directors (Laura Shoaf and Tony Poulter) joined the DFTO board on 20 March 2026 4, and Alex Hynes was named CEO of DFTO ahead of the Bill's introduction.
The devolved-government interface is largely settled in principle. The framework MoU with Scottish Ministers and the full MoU with Welsh Ministers were published on 25 March 2026 56, and the Scottish Parliament agreed an LCM the day before 7. The Welsh Senedd equivalent is still expected. The Transport Committee's 8th Report scrutinising the Bill 8 has received a Government response in the 4th Special Report of 24 April 2026 9. The Commons Library briefing CBP-10386 10 and the RPC Green opinion on the DfT IA 11 complete the principal scrutiny inputs.
Recent developments
The most material recent moves cluster around late March 2026. The Department published the framework Memorandum of Understanding with Scottish Ministers and the substantive MoU with Welsh Ministers on 25 March 2026 12, pairing with two same-day press releases announcing the devolved settlements 34. The Equalities Impact Assessment was published the previous day 5. On 17 March 2026 the Department announced Delay Repay reforms intended for delivery under GBR 6 and published the Government response to the ORR's independent review of train-operator revenue-protection practices 7.
DFTO board appointments on 20 March 2026 8 and the 1 April 2026 staff transfers 9 mark the practical stand-up of the GBR operational vehicle. The 24 April 2026 Government response to the Transport Committee's 8th Report (the 4th Special Report) 10 is the principal recent select-committee interaction. Open-access operator concerns about clause 71 have continued to surface in PQs, including PQ 129358 (28 April 2026) on how ORR applies state-aid principles to access applications 11.
What to watch
Report stage and Third Reading in the Commons are the next procedural gates; the daily amendment-paper cadence through April-May 2026 1 suggests the Government is processing a substantial volume of amendments ahead of those stages. Lords scrutiny is then expected to concentrate on the two ECHR-flagged provisions: clause 71's retrospective power to amend existing track access contracts (engaging A1P1) and the ORR's dual statutory roles as access-regime appellate body and statutory consultee on GBR's documents (engaging Article 6(1)) 2. The open-access operator written evidence (Lumo and Hull Trains RB28 3; ALLRAIL RB16/RB16A 45) and PQs from MPs aligned with the open-access market (e.g. PQ 129358 on state-aid principles in access applications 6) signal that the access regime is the live commercial issue. Post-Royal-Assent, two SIs matter most: the clause 1 designation SI that actually creates GBR as a body corporate (without which the new regime is inert) and the first commencement regulations. The Long-Term Rail Strategy under clause 15 and the rail-freight growth target under clause 17 are the first substantive Secretary-of-State outputs the Bill mandates; their content will set the operating frame for GBR's first business plan. The Welsh Senedd LCM has not yet appeared in the events list and is a procedural gap to close before Royal Assent given the Bill's Wales-and-Borders provisions. Workforce-protection issues — pensions 7, collective bargaining 8, conditions and travel facilities 910 — continue to drive PQ activity from MPs allied with rail trade unions and may yet attract Lords amendments.
Risks and uncertainties
The principal risks are concentrated in clause 71 and the access regime. The ECHR Memorandum acknowledges A1P1 engagement and relies on a 'core commercial value' preservation argument plus express compensation provision modelled on the Transport and Works Act 1992 1; whether this survives Lords-level scrutiny is uncertain, particularly given concentrated open-access evidence on the point 234. The Article 6(1) issue around the ORR's dual roles is mitigated in the Memorandum but remains a live design question.
Separately, the Government Response to the Transport Committee (4th Special Report of 24 April 2026 5) is in the events list but the substantive text is not visible in the bodies retrieved for this build, so the Committee's specific concerns and the Government's accommodations on freight and access have not been read directly. Inferred from corpus gap: the Welsh Senedd LCM equivalent of the Scottish LCM 6 is not in the events, which may simply reflect timing or may indicate a procedural step still to be taken — practitioners should confirm separately.
Workforce-pension implications during the staff-transfer cascade are flagged by Railpen's RB21 written evidence 7 and a sustained PQ campaign 89 but the Bill does not contain explicit pension-protection provisions on its face beyond the transfer-schemes framework in Sched
Scope notes
This briefing covers the Railways Bill 2024-26 as the unified Great British Railways / passenger-benefits package referenced in the King's Speech 2026 1. It does not cover the Passenger Railway Services (Public Ownership) Act 2024 in detail beyond its role as the immediate first-step partner statute 2, the Rail Passengers' Charter private member's bill 3 (a separate parallel vehicle), or freight-specific commercial issues outside the clause 17 freight growth target. The Planning and Infrastructure Act 2025 candidates surfaced by retrieval are out of scope — they cover the unrelated planning-NSIP framework and the lexical overlap is from shared 'infrastructure' vocabulary, not subject-matter overlap.
Primary legislation
Bills and Acts this regime substantively depends on. Links go to the bill's own thread on this site (where available) and to bills.parliament.uk.
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The Bill that is the subject of this thread — when enacted it will be cited as the Railways Act 2026 (already self-referenced in clause 6 of the Bill text).
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First-step legislation that amended the franchising provisions in the Railways Act 1993 to enable public ownership; the Railways Bill is the structural follow-up.
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Railways Act 1993 Predecessor regime
Establishes the framework the Bill substantially displaces — sections 17-22C are disapplied for the GBR network; sections 23-31 (franchising) are repealed; section 4 duties are replaced by Chapter 2 of Part 1 of the new Bill.
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Railways Act 2005 Related framework
Created the periodic review process and devolved Scottish rail functions; the Bill retains Scottish Ministers' s.5 strategy power and replaces the periodic review with the Schedule 2 funding cycle.
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Transport Act 2000 Related framework
Continues to provide the byelaws-making power exercised in the Railway Byelaws Amendment Order 2025 (SI 2025/1258) alongside Bill passage.
Legal & Policy Framework
The Bill replaces the post-1993 settlement on a single conceptual move: it consolidates 'track' (infrastructure management) and 'train' (most mainline passenger services) inside a single publicly-owned body corporate — Great British Railways — designated under clause 1. GBR inherits the Network Rail Infrastructure Limited corporate shell (preserving contract counterparty continuity), absorbs in-house TOCs via DfT Operator Ltd, and takes over industry-back-of-house functions from the Rail Delivery Group. The Bill's statutory functions in clause 3 read as the operationalisation of a 'directing mind' theory: GBR is the body that plans the network, runs most services, sets fares, sells tickets, and authors industry standards.
Layered over those functions is a duties-and-strategy architecture in Chapter 2 of Part 1. The Secretary of State must publish a Long-Term Rail Strategy and set a rail-freight growth target (clauses 15 and 17). Clause 18 then puts all the principal actors — Ministers, GBR and the ORR — under a common set of general duties: passenger interest including disabled passengers, freight promotion, performance, public interest, and value for public funds. The drafting deliberately mirrors a balancing duty (s.4 Railways Act 1993 style) but extends it across the now-integrated entity so incentives no longer diverge between infrastructure manager and train operator.
The access regime in Chapter 1 of Part 3 (clauses 59-68) is the most significant doctrinal break. The Railways Act 1993 (sections 17-22C) and the 2016 Regulations gave the ORR the power to approve or direct access agreements and to set standard terms on Network Rail's network. The Bill disapplies those provisions for the GBR network and substitutes a GBR-authored regime: GBR publishes the Access and Use Policy, the Infrastructure Capacity Plan, the working timetable, the charging scheme and the performance scheme. The ORR becomes the appeals body, applying High Court / Court of Session judicial-review principles (clause 68(1)) and retaining its appellate role under regulation 32 of the 2016 Regulations for non-GBR infrastructure and service facilities.
The regime sits on two displaced predecessor instruments which the Bill does not repeal wholesale but disapplies for the GBR network: sections 17-22C of the Railways Act 1993 and most of the 2016 Regulations. The Passenger Railway Services (Public Ownership) Act 2024 is the first-step partner statute that ended franchising; the Railways Bill is the structural follow-up. Clause 71's power to amend existing track access contracts retrospectively is the bridging mechanism — without it, freight and open-access operators on the GBR network would run on terms keyed to a regulatory architecture (ORR-led periodic review, ORR-set charges) that the Bill is dismantling.
Devolved architecture sits alongside in clauses 23-24 and the published MoUs: Scottish Ministers retain their role as funder and specifier of Scottish passenger services; Welsh Ministers retain Transport for Wales and the Core Valley Lines; both can delegate to GBR, contract with GBR companies, or operate jointly-owned subsidiaries. Mayoral combined authorities get statutory consultee status (clauses 5 and 81). Train-driver licensing (clause 91) and the Cape Town/Luxembourg Protocol provisions (clause 92) are discrete add-ons orthogonal to the structural reform.
Statutory basis
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Railways Bill 2024-26, clause 1
Empowers the Secretary of State by regulations to designate a body corporate as Great British Railways.
Railways Bill — Bill 373 2024-26 (as amended in Committee) - pdf -
Railways Bill 2024-26, clauses 3 and 13
Sets out GBR's general statutory functions — managing infrastructure, providing passenger services, setting fares and selling tickets, providing industry services, research and standards — and gives GBR power to charge for things done in exercise of those functions.
Railways Bill — Bill 373 2024-26 (as amended in Committee) - pdf -
Railways Bill 2024-26, clauses 7-10
Directions and guidance powers: Secretary of State and Scottish Ministers may direct GBR; consent of Scottish/Welsh Ministers required where directions directly affect functions exercised under devolved arrangements.
Railways Bill — Bill 373 2024-26 (as amended in Committee) - pdf -
Railways Bill 2024-26, clause 15
Requires the Secretary of State to prepare and publish a long-term rail strategy for development and use of the railway network in Great Britain.
Railways Bill — Bill 373 2024-26 (as amended in Committee) - pdf -
Railways Bill 2024-26, clauses 18-19
Imposes general duties on Ministers, GBR and ORR — including duties to promote passenger interests (including disabled passengers), promote rail freight, promote railway-service performance, and take into account safety.
Railways Bill — Bill 373 2024-26 (as amended in Committee) - pdf -
Railways Bill 2024-26, Chapter 1 of Part 3 (clauses 59-68)
Creates a new access regime for GBR's network: GBR sets the Access and Use Policy, infrastructure capacity plan, working timetable, charging scheme and performance scheme; ORR becomes the appeals body applying judicial-review principles.
Railways Bill — Bill 373 2024-26 (as amended in Committee) - pdf -
Railways Bill 2024-26, clause 71
Power for the Secretary of State by regulations to make provision about the operation of existing access agreements and access rights on GBR infrastructure, including retrospective amendment.
Railways Bill — Human Rights Memorandum -
Railways Bill 2024-26, Schedule 2
Funding GBR: replaces the existing Schedule 4A Railways Act 1993 periodic review with a new business-plan-driven funding cycle led by the Secretary of State (and parallel Scottish Ministers' provision).
Railways Bill — Bill 373 2024-26 (as amended in Committee) - pdf -
Railways Bill 2024-26, clause 91
Power to amend, update or revoke the Train Driving Licences and Certificates Regulations 2010 and related assimilated law.
Railways Bill — Human Rights Memorandum
Cross-cutting regimes engaged
- ECHR Article 1, Protocol 1 (peaceful enjoyment of possessions) Clause 71's power to amend existing track access contracts retrospectively interferes with property rights of non-GBR operators; the ECHR Memorandum justifies the interference by reference to compensation provisions and the model of the Transport and Works Act 1992.
- ECHR Article 6(1) (fair trial) The ORR's dual statutory roles as access-regime appellate body and statutory consultee on GBR's access documents engage Article 6 fair-trial guarantees; the ECHR Memorandum addresses this directly and points to High Court judicial review as backstop.
- Subsidy Control Act 2022 Schedule 2 Part 3 of the Bill is explicitly headed 'Subsidy Control' — direct public funding of GBR and parallel funding by Scottish Ministers requires subsidy-control compliance, particularly given non-GBR open-access operators competing on GBR infrastructure.
- Public Service Obligations in Transport Regulations 2023 The 2023 PSOTRs (which replaced EU Regulation 1370/2007) provide the framework under which Scottish and Welsh Ministers can secure passenger services through public service contracts with GBR or other public-sector companies — designation under clauses 25-27 keys into this regime.
- Equality Act 2010 Clause 18(2)(a) and 18(3) reference the 'needs of disabled persons' via the Equality Act 2010 definition; the Equalities Impact Assessment maps Bill measures against protected characteristics.
- Trade Union and Labour Relations (Consolidation) Act 1992 Clause 2(4) provides that employment by GBR is not Crown employment for the purposes of TULRCA — defining the industrial-relations regime applicable to GBR's workforce and structuring collective bargaining post-transfer.
Key concepts
Great British Railways (GBR)
A body corporate designated by the Secretary of State under clause 1, not enjoying Crown status, with statutory functions to manage railway infrastructure, provide passenger services, set fares, sell tickets, and supply industry services across Great Britain.
Statutory functions of GBR
The list of functions in clause 3(1) plus those conferred by regulations under clause 3(3), the charging power in clause 13, and any other Act-conferred functions, but excluding functions under the 2016 Regulations relating to service facilities.
GBR infrastructure
Railway infrastructure managed by GBR — distinct from non-GBR infrastructure (e.g. Core Valley Lines, HS1, certain freight depots) for which the Railways Act 1993 access regime and the 2016 Regulations are retained.
Access and Use Policy
The principal published document under clause 59 setting out GBR's processes, policies and criteria for access decisions on its network, on which GBR must consult and which must be consistent with legislative requirements, strategies, directions and guidance.
Capacity duty
Duty under clause 63 on GBR to retain sufficient capacity on its infrastructure for particular passenger services it is required to provide and for maintenance/improvement works.
Passenger Watchdog (Passengers' Council)
The strengthened body built out of Transport Focus under Part 2 Chapter 2, retaining the legal name 'Passengers' Council' while operating under a new name, with functions including standards-setting (approved by ORR and Secretary of State), complaints, ADR, investigations and improvement plans.
Periodic-review replacement / business plan cycle
The Schedule 2 funding architecture replacing Schedule 4A Railways Act 1993 — five-year cycle of Secretary of State objectives, ORR advice on alignment, GBR business plan, and Secretary of State approval.
Forward look calendar
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Commons Report stage and Third Reading following the daily amendment papers run from late February to late April 2026.
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Lords stages — expect concentrated scrutiny of clause 71 (retrospective amendment of access contracts) on A1P1 grounds and of the ORR's dual roles in the access regime.
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Royal Assent and renaming as the Railways Act 2026 (the Bill text already refers to itself as such in clause 6).
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First commencement regulations and the SI under clause 1 designating a body corporate as Great British Railways.
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Publication of the Long-Term Rail Strategy under clause 15 and the rail freight growth target under clause 17.
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Welsh Senedd Legislative Consent Motion (the Scottish LCM is already secured).
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Next tranche of TOCs into public ownership (West Midlands Trains, Govia Thameslink Railway, Chiltern Railways and Great Western Railway, as announced 26 September 2025).
Stakeholder positions
Department for Transport
Owns the Bill and the policy frame; argues from the IA's market-failure analysis (coordination failure, principal-agent issues, externalities, productive inefficiency) that integration of track and train under a single publicly-owned body is the only way to deliver reliability, value for money and passenger experience.Nov 2025Nov 2025Nov 2025
Tension with Office of Rail and Road, RMT (National Union of Rail, Maritime and Transport Workers), Rail Freight Group, ALLRAIL (Alliance of Passenger Rail New Entrants), Lumo and Hull Trains, Andy Burnham (Mayor of Greater Manchester)
Heidi Alexander
As Secretary of State, has staked political authority on Royal Assent and rapid stand-up of GBR; signed the s.19(1)(a) HRA statement, the HS2 reset statement (HCWS1433, 23 March 2026) and the policy-package introduction.Nov 2025Mar 2026
Lord Hendy of Richmond Hill
As Minister of State for Transport and former Chair of Network Rail, public statements emphasise rail-infrastructure delivery, accessibility and integrated transport strategy — the operational delivery side of the GBR agenda.Mar 2026Jan 2026Nov 2024
Keir Mather
Leads the line for the Government in Public Bill Committee across all 14 sittings; defends the Bill's architecture clause-by-clause on staff transfer, access regime, fares and accessibility provisions.Feb 2026Feb 2026Feb 2026
Tension with Edward Argar
Edward Argar
Lead Conservative spokesperson in Committee; presses the Government on the displacement of independent regulation, the open-access market and the breadth of delegated powers including clause 71.Feb 2026Feb 2026
Tension with Keir Mather
Olly Glover
On accessibility, fares and rural connectivity: Liberal Democrat lead in PBC pressing for stronger accessibility duties, transparent fares architecture and protection for devolved/local services within GBR.Feb 2026Feb 2026
Transport Select Committee
Published the 8th Report scrutinising the Bill — themes include rail freight protections, accessibility delivery and the design of the access regime; the Government responded via the 4th Special Report in April 2026.Feb 2026Apr 2026
Office of Rail and Road
On access and competition: submitted written evidence RB08 setting out its understanding of its appellate role; previously raised concerns through the consultation about how state-aid and competition principles will be applied when access decisions sit with GBR rather than an independent regulator.Jan 2026Apr 2026
Tension with Department for Transport
Transport Focus
On the Passenger Watchdog: supports the consolidation of consumer functions into the strengthened Passengers' Council built out of Transport Focus, while seeking clarity on standards-setting and ADR scope.Jan 2026
RMT (National Union of Rail, Maritime and Transport Workers)
On worker protection: written evidence RB07 and a sustained PQ campaign by allied MPs pressing for explicit Bill provisions on jobs, pay, pensions, conditions, travel facilities and collective bargaining during the transition into GBR.Jan 2026Mar 2026Mar 2026Mar 2026Mar 2026Mar 2026Mar 2026Mar 2026
Tension with Department for Transport
ASLEF (Associated Society of Locomotive Engineers and Firemen)
On train-driver licensing and workforce: written evidence RB23 — particular focus on clause 91 reforms to driver licensing and on protecting collective bargaining as drivers transfer into the GBR family.Jan 2026Feb 2026
Rail Freight Group
On the freight target and capacity allocation: written evidence RB06 pressing for the clause 17 freight growth target and clause 63 capacity duty to be robust enough to protect freight paths against GBR's own passenger services.Jan 2026
Tension with Department for Transport
ALLRAIL (Alliance of Passenger Rail New Entrants)
On open access: written evidence RB16 and RB16A — concerned that combining the network manager, the dominant operator and the de facto access-decision-maker in a single body will squeeze open-access operators despite the ORR appeal route.Jan 2026Jan 2026
Tension with Department for Transport
Lumo and Hull Trains
On clause 71: joint open-access evidence RB28 pressing the specific risk that the Secretary of State's power to amend their existing track access contracts retrospectively could erode the commercial basis on which long-term rolling-stock liabilities were taken on.Jan 2026
Tension with Department for Transport
Trainline
On ticket retailing: written evidence RB17 — third-party retailer arguing for the proposed retail code of practice to enforce a level playing field as GBR consolidates the 14 operator ticketing websites into one.Jan 2026
Independent Rail Retailers
On the retail market: written evidence RB13 — independent retailer perspective aligned with Trainline on the need for ORR-enforced fair-treatment obligations on GBR.Jan 2026
Andy Burnham (Mayor of Greater Manchester)
On mayoral powers: letter and supplementary evidence (RB18, RB18A) arguing the statutory consultation role for mayoral combined authorities under clauses 5 and 81 is insufficient — pressing for clearer 'right to request' devolution and influence on service levels, timetabling and rolling-stock deployment.Jan 2026Jan 2026Mar 2026
Tension with Department for Transport
Urban Transport Group
On multi-modal integration: written evidence RB12 supporting the statutory role for combined authorities and pressing for explicit multi-modal duties in the long-term rail strategy.Jan 2026
Regulatory Policy Committee
Issued a Green opinion on the DfT Impact Assessment — confirming the IA's analytical robustness.Nov 2025Nov 2025
DfT Operator Ltd (DFTO)
Consolidation vehicle: absorbed first wave of TOC staff from 1 April 2026 with new board appointments (Laura Shoaf, Tony Poulter) and CEO Alex Hynes — the operational stand-up partner for GBR during designation.Mar 2026Apr 2026
Mark Harper
Conservative predecessor as Secretary of State who published the Draft Rail Reform Bill in February 2024 — established the policy direction that the current Bill operationalises in a more directly public-ownership-led form.Feb 2024Feb 2024Feb 2024
Andrew Ranger
On Wales-and-Borders cross-border services: tabled PQ 129596 (29 April 2026) on cross-border rail connections under GBR including the Wrexham-Shropshire-Midlands Railway.Apr 2026
British Transport Police
Engaged via correspondence on Chair appointment (January 2026) and via consequential provisions in adjacent Crime and Policing Act 2026 will-write letters — institutional interface with GBR yet to be fully specified.Feb 2026
Engaged, but no published position in the corpus
- Lilian Greenwood —
- Jerome Mayhew —
- Railway Industry Association —
- Delegated Powers and Regulatory Reform Committee —
- Laurence Turner —
- Rebecca Smith —
- Joe Robertson —
- Edward Morello —
- Daniel Francis —
- Jayne Kirkham —
- Baggy Shanker —
- Sarah Smith —
- Adam Dance —
- Lloyd Hatton —