Southern rail co-owner Go-Ahead has
reported a profit of nearly £100m and apologised for major ongoing
disruptions to its railway services.
Earlier this year hundreds of
rail services were axed as part of a revised Southern timetable,
prompting travel chaos and complaints from passengers.
The profit figures angered unions, with RMT describing Go-Ahead and Southern as "a money-raking disaster".
Go-Ahead's yearly profits before tax rose 26.8% to £99.8m.
On Thursday the government unveiled a £20m fund
in a bid to "get to grips" with problems on Southern's network.
Go-Ahead
chief executive David Brown turned down a bonus and pay increase this
year after disruptions and strikes on Southern and other railway
services.
"Whilst we have largely achieved the financial and
strategic targets set at the beginning of the year it is clear that we
have not delivered the required levels of passenger service on our
Southern routes," Go-Ahead chairman Andrew Allner said in a statement.
"As a result, David Brown, who in my view is an exceptional and
committed group chief executive, made it clear he does not wish to be
considered for an annual bonus this year and declined a salary
increase."
Apology
In 2015, Mr Brown earned £2.16m.
Go-Ahead
owns 65% of Govia, with French firm Keolis owning the remaining 35%.
Southern is part of the Govia Thameslink Railway (GTR) franchise.
Go-Ahead
said Govia Thameslink Railway had "a difficult year", and that it was
working with the Department of Transport and Network Rail "to improve
services for customers".
"A large part of the role of the GTR franchise is to introduce three new train fleets and modernise working practices.
"During
this period of change, Southern services have been disrupted by
restricted network capacity, strike action and increased levels of
absence. We apologise to the people whose lives have been affected
during this time," Mr Brown said.
He said in a Reuters interview on Friday that GTR was "the problem franchise that we've had for a little while."
"It
doesn't contribute to our profits. I can't apologise for doing what I
set out to do in other parts of the business because that's where the
profits have come from."
Go-Ahead shares rose more than 9% in morning trading on Friday.
Southern Rail introduced a reduced service in July after months of
delays and cancellations, which it blamed on "unprecedented" staff
sickness.
In September it will reinstate more than a third of the 341 daily services it cut.
'Alice in Wonderland'
Southern
has been subject to complaints from passengers and politicians about
the travel chaos caused by a bitter dispute with unions over the role of
guards, and staff shortages.
But Go-Ahead, which also runs London
and regional bus networks, said it planned to move ahead with
introducing a change in conductors' roles, saying it is a "step in the
right direction", despite the move angering unions and triggering
several strikes.
Rail, Maritime and Transport (RMT) union general secretary Mick Cash said of Go-Ahead's results:
"While
Go-Ahead have been driving Britain's biggest rail franchise into total
meltdown, the cash has been sloshing through the boardroom at obscene
levels. This is reward for total failure on a scale which is off the
map."
"Just a fraction of these profits would be enough to keep
the guards on Southern trains, keep the passengers safe and resolve the
industrial dispute between RMT and the company."
"They are a
money-raking disaster that has turned Britain's railways into a global
laughing stock and they should be slung out and replaced by the public
sector option."
Mick Whelan, general secretary of train drivers' union Aslef, said: "This is like living with Alice in Wonderland.
"A
company which has failed to deliver for passengers every day for the
last year, and which only yesterday got its snout back in the public
trough, with another generous pile of taxpayers' cash, courtesy of a
compliant DfT, has just announced record profits for its shareholders."
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