I have long been opposed to the policy of affordable fares being restricted to a particular train. IMO▸ , only 3 different fares should exist for a given journey, these being based on how well patronised or not the service is expected to be.
I (mis?) read that to be a very interesting proposal ...
Taunton to London - £110 peak, £66.00 regular, £39.60 "am I the only one in the carriage" type.
No other fares for that journey. So no returns, no first class, no children's fares, no railcards.
How do you gauge which train is to be at which fare? What about something like the 17:48 (ish) Cheltemham Spa to Southampton via Swindon, which start off really busy but has somewhat (!) thinned out by the time it leaves Salisbury?
As people's travel habits change to save money, some trains that are just peak will thin out and become regular, and others that were regular will become peak. How often do you change the designation of services?
To amplify and clarify my proposals,
Yes I would still allow first class, but only 3 different first class fares for a given journey not the complexity as offered at present.
The
TOC▸ would be permitted to re designate trains as peak, off peak, or super bargain as they see fit, subject to two overriding rules.
Firstly, alterations may only be made at timetable changes, not every week on a whim.
Secondly, no more than 25% of services may be classified as peak, and at least 25% must be super bargain. These figures being averaged over the period covered by the timetable.
I would still allow railcards, but would attempt to simplify the system. A rail card would give discounts ONLY on off peak or super bargain trains. No discount on peak trains.
I would give rail staff completely free travel on the super bargain trains, heavily discounted travel on the off peak services, but no discount on peak time trains. (subject of course to not conflicting with existing agreements for existing staff)