I don't really think that arguement should stand when it comes to running a public service!
Well said!
I've sympathy with that view and I understand that you take it because the passenger ought to come first which I agree with, but if you are going to allow the franchise to be renegotiated because
FGW▸ /
DFT▸ made a mistake or because circumstances have changed, then I have to ask you the question, "what is a franchise for?".
If the franchise system is to transfer the risk of running a public service to the private sector then that risk ought to stay with the private sector. If the franchise can be renegoted at will then the risk hasn't really been transfered and it stays with the public sector. All you have done is privatise the profit when times are good but kept the loses with the taxpayer when times are bad. As a taxpayer I object to this.
If the risk stays with the public sector then it would be much better to have the ownership in the public sector too, or to have FGW as a mere contractor rather than a franchisee (like they are with London buses).
It is not as if the franchise system even brings private investment into the railways. First only hold the franchise for 7 years so they don't put any serious investment into the railways - ask yourself what does First actually own and you will find that it is very little - no infracstructure or stock, just things like staff uniforms and computers etc which have a short lifespan anyway). the serious investment comes from
NR» which is in the public sector in all but name and the
ROSCOs» (who charge huge lease-fees to cover their risks). So franchising doesn't bring huge private investment into the railway. Compare this with the freight companies who are not franchsied and who have invested hugely buying new wagons and hundreds of class 66s which
BR▸ would never have been able to afford.
To my mind you either believe in capitalism and leave the railway completely (loses, profits, investments and risk - the whole lot) to the private sector - with taxpayer subsidy on routes and services where it can be justified - or you believe in state ownership and control and recreate BR (perhaps with some functions which are not core to a railway company contracted out, for example catering, cleaning, laudry, ticket machines etc). I am happy to argue over which system is better, but the current situation is the worst of both worlds because the taxpayer takes all the risk but the private company takes all the profit and when the profit runs out it hands back the keys like
GNER▸ did.
The point of about GM-TV is a very good one. If word gets around that franchises can be renegotiated at will what is to stop First bidding for every franchise with the promise of paying a billion-billion pound premium to the treasury and then renegotation more favourable terms after it has won the contract.
There is also a moral argument - FGW made a promise in its bid and it is imorral for people or companies to break their promises is it not? Just as it is imoral to enter into a contact for travel and then refuse to pay your fare. I view FGW's attempt to renegotiate its contract with the same contempt as I view some sumbag trying to dodge their fare. its all abot trying to argue your way out of your responsibilities.
Public service arguments should come first and I have no problem with the taxpayer subsidising the railway (as they subsidise every other mode of transport) but it is also important that the taxpayer is robbed blind to do this.