Quotes from the link below:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2009/jan/19/recession-rail-industryIt is understood that the chief executives will discuss allowing "flexibility" in their rail contracts, which guarantee huge payments to the government over the next decade including ^1.4bn from National Express East Coast and ^1.2bn from Stagecoach's South West Trains. The Department for Transport is adamant that it will not renegotiate contracts and reacted to the financial troubles of the previous east coast operator, GNER▸ , by stripping the company of its ^1.3bn deal in 2006 and putting the contract out to auction. A government source told the Guardian last week that the franchise owners had yet to approach the DfT» with a proposal and, until then, they will be expected to honour contracts that were signed when the rail sector was riding on the coat tails of an economic boom.
The executives will attend the meeting armed with evidence that a boom period for the railways could be drawing to a close. According to figures seen by the Guardian, the number of rail journeys last year rose by less than 5%, down from 7.8% in 2007 and 6.7% in 2006. The tail-off in passenger growth follows an even steeper fall in revenue growth in the final two months of last year, with fare income rising by just 4% - prompting fears that some franchise contracts are coming under pressure. Analysts have warned that some recently awarded contracts need revenue growth closer to double figures to keep pressure off their owners.
Franchise owners have slashed more than 1,500 jobs recently, with National Express cutting 750 across its business, South West Trains shedding 480 and Go-Ahead's Southeastern losing 300. National Express also admitted this weekend that its East Coast operation is considering charging passengers at least ^1 to reserve a seat. Other franchises have expressed private sympathy, saying that too many customers make multiple reservations and never use them, but they have disregarded it after deciding that the public would react badly to extra charges when many fares are rising by as much as 10%.