AFTER a decade spent reassuring passengers that it was "getting there", Iarnród éireann appears to have careered off the rails, sparking fears that the perennially dysfunctional transport provider could become the state's next Fás. As the company prepares to close the first railway line in over 30 years, the Sunday Tribune has uncovered an apparent culture of waste stretching to the top of the organisation, which has cost the taxpayer almost €500m in recent years.
The company has invested over €420m in a new Dublin railway expansion scheme, the Kildare Route Project, which company bosses have now decided is surplus to requirements.
It also has a fleet of over 100 modern carriages lying idle across the country which it refuses to use despite continuing overcrowding at peak times on Dublin commuter routes. On top of this, 5% of the city's Dart fleet – worth around €20m – is inoperable due to uncorrected manufacturing faults.
Meanwhile, the company is refurbishing a set of carriages especially for a trainspotters' excursion on the new western rail corridor. Its economy drive, however, looks set to begin with the axing of rail services between Waterford and Rosslare.
The revelations come as two senior executives are suing the company in court for unlawful dismissal and the firm continues to be probed over last year's Malahide viaduct collapse. There also remain allegations of procurement fraud at the company.
According to Mark Gleeson of Rail Users Ireland, the company's management has consistently ignored passenger needs and despite receiving €2bn in taxpayers' money over the past decade, passengers often experience slower journey times than those in 1999.
Meanwhile, overcrowding continues to be a problem given the company's refusal to use its Mark 3 fleet of carriages which are practically identical to those used in Britain on prestigious rail routes such as the Great Western main line between London and Bristol and the east coast main line between London and Edinburgh.
The fleet of over 100 carriages is currently decaying in railway yards across the country. Gleeson believes that the 20-year-old fleet should return to some intercity routes to free up extra capacity for commuter services.
"There is a desperate push within the company to eliminate all references to the 'orange' era and to create a new corporate image. While a fresh start is to be welcomed, passengers don't care how old a train is provided it arrives on time, the heating and lighting works and it's comfortable," he said.
"It is imperative that the fleet be restored for use. Iarnród éireann's withdrawal of the Mark 3 fleet has resulted in more cancellations, more delays and more unhappy passengers."
One such passenger is Kevin Callan, a barrister and the deputy mayor of Drogheda, a town which has been in constant conflict with Iarnród éireann over the level of service the company has provided to its residents in recent years.
A regular rail commuter, Callan characterises Iarnród éireann's service as unreliable and uncomfortable, despite the town being served by the company's latest commuter railcars.
According to Callan, many of his fellow commuters have abandoned the rail service in favour of private coaches in the wake of the Malahide viaduct collapse last August.
"They found that private coaches provided a level of comfort and quality of service that far exceeds what Iarnród éireann can provide.
"It is also very expensive to travel by rail compared with bus between Dublin and Drogheda," he said.
"Overcrowding is a particular issue in the evenings. In most cases, the Drogheda trains are full to capacity at Connolly and people are sandwiched into the trains. But there's no sign of anything being done to fix it."
In fact, in some cases, Iarnród éireann's actions have worsened the problem, particularly the new Dart timetable. Dublin's electric rail service has slashed the number of trains running at peak times.
The timetable introduced a standardised 15-minute gap between all services, even though peak services had previously been running around five minutes apart.
One of those suffering as a result is David Lafferty, an accountant who commutes daily between Shankill and Grand Canal Dock Dart stations. He normally leaves Shankill between 8.10am and 8.30am. Until last November, four northbound services served Shankill during that time. Now, there are only two.
"The train has become unbearable. There used to be a train every five minutes at that time. If the train was packed, you would just wait for the next one but now you don't have that option," he said.
"Shankill is the first stop after Bray but you often can't get on the train. It's like a concentration-camp train and it's exactly the same going home in the evenings".
The overcrowding has become so bad that the service Lafferty normally gets – the 8.15am from Shankill – is often delayed by five minutes once it reaches the city centre because passengers literally struggle to get on it.
According to Mark Gleeson of Rail Users Ireland, complaints about the new timetable have been met with "total denial" from Iarnród éireann.
"Irish Rail will never admit it is wrong and relies on the fact the general public are not sufficiently knowledgeable to disprove Irish Rail claims that insufficient capacity exists to run more trains," he said.
The capacity problems in Dublin haven't been helped by the fact that 10 Dart carriages bought in 2000 for €20.3m currently lie idle, having last seen passenger service a year ago.
Although they are officially undergoing heavy maintenance, they have proven consistently faulty and may never return to service – the company admits that it's struggling to source spare parts for them.
Other promises have also been broken: a third of the company's fleet of high-powered locomotives bought for over €80m between 1994 and 1995 are in storage, despite having a remaining lifespan of around 25 years.
The company bought them in a bid to cut journey times on the Dublin-Cork route to two hours. Fifteen years later, the average journey time has actually increased to three hours.
The company is now pushing the government to buy new high-speed trains for the route, a move its critics suspect is designed to conceal maintenance failings.
"The management's focus on 'new' has resulted in a failure to maintain what has already been done.
"The condition of the Dublin-Cork line has been allowed to deteriorate to the point where there were 24 temporary speed limits on the route in December 2009," said Gleeson.
Many of these limits stand at 25mph on a route which should be capable of top speeds of up to 100mph. To add insult to injury, passengers using the line are experiencing more cancellations because of the company's decision to ban the use of the Mark 3s.
Despite this, the company's chief executive Dick Fearn was unrepentant when questioned about it by the Oireachtas Committee on Transport last year.
"Our Mark 3 carriages... are close to the end of their useful life unless one spends a lot of money on refurbishment. However, a Mark 3 carriage in itself is inert and needs something to pull it, a locomotive. That is a very traditional way of doing things because, given the relatively short distances we have in Ireland, it means uncoupling the locomotive and putting it to the other end," he said.
The company is happy to continue tradition when it suits, however, and it is currently refurbishing a set of Mark 3 carriages for a trainspotters' excursion later this month. The carriages will be immediately mothballed once the event is over.
A company spokesman said that the event formed part of its annual charity drive for British charity the Railway Children and that a "modest spruce-up" of the carriages formed its contribution.
He also told the Sunday Tribune that Dart service changes had been introduced as a result of government cuts to the company's funding.
"In a situation where our subvention and revenue have seen a significant fall, we could not sustain the situation where services were bunched and there were irregular service gaps, resulting in Dart trains, even in the peak, operating with empty seats," he said.
He said that commuter services were designed to carry full loads, meaning that not all passengers would be able to get seats.
He said that the company's Mark 3 fleet was less cost-effective than the railcars it uses on most of its intercity routes. These railcars have other benefits, including a major increase in service frequencies on most routes.
The most dramatic example of this is the Dublin-Sligo route which is now served by eight intercity trains per day as opposed to three per day in 1999.
Average journey times have also improved on some routes: the slowest Dublin-Tralee train in 1999 took over four-and-a-half hours to reach its destination. By contrast, the slowest train on the route today takes just four hours.
But journey times on Iarnród éireann's key flagship routes, Dublin-Cork and Dublin-Belfast, have increased over the past decade and none of the journey times promised on those routes in 1994 have ever been achieved.
According to the spokesman, these promises were merely aspirational objectives "from a pre-investment era, where the funding was simply not available to deliver this".
"When significant capital funding did return in the late 1990s, it was directed to the crucial area of safety investment as the entire core network needed to be overhauled. Frankly, without this work, we would not be talking about routes in regard to journey times, we'd be talking about them in the past tense," he said.
These comments will provide little comfort to Wexford commuters, however – they will soon be speaking of the Waterford-to-Rosslare line in the past tense as they ponder whether any of the money used on dud Darts, unneeded capacity and the indiscriminate purchasing of new carriages could have saved their service.
This article reinforces my belief that CIE is a gigantic outdoor relief scheme run for the benefit of its employees, many of whom whose families have been employed for generations by CIE and its predecessors.
The railway lines are part of the national highway infrastructure. For that reason the railway tracks must be taken away from Irish Rail and vested in a separate company that will put services out to tender and hopefully the farce that is the Rosslare services, that do not connect with sailings and even each other in many instances, cannot happen again. It is a hoary old ruse by CIE to run grossly inadequate services and then pretend that demand is insufficent.
I have been using the dart since I moved to Dublin 3 years ago. However, the move from an urban timetable to something befitting a country service is unbearable and I'm cancelling my season ticket and buying a scooter.
Is this article anti Children's Charity!
Myself and Nigel Fitzgricer shall be making the journey over from the Mainland for the Western Rail Corridor Railway Children's Special and I can assure you that it all for the children and not to have Irish taxpayers support our trainspotting.
For shame!
The Waterford-Wexford rail line was deliberately scheduled for 5.20pm (leaving Waterford) to prevent commuters from using it in order to build a case for closing the line.
What's more, the closure of the beet factory in Carlow, to make way for a housing development that was never built, at the loss of many jobs for what was a profitable enterprise, meant the loss of the much needed cargo transport on the same line to keep it in operation.
It's a shame to see railway join the list of mismanaged public services in this country.
Change is badly needed.
Locomotive hauled carriages may be "inert" but that also means quieter since there is no engine under the floor. VIA Rail Canada is currently doing a full refurbishment of carriages of a similar lifespan to the Mark 3s - but unlike Irish Rail, Canada still has major carriage building expertise.
To the reader named Tarquin - what on earth do you mean "making the journey over from the Mainland" ? I can only assume it's some sort of wind up. Are you implying that Ireland is part of the Uk ? If that's your level of ignorance about this country then you should stay where you are and don't bother coming here with your condescending attitude. For shame indeed - Shame on you mister !.
Tarquin, are you joking? If not, please read the article again. Its focus is clearly not on the charity, but on the rampant waste within Iarnród Éireann.
I will point out, however, that as a public service body, IÉ's responsibility is to provide a top class rail service to the citizens of Ireland, which it has utterly failed to do. It is not IÉ's responsibility to entertain children from "the mainland" (by which I assume you mean the island of Great Britain, part of a foreign country, boasting far superior rail services than Ireland), however deserving they might be.
Tarquin is obviously not telling the truth, his name and the name of his colleague will tell you that immediately.
Whether he is joking or not is another matter.
I don't know who is more stupid, "Tarquin" for his comments or the people who believe his comments.
Tarquin is a tool, and an Irish tool at that who goes onto the IRN forum and winds people up about British trainspotters- known as Gricers coming to Ireland.
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Here here Rio Pathfinder, as one of the regular old beans on the Irish trainspotting circut I agree 100%!!! Sitting here in my home in Somerset while in regular phone converrsation with Irish Rail managers I can assure you they always give me what I request. Stout Yeomany one and all!
Bring back the Park Royal! Now where is my monocle and deer stalker cap?
I think its great the way we have loads of new trains, the Mullingar train used to only run a few times a day, but now we have as service every two hours with shiny new up to date trains. Its brilliant!
Ah Sir Reginald, another tool. Or just the same tool using another name?
What are you hoping to achieve with your posts? Humour? Well you're about as funny as piles.
irish rail seriously need to cop on and get there heads into gear theres over 100 mark 3s stored and there all in great condition better condition than them commuter 2700s on the limerick to ennis line.
heres the problem, overcrowding on the commuter line to drogheda.
heres the solution, bring 4 or 5 sets of 10 carriges of mark 3s with a loco 201 at the front and back that way theres no changeover required, the platforms on the drogheda line can easily hold 10 carriges.
irish rail even admitted that the cost of refurbisment of the mark 3 fleet would cost less than half of what they spent on railcars.
irish rail just suck big time.
BRING BACK THE MARK 3S NOW
Damn the blighter! I cannot agree with you more Rio! Who are these people to deny Irish Rail management the chance to waste thousands on giving mostly overseas trainspotters a fun time on the Western Rail line in coaches they refuse to their paying regular customers!
Back in the days of the Raja we would whip the coolies who refused to obey His Majesty's Imperial Railway Charter. I can recall once on the Bengali Road during a fine run behind a Class 069 4-12-10 Derby Built steam locomotive I spilled my Earl Grey down my favourite Eaton tie! We must maintain the Empire's railways and Irish Rail Management are doing a Sterling job. Well more a case of Euros, thousands of them to fund trainspotting.
Thankfullly this Earl Grey Malfunction won't happen on the Western Rail Corridor next weeked as Irish Rail management have gone to trouble of refurbishing an entire train, spending all that time effort and diesel (carbon footprint you know!) driving it all the way to Limerick for us Trainspotters. Horah! The next day it'll dumped on the scrap heap so Irish Commuters will never know the pleasure of its fine interior as they rattle in railcars and bouncy packed DART to Balbriggian.
So Happy Irish Rail management have their prirorities correct.
Many thanks to Irish Rail Managament for keeping the SPIRT OF THE EMPIRE in tact and using taxpayers money and resources to fun my jollies between Gort and Ennis. Oh my apology it's all about children's and not taxpayer subsidised trainspotting. Oh no. Not at all. Heaven forbid!
Tally Ho! Another Lemon Curd sandwich anyone? Where's me camera Tarquin?
There's nothing wrong with Irish Rail that can't be fixed by bringing back the Craven carriages with their steam heating and dining cars filled with lashings of ginger beer and pork pies. I love to hear the bark of a heavy freight locomotive hauling 15 bogies over Shap Fell and down across the Barrow Bridge as I munch on my bacon buttie in the dining car on the way to catch the ferry back to the MAINLAND!!!!!
SRB
Hemel Hempstead
As a 15th generation train driver at CIE, I am disgusted with the suggestions that the rail unions in this country are a den of publically funded nepotism and jobs for the boys!
When I went straight into work at Inchicore as a little boy it was because I was the best candidate for the job and not because my previous 15 direct male ancestors were also train drivers!
How offensive. Just because of that and my mother working in the CIE canteen, my 5 sisters in the CIE accounts departs, 14 uncles on level crossing gates and 33 various neices and nephews also working for Irish Rail has nothing to do with nepotims at all!
It is because we are genetically superior to taxpayers. Get that straight PAYE monkeys!
Larkin!!!!! Larkin!!!!!
Chaps, Whats all this mucking about on trains in the west, Any chance of an old steamer on front instead of the mucky old diesel. Maybe IE could get Maebh out of her shackles up north in the UK in time for the run. That would show those ruffians invading from the Mainland what a proper Railway company can do for chaps that look at trains all day and do no work, what are they Gricers you say. Lets put a smile on their faces. Well done IE, Lets hope there not to many kids on it though.
CIE is atrocious organisation who run abysmal services and then expect us to be thankful. They need to be dismantled before they dismantle our railway services any further.
It's a joke at this stage, and not a funny one.
A fitting advertisement for Irish Rail considering the Tribune article.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HhVbSY...
Instead of investing funds in Dublin all the time why don't Irish Rail look at reopening lines in Counties Cavan and Monaghan and Meath which should never have been closed in the first place.
In my opinion the money spent on the N3 which is still ongoing would have been better spent on a railway line from Cavan to Dublin and Monaghan to Dublin encompassing Meath and Louth en route.
Maybe they could have worked with NIR to restore services in Co Fermanagh too.
Where overcrowding is taking place then they need to look at bringing any idle carriages around the country back into service to meet capacity. If people are paying for a service then they should be getting everything that is needed to provide them with an adequate and comfortable service.
Michael Aghas is right! We must make sure Dublin never gets a world class transport system. The present Third World rail network in Dublin is enough. In fact, I would suggest ripping up the DART and sending it to Coothill and Clones. We need more social Justice and less condoms.
I like my dinner in the afternoon.
Theres no third world rail network in Dublin. Its no where as bad as a concentration-camp train. This article seems very onesided and looks like it got most of its 'info' from a certain Dublin orientated rail users group. I doubt at this stage some of the mk3s are in better condition than the 2700s, though some could go back into service. Does it really matter anyway as most of the comments made here are from the same guy using aliases. Irish Rail could be a lot better but they could be a lot worse. We should be grateful we have all these new efficient (compared to mk3) trains. Putting a loco on each end of a train of coaches would (1) require money to fit them with the equipment needed (2). Use a hell of alot of fuel (3). Cause a hell of alot of damage to the track compared to railcars.
Oh these funny names to insult English "trainspotters", you master of comedy. I see the same tool is still making pointless comments. Why not stick to Board.IE as I'm sure I've just been reading more of your rubbish on there.
If you have a point, (which somehow I doubt come) out with it.
Sit back relax- let the train take the strain- chuck along as for today we're in no rush, Enough time to count the moo cows in the field- if you watch carefully, you see rail workers playing hide and seek near the stations.
Listen to a person on free travel who tells all on the meaning of life- ponder a moment and laugh out loud at the madness of it all- this is our rail service- not perfect- can we fix it? Well no because deep down no one is really bothered- in the end we get there- back to the green fields of home...
I hope the seats on the MrkIII aren't stained by heaps of lemon curd and lashing of ginger ale when myself and the rest of the chaps come over from the Mainland for the "charity event" *haw haw, nudge, nudge wink wink*
I suggest all of Irish Rail's Management be placed on the Queen's Honours List for their sterling work in using taxpayers money to fund trainspotting. MBE's at the very least!
"Our Mark 3 carriages... are close to the end of their useful life unless one spends a lot of money on refurbishment. However, a Mark 3 carriage in itself is inert and needs something to pull it, a locomotive. That is a very traditional way of doing things because, given the relatively short distances we have in Ireland, it means uncoupling the locomotive and putting it to the other end," he said.
This from the chief executive! Shows how out of touch this guy is. In the UK, the mark 3 is still in daily use in particular within the HST sets. As for changing locos at each end, then why not convert some of the spare mk3's to driving trailers? Or possibly import redundant DVT's from the UK? This would then alleviate the need to change ends. It's not rocket science!
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I have abandoned Galway Dublin for GOBUS now.
It takes the same time or slightly less as the train AND at less half the cost at peak times and with free wifi all the way.