Protestors gather in London against plans to shut railway ticket offices
Many are concerned about the impact on elderly and disabled passengers
Last updated 1st Sep 2023
People have gathered outside Downing Street in London to protest against controversial plans to close railway ticket offices across the country.
Many are concerned about the impact it'll have on elderly and disabled passengers.
It comes as a public consultation on the proposals closes today.
RMT general secretary Mick Lynch called the fight to stop the closure of ticket offices at railway stations a āfight for the future of our communitiesā.
Mr Lynch spoke in front of hundreds of people at a demonstration organised by the RMT union outside on Thursday evening.
More than 460,000 people have responded to the proposals, and London TravelWatch and Transport Focus will assess the response to the consultation after it ends on Friday.
Addressing the crowd, Mr Lynch said: āItās a fight for the future of our communities.
āPeople up and down this country are sick and tired of their communities being hollowed out.
āOur Post Offices are being closed, our pubs are being closed.
āOur banks have withdrawn from the High Street.
āEverywhere we go, all the community assets are being hollowed out in the name of profit, in the name of modernisation.ā
Mr Lynch added that the trade union members will āstand up for themselvesā.
āWeāre going to stand up for ourselves, not rely on the professional politicians, and the shysters,ā he said.
āLetās have a working class movement that serves our interests that serves our people are waiting for our class solidarity.
āLetās get in before the rain comes.
āThereās a storm coming, make sure the Tories feel it.ā
Rail unions and passenger groups have warned the closures would particularly affect disabled and elderly passengers.
While companies say many offices sell few tickets because of increasing online sales, and argue that moving staff from ticket offices on to station concourses will offer more help for passengers.
Damien Frettsome, 36, from Hinckley, Leicestershire, said that a āhuge portionā of people would be excluded from using the railway if ticket offices were closed.
āA huge portion of society, and different groups, wouldnāt be able to use the railway, or would have issues using the railway,ā he said.
Londoner Elaine Bromon said that closing ticket offices was the āthin edge of the wedgeā.
āI passionately believe in hanging onto the ticket offices for loads of reasons,ā she said.
āIām a Londoner, I live here, I watch people who canāt speak English grappling with the ticket offices.
āThereās people with disabilitiesā¦ youāve only got to leave your glasses at home and you canāt see the automated ticket office.
āTo me itās the thin edge of the wedge.
āI think this will go and then cash will go.
āItās just one thing after another.ā