A railway fit for Britain's future
Why linked: Filled the "Government rail strategy or rail reform policy documents that frame the Bill's objectives" gap via web research
Seeking views on proposals to reform Great Britain’s railways.
The Railways Bill is a Government Bill introduced 5 November 2025 to establish Great British Railways (GBR) as a single arm's-length body unifying track and train, amending the Railways Act 1993 and reforming the duties and functions of the Office of Rail and Road. It implements the Government's 'A railway fit for Britain's future' response and replaces the franchising model with public ownership integrated under GBR.
The Bill is the most significant rail reform since the Railways Act 1993, transferring track-access decisions and charging from ORR to GBR, narrowing ORR to a monitoring/appeals/licence-enforcement role, and creating a new Passenger Watchdog grown from Transport Focus. It restructures the funding regime via a five-yearly Funding Period Review and reshapes access rights for ~40 non-GBR operators including freight and open-access services.
The Bill completed Public Bill Committee stage on 10 February 2026 (Bill 373 reprint) and is now at Report stage in the Commons, with amendment papers running through to 30 April 2026. The Scottish Parliament agreed a Legislative Consent Motion on 24 March 2026.
The Bill as introduced on 5 November 2025, establishing Great British Railways and reforming the legal framework for railway regulation under the Railways Act 1993.
Reprint of the Bill following Public Bill Committee amendments, governing the version now at Report stage.
DfT's response to consultation setting out the policy architecture for GBR — the directing mind, the Passenger Watchdog, the Funding Period Review and the new access regime.
DfT's impact assessment supporting the Bill, including the RPC-reviewed costs and benefits of unifying track and train.
DfT memorandum to the Delegated Powers and Regulatory Reform Committee setting out delegated powers in the Bill.
ECHR compatibility memorandum accompanying the Bill.
Explanatory Notes for the Bill as introduced.
DfT's equalities impact assessment of measures within the Bill, published 24 March 2026.
DfT factsheet on the LTRS provisions in the Bill.
DfT factsheet on the new Passenger Watchdog grown out of Transport Focus.
DfT factsheet on accountability, monitoring and enforcement of GBR.
Framework for a memorandum of understanding on applying the Railways Bill in Scotland, including how GBR will deliver services there.
MoU setting out roles and responsibilities of DfT and the Welsh Government on collaboration between GBR and Transport for Wales.
ORR's submission summarising how the Bill reshapes its functions: new monitoring/appeals role, loss of track access direction, retention of safety and competition functions.
Library briefing on the structure and effect of the Bill ahead of Second Reading.
Select Committee report on the Bill before Report stage, including recommendations on the Long-Term Rail Strategy and asset stewardship.
Government response to the Transport Committee's report on the Railways Bill.
Holyrood's LCM on the Bill, agreed 24 March 2026.
Regulatory Policy Committee opinion on the DfT Impact Assessment for the Bill.
Conservative government's draft Bill subjected to Transport Committee pre-legislative scrutiny, predecessor to the Labour Government's Railways Bill.
The Bill is the legislative output of this consultation.
Why linked: DfT response setting out the public-ownership architecture and ORR's reformed role as 'critical friend' — the basis of the current Bill.
Why linked: Filled the "Government rail strategy or rail reform policy documents that frame the Bill's objectives" gap via web research
Seeking views on proposals to reform Great Britain’s railways.
Why linked: Matched expansion phrase: Transport Act 2000
This document is a response to the consultation on a draft Statement of Policy on Penalties under Chapter 1 of Transport Act 2000.
Why linked: Government response to consultation on rail reform legislation and draft Rail Reform Bill (Feb 2024).
Draft bill sets out blueprint for bringing track and train together under a new Great British Railways, leveraging private sector innovation to benefit customers.
Why linked: Filled the "Consultation responses on rail franchising, regulation, or service standards" gap via web research
The Department for Transport (DfT) consulted between 9 June 2022 and 4 August 2022 seeking views on primary legislative changes required to effect rail reform as set out in the Williams-Shapps Plan for Rail.
Why linked: Matched expansion phrase: Passenger Rail Services
A consultation on implementing minimum service levels for passenger rail services during periods of strike action.
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The Railways Bill, introduced by Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander on 5 November 2025 1, is the legislative vehicle for Great British Railways (GBR) — a unified arm's-length body absorbing Network Rail and 14 contracted train operating companies. The Bill substantially amends the Railways Act 1993 and reforms the Office of Rail and Road's statutory duties and functions. Second Reading completed on 9 December 2025 2; the Public Bill Committee took 14 sittings through January–February 2026 with the Bill reprinted as Bill 373 on 10 February 2026 3; the Bill is now at Report stage with amendment paper activity continuing through April 2026 4. The Scottish Parliament agreed its Legislative Consent Motion on 24 March 2026 5. The DfT's 'A railway fit for Britain's future' government response sets the policy frame 6, and ORR's written evidence (RB08) maps the regulator's reshaped role across monitoring, licence enforcement, JR-style appeals and the new Funding Period Review 7.
The Bill is at Report stage in the Commons following completion of Public Bill Committee on 10 February 2026 12. The Committee reprint (Bill 373) is the operative text 2, with notices of amendments published almost daily through April 2026 34. The Transport Committee published its 8th Report on the Bill on 10 February 2026, followed by the Government's response in a 4th Special Report on 24 April 2026. The Bill establishes GBR as the directing mind for rail, transfers track-access charging and capacity allocation from ORR to GBR, replaces ORR's Railways Act 1993 s.4 duties with a new duty-set including a public-interest duty (cl 18–20) 5, and creates a Passenger Watchdog grown out of Transport Focus. The Railways (Access, Management, and Licensing of Railway Undertakings) Regulations 2016 are disapplied to GBR (cl 72(2)) but retained for non-GBR infrastructure managers, producing a deliberately asymmetric access regime 5. The Funding Period Review under Schedule 2 replaces the existing periodic review: the Secretary of State publishes objectives and a funding envelope; GBR builds an integrated business plan; ORR advises but no longer determines 5. The Scottish Parliament's Legislative Consent Motion was agreed on 24 March 2026 6 and DfT published framework MoUs with Scottish and Welsh Ministers and the equalities impact assessment in late March 2026.
April 2026 has been dominated by Report-stage amendment papers, with notices published on most working days and the most recent dated 30 April 2026 1. The Government published its response to the Transport Committee's 8th Report on 24 April 2026. In late March, three significant publications appeared in close succession: the Scottish LCM was agreed on 24 March 2026 2; DfT published the equalities impact assessment of the Bill on 24 March 2026; and on 25 March 2026 DfT published the framework MoU for applying the Bill in Scotland alongside the MoU with Welsh Ministers on collaboration between GBR and Transport for Wales. The Public Bill Committee took written evidence from 33+ organisations across January–February 2026, with the regulator's submission (ORR, RB08) 3 providing the most detailed roadmap for how the reformed regime will operate. The DfT Minister for Rail wrote to the Committee in January 2026 confirming policy positions on the Bill. A separate letter on the transfer of train operating companies into public ownership followed on 11 February 2026.
Report stage completion and Lords introduction are the immediate parliamentary milestones, with amendment activity concentrated in late April 2026 1. Analysts should watch four substantive doctrinal flashpoints. First, the GBR licence: under Schedule 1 paragraph 3 (substituting Railways Act 1993 s.8) it is the Secretary of State, not ORR, who drafts and issues the licence — the consultation draft is awaited and will determine the practical scope of ORR's enforcement headroom over long-term asset stewardship and the retail code of practice 2. Second, the Access and Use Policy and the new ORR appeals jurisdiction under cl 68 — the appeals power is deliberately narrower than the current AMRs regulation 32 jurisdiction and the existing ORR directing role under the Railways Act 1993, confined to judicial-review grounds with substitution available only where there is one legally available answer (cl 68(4)(b)) 2. Open-access operators (Lumo/Hull Trains 3, ALLRAIL 45) and freight (Rail Freight Group 6, DP World 7) will be testing this in early disputes. Third, the Welsh Legislative Consent Motion remains outstanding (the Scottish LCM was secured on 24 March 2026 8) — the Welsh MoU frames expectations but is not a substitute for Senedd consent. Fourth, the first Statement of Objectives and Statement of Funds Available under the Funding Period Review will trigger the first FPR cycle 2; whether the FPR is used only for network operation/maintenance/renewals or extended to passenger services as the Bill permits is a live political-economy question.
ORR's evidence flags that several key implementing documents — the GBR licence text, the retail code of practice, the Statement of Objectives and the AUP — remain in development 1. The Transport Committee called on DfT to publish a comprehensive list of decisions, key documents and planned consultations before Report stage; the Government Response is in the corpus but its detail has not been extracted into individual event bodies. Inferred from corpus gap: the Welsh Legislative Consent Motion is not yet recorded in the events list while the Scottish LCM is 2 — a Welsh refusal or qualified consent would be a material political risk on Lords passage. The Bill's interaction with broader accessibility legislation reform is flagged by the Transport Committee but not resolved on the face of the Bill. The narrowed JR-style appeals jurisdiction under cl 68 may not deliver the de facto regulatory independence ORR is positioned to provide as 'critical friend' 1, particularly for capacity allocation disputes between GBR services and non-GBR freight or open access.
The Railways Bill rebuilds the doctrinal architecture put in place by the Railways Act 1993 around a new directing mind — Great British Railways — that combines the functions of Network Rail and most of the franchised passenger operators. Where the 1993 Act distributed track ownership, train operation, regulation and franchising across separate actors, the Bill collapses track and train into a single statutory body whose functions are set out in the new cl 3(1) and whose licence is issued by the Secretary of State rather than the regulator.
The Office of Rail and Road's role is reconstituted, not abolished. Its s.4 duties are replaced by a reformed duty-set (cl 18–20) that adds a positive public-interest duty and an obligation to consider the cost of public funding, but strips the long-standing duty to promote competition from the regulator's appeals work on GBR's network. ORR retains health and safety, competition law concurrency with the CMA, consumer law, rail statistics, train driver licensing, oversight of non-GBR networks (HS1, Core Valley Lines, Elizabeth Line core) and the Channel Tunnel — and continues to issue licences to non-GBR operators.
Access and charging move materially. Under the current regime ORR approves access contracts and sets charges for Network Rail; under cl 13(1) and cl 59–67 GBR sets its own access charges and produces an Access and Use Policy, a charges scheme and a performance scheme. The Railways (Access, Management, and Licensing) Regulations 2016 (AMRs) are disapplied to GBR by cl 72(2) but continue to govern non-GBR infrastructure managers — creating, by design, a two-track access doctrine across the network.
ORR's residual leverage over GBR runs through three channels: enforcement of the GBR licence (issued by the SoS); statutory monitoring under the inserted s.69A; and a judicial-review-style appeals jurisdiction under cl 68 over GBR's access, charging and performance decisions. The appeals power is deliberately narrow — ORR may quash a decision, order reconsideration or substitute a decision only where there is a single legally available answer (cl 68(4)(b)). This is significantly weaker than the current ORR directing role under the Railways Act 1993 or its appeals function under regulation 32 AMRs.
Funding is restructured through the Funding Period Review (Sch 2). The Secretary of State issues a Statement of Objectives (replacing the HLOS) and a Statement of Funds Available; GBR produces an integrated business plan; ORR advises rather than determines. A new Passenger Watchdog, grown out of Transport Focus, takes on functions currently exercised by ORR on passenger information, accessible travel, complaints, delay compensation and the Rail Ombudsman, with binding standards delivered through GBR's and non-GBR operators' licences.
New arm's-length body unifying network management and most passenger train operation, established under cl 3 of the Bill, absorbing Network Rail and 14 contracted train operating companies.
Document GBR must produce under cl 59 setting out how it will decide applications to use its network.
Reformed five-yearly funding process under Schedule 2 replacing the existing periodic review.
New body grown out of Transport Focus, taking on ORR's consumer-facing functions including passenger information, accessibility and complaints (cl 42, 43, 46, 47).
Statutory long-term strategy provided for in the Bill, welcomed by the Transport Committee in its 8th Report.
Commons Report stage and Third Reading of the Railways Bill — amendment paper activity is concentrated in April 2026 with the most recent paper dated 30 April 2026.
Lords stages following Commons completion; potential ping-pong on accessibility and devolved-authority amendments.
Welsh Parliament Legislative Consent Motion (Scottish LCM secured 24 March 2026).
Publication of draft GBR licence by DfT and consultation on the retail code of practice.
Network Rail/GBR publication of the Access and Use Policy following further engagement, with ORR developing appeals approach.
Statement of Objectives and Statement of Funds Available triggering the first Funding Period Review cycle.
Welcomes its repositioning as 'independent, expert advisor to the Secretary of State' and supports the reform package, while drawing attention to specific design choices: narrowed appeals jurisdiction (judicial review standard), loss of competition duty on appeals, and the need for a targeted licence including long-term asset stewardship and retail market obligations. Highlights operational transformation programme required to deliver new role.Jan 2026
Promoter of the Bill; sets out in 'A railway fit for Britain's future' a unified GBR responsible for both infrastructure and most passenger operations, with ORR as expert advisor and a new Passenger Watchdog. Frames the Bill as delivering simpler, more accountable rail in the customer and taxpayer interest.Nov 2025Nov 2025
Tension with ALLRAIL (Alliance of Passenger Rail New Entrants), Trainline
Engaged actively to ensure freight access on a GBR-controlled network is protected through the new statutory duty to promote rail freight and through the access appeals mechanism.Jan 2026
Open-access operators concerned about a vertically integrated GBR setting its own access charges and capacity allocation, with appeals confined to judicial-review grounds.Jan 2026Jan 2026
Tension with Department for Transport
Independent retailer focused on safeguards in the GBR retail code of practice to prevent GBR favouring its own retail platform over third-party competitors.Jan 2026
Tension with Department for Transport