25 NOVEMBER 2000, Page 33

Hopes deferred

ONE school of reorganisation now wants to dig Railtrack up and bury it, and perhaps the trains should never have been parted from the tracks — or not on purpose, any- how. Still, the great digging-up of British Railways is now behind us. What the dig- gers never foresaw was that transport by rail would became a growth business again. Passenger traffic is up by one-fifth and freight by one-third, or they were until the accident at Hatfield put the railways into hibernation. These are or could be good businesses and would reward investment. This year's contenders for franchises cer- tainly thought so. On the Brighton line a new bidder has unseated Connex, to the relief of its patient passengers, who call it Chronix. All these hopes have been dimmed or postponed. The outbreak of second-guessing that has followed Hatfield must have made the railways less attractive to investors and to managers. Since Rail- track needs running, my choice would be Chris Green, the old hand who was brought in to lend credibility to Virgin Rail, but I cannot raise my railway correspondent, I.K. Gricer. Either he is in a tunnel or he is hid- ing from the headhunters.