Train driver strikes over the next two days are set to cause more misery for travellers.
Drivers belonging to the union Aslef are walking out at different companies on Friday and Saturday.
A ban on overtime at 16 companies is also continuing until Saturday, which will cause disruption to services.
Tomorrow (Friday) train drivers will strike at Avanti West Coast, CrossCountry, East Midlands Railway, West Midlands Railway and London Northwestern.
- CrossCountry, which runs many services through York, says there will be no services on Friday. More details here.
On Saturday (6 April), Aslef drivers will strike on Chiltern Railways, Great Western Railway, LNER, Heathrow Express, Northern and TransPennine Express.
- LNER will run more than 35 services between London, Edinburgh & West Yorkshire. This is equivalent to 25% of its usual timetable. You can see the revised timetable for Saturday here.
- Northern says: “As a result of ASLEF strike action, there will be no Northern services on Saturday 6 April. Additional disruption is expected between 4 and 9 April due to action short of strike called by ASLEF where some short notice amendments may take place.” More details here.
- TransPennine Express says: “On Saturday 6 April, please do not attempt to travel on a TransPennine Express service as we will not be running any services on our routes. Disruption is also likely on days before and after strike action. You are advised to plan carefully for any rail journeys as services may start later and finish earlier than usual.” More details here.
Train drivers on LNER will strike again on Saturday 20 April over a separate issue to the national pay dispute.
Aslef members at the company will also ban overtime from Friday 19 April to Sunday 21.
The union said LNER is failing to adhere to agreements.
An LNER spokesman said: “Our priority focus remains on minimising disruption to customers. We continue to encourage Aslef to work with us to find a way to end this long-running dispute.”