Keeping the Railway Moving - A Commuter's View from the Platform

Innovation
Rail
Transport
January 19, 2026
   •   
by  
Will Wood, Head of Business Development

Every weekday morning, my journey depends on decisions being made exactly right – across multiple routes, operators and teams that I’ll never meet. Most of the time, I don’t notice any of it. Which is precisely the point.

The announcement “person on track” is one many passengers recognise. It lands suddenly, halting trains, freezing platforms and throwing carefully planned journeys into uncertainty. For those on board, it’s frustrating. For those behind the scenes, it’s far more serious. While disruptive, these situations are first and foremost safety-critical responses, taken to protect life. 

Network Rail operates one of the most complex transport systems in the country where safety must always come first. The professionalism and care shown by teams responding to these incidents deserves real recognition and respect. At the same time, there is a clear opportunity – and responsibility – to reduce how often these situations occur, particularly at known hotspots where patterns repeat.

I was shocked to read that, according to Network Rail figures for the 2023/24 financial year, trespass was one of the biggest causes of delays on Britain’s rail network, responsible for 908,168 delay minutes to passenger and freight services. That’s well over 900,000 minutes of disruption caused simply by people going onto the tracks without permission. To put that into perspective, more than 19,300 trespass incidents were recorded in a single year - roughly one every half hour - making trespass a leading cause of late running and widespread disruption across the network

Better visibility of risk enables earlier intervention and earlier intervention protects lives. Fewer trespass incidents mean fewer emergency stops, fewer cascading delays and a more reliable railway for everyone who depends on it.

For commuters like me who juggle connections, tight schedules and long days – that reliability isn’t something that we take for granted. It’s something we value deeply. When the railway works, it’s not by accident. It’s because thousands of people, systems and safeguards are quietly doing their job to keep us moving. Supporting Network Rail’s ongoing efforts to make the network safer and more resilient helps ensure that, day after day, countless journeys like mine can continue.