Call Connection Service

This call connection service is provided by Directory Network Ltd and is in no way linked or affiliated with Northern Rail. The direct number can be found here at a lower cost.

All calls to our directory and call connection service are charged at a flat rate of £6 plus your phone company’s access charge.

All calls to our directory and call connection service are charged at a flat rate of £6 plus your phone company’s access charge.

Our Service: Calling from a Landline? Have a pen & paper ready.

Large businesses don’t like customers making telephone calls, so make it as difficult as possible on their website to hide away the contact telephone numbers and instead push you through to endless FAQ pages on their website. Directory Network makes it easy. Just select the business that you want to be connected with, then, click the call now button and we will do the rest.

When you use our services, we confirm the price of the service to you on the call. In addition, we will also read out to you the direct contact number for the service that you call. We recommend having a pen and paper to hand so that you can write this number down and contact them directly if required. Following the call, if you called from a mobile, we will also send you a free text with the services direct telephone number on it.

Want to record your call with Northern Rail? Directory Network offers a simple solution at no additional cost – simply select from the options to record your call and once the call is complete, we will send you a free text message with a link to your recording.

Our call recordings are sent to you by SMS once you finish your call. The call recording link is available for 30 days and we would recommend that you download the recording and store it in a safe place if you require it after the 30 day period.

If you are calling from a landline and wish to retrieve your call recording, you will need to use our contact form. Please tell us the telephone number you called from and an email address and we can send the call recording to you.

Directory Network connects customers to a wide range of businesses, including; travel, delivery services, catalogue and online shopping, mobile phone providers and energy suppliers.

We save customers time and connect you quickly through to the business that you wish to speak with.

The services mentioned on this website are provided by Directory Network Limited. We are not affiliated to or linked to any of the businesses mentioned on our website. We offer a call connection service

Northern Rail

Customer Services

Address

9 Rougier Street, York, North Yorkshire, YO1 6HZ

Phone

0800 200 6060

Hours

Northern Rail was replaced on 1 April 2016 by Arriva Rail North

Northern Rail, branded as Northern, was an English train operating company owned by Serco-Abellio that operated the Northern Rail franchise from 2004 until 2016. It was the primary passenger train operator in Northern England and operated the most stations of any train operating company in the United Kingdom. Northern Rail was replaced on 1 April 2016 by Arriva Rail North.

Arriva Rail North, branded as Northern by Arriva (legal name Arriva Rail North Limited) was a train operating company in Northern England that began operating the Northern franchise on 1 April 2016 and inherited units from the previous operator Northern Rail. A subsidiary of Arriva UK Trains, Northern was the largest train franchise in the United Kingdom in terms of the size of the network and the number of weekly services run. Its trains called at 528 stations, about a quarter of all stations in the country; of these stations 476 were operated by Northern. On 1 March 2020, Arriva Rail North Limited ceased to operate and all operations were handed to HM Government’s Operator of Last Resort.

The preceding Northern Rail franchise greatly increased passenger numbers from 73 million to 97 million between 2004 and 2016 and as a result the new franchise was tendered on a growth basis, allowing for a £500 million investment in 101 new-built trains: the diesel Class 195 and electric Class 331. Introduced into service in July 2019, these were the first new-build trains for the Northern franchise since the introduction of the Class 333 in 2000, with further orders possible if the new units encouraged passenger growth and improved passenger satisfaction. The new rolling stock would enable all Pacer trains to be retired by June 2020.

Since the franchise began in April 2016, it had been beset by worsening punctuality, perceived poor customer service, frequent industrial action by staff, and delays in introducing new rolling stock. The franchise was badly affected by the May 2018 timetable fallout and punctuality had struggled to recover. The franchise was scheduled to run until 2025 and had an option for an additional year, which was dependent on performance.

The future of the franchise was first reviewed by the Department for Transport (DfT) in July 2019 deeming frequent weekend cancellations due to insufficient staff to be “unacceptable”. It also voiced concerns about declining passenger numbers despite a 10% increase in timetabled services since the beginning of the franchise in 2016, and an unplanned subsidy increase from £286 million to £404 million following the May 2018 timetable fallout.

Conversely, Arriva contended that there had been “collective system inability”, citing Network Rail’s inadequate timetabling to absorb delays and the DfT’s unwillingness to proceed with improving infrastructure which was part of the Northern franchise bid prospectus in 2014, such as two new “through” platforms at Manchester Piccadilly; these would have eased congestion through the Castlefield corridor and enabled the planned increase in services over the course of the franchise.

On 29 January 2020, it was announced that the Northern franchise would end early on 1 March 2020 – marking the first time a franchise has been removed from a train operating company due to poor performance since Connex South Eastern in 2003. From this date onwards, the franchise became directly operated by the DfT under the brand name Northern Trains with an objective to “stabilise performance and restore reliability for passengers”

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