Office of Rail and Road
Non-ministerial government department overview | |
---|---|
Formed | 5 July 2004 |
Preceding Non-ministerial government department | Rail Regulator |
Jurisdiction | Great Britain |
Headquarters | 1 Kemble Street, London, WC2B 4AN |
Employees | 280 |
Annual budget | £30 million[1] |
Non-ministerial government department executives |
Anna Walker, Chair Richard Price, Chief Executive |
Website |
www |
The Office of Rail and Road (ORR) is a statutory board which is the combined economic and safety regulatory authority for Great Britain's railway network. It was established on 5 July 2004 by the Railways and Transport Safety Act 2003, replacing the Rail Regulator. As a non-ministerial government department it is operationally independent of central government.
Following the passage of the Infrastructure Act 2015, the ORR's name changed from the Office of Rail Regulation to the 'Office of Rail and Road'. This change was introduced to reflect the ORR's new functions and duties as it assumed responsibility for monitoring highways.
Primary functions
The ORR's main functions are:
- Regulation of Network Rail's stewardship of Britain's rail infrastructure.
- Reviewing and revising the financial framework for the railway industry through periodic access charges reviews in which the structure and level of the allowed revenues of Network Rail are set.
- Granting, modifying, compliance monitoring and enforcement of licences held by operators of railway assets.
- Controlling the fair and efficient allocation of capacity of railway assets through the approval or direction of contracts for the use of track, stations, and light maintenance depots.
- Acting as the appellate authority for certain classes of appeal of a regulatory or legal nature arising under the industry-wide network code.
- Enforcement of railway competition law.
- Independent health and safety regulation for the railway industry as parent body (since 2006) of HM Railway Inspectorate and for Personal Track Safety.
- Approval of changes made to the National Routeing Guide and National Rail Conditions of Carriage.
ORR produces what is known as "the Blue Book", officially titled Railway Safety Principles and Guidance, to ensure those operating the rail network, or designing products related to it, comply with health and safety law.
Statutory duties
In carrying out its functions, ORR must discharge its statutory duties, which are its formal objectives. These are laid down in section 4 of the Railways Act 1993, and include the protection of the interests of users and the promotion of competition, efficiency and economy in the provision of railway services.
Public law obligations
Like other public authorities, ORR must comply with the rules of administrative law, and is amenable to judicial review, so it must act lawfully, rationally, proportionately and in accordance with the relevant rules of procedure. Although operationally independent of central government as a non-ministerial government department, it is still covered by legislation such as the Freedom of Information Act 2000.
Management
The ORR is managed by a thirteen-member board which is appointed by the Secretary of State for Transport. Anna Walker succeeded Chris Bolt as chair of the Office of Rail Regulation on 5 July 2009 when Bolt's five-year term of office ended.[2] The chief executive officer is Richard Price, appointed in 2011.
The ORR employs approximately 280 people, with offices in Glasgow, York, Manchester, London, Birmingham and Bristol.
Statistics
The ORR produces usage statistics for each station. These are generally released each February.
See also
References
- ↑ Who we are, Office of Rail Regulation, 28 January 2014, retrieved 11 March 2014
- ↑ "Anna Walker announced as ORR Chairman designate" (Press release). Office of Rail Regulation. 2009-03-26. Retrieved 2009-04-05.