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Talks held to avoid rail strikes as scale of disruption revealed

RMT members are due to walk out on June 21, 23 and 25

Commuters at Leeds railway station(Image: PA)

The scale of disruption to rail services by the planned strikes later this month has prompted talks to be held in a bid to avert the industrial action, it has been revealed.

It was announced yesterday (Tuesday, June 7) that members of the Rail, Maritime and Transport (RMT) union at Network Rail and 13 train operators will walk out on June 21, 23 and 25, in the biggest outbreak of industrial action in the industry in a generation.

It was also confirmed by the union that another 24-hour strike on London Underground on June 21 in a separate row.

READ MORE: Dates for the biggest rail strikes in a generation revealed

The disputes are over pay, jobs and pensions, with the union complaining that railway staff who worked through the pandemic are facing job cuts, a pay freeze and attacks on employment conditions.

Talks between Network Rail (NR) and the union are expected to be held in the next few days, sources told the PA news agency.

NR is also drawing up contingency plans, with the strikes expected to cause disruption to services for six days, from the first walkout on Tuesday June 21 to the day after the third strike.

Fewer than one in five trains are likely to run, and only between 7am and 7pm, probably only on main lines.