The South Eastern franchise, also known as the Integrated Kent franchise, is a railway franchise for the provision of passenger services between London and Kent in South East England.
In December 2002, after the franchise ran into financial trouble, the Strategic Rail Authority (SRA) agreed to bail it out with a £58 million injection, with the end date brought forward from 2011 until 2006.[5] However, continuing poor financial management resulted in the SRA deciding to strip Connex of the franchise in June 2003.[6][7][8][9] Connex South Eastern continued to operate the franchise until 8 November 2003.[10][11]
2003: South Eastern Trains
On 9 November 2003 South Eastern Trains, a subsidiary company of the SRA, took over the franchise for a planned 18 months. It took on all the leased rolling stock and most of the Connex staff including senior management. In the event, it took over two years to re-let the franchise to a private company.
The franchise was let for an initial eight years, with a two-year option dependent on performance targets being met. In December 2008, as part of the franchise agreement, operation of services on the Redhill to Tonbridge Line passed to Southern. High Speed 1 services began on 14 December 2009.[15] Having met the performance criteria, in March 2011 the DfT granted Govia a two-year franchise extension until March 2014.[16]
In June 2017 the DfT announced that an Abellio/East Japan Railway Company/Mitsui & Co consortium, incumbent Govia, Stagecoach and Trenitalia had been shortlisted for the next franchise, which was once again named the South Eastern franchise.[23][24] In August 2017, Trenitalia withdrew citing a desire to concentrate its resources on its bid for the West Coast Partnership.[25] In February 2018, it was announced that Alstom would take a 20% shareholding in the Stagecoach company.[26] In April 2019, Stagecoach was disqualified from the bidding because they did not meet pensions rules.[27]
On 7 August 2019, the franchise competition was cancelled and the DfT instead took up a further extension. The franchise was due to cease on 31 March 2020[28][22] until a new contract was agreed on 30 March 2020, running for up to two years.[29]
2021: Southeastern (DfT)
In September 2021, Transport Secretary Grant Shapps announced that Southeastern's contract would end on 16 October 2021, with operations transferred to the DfT OLR Holdings-owned operator of last resort, Southeastern, which is continuing to operate under the Southeastern name.[30] This followed an investigation conducted by the Department for Transport which found that, since October 2014, Southeastern had failed to return over £25 million of taxpayer funding.[31] Southeastern's contract runs until 17 October 2027.[1]