Sydneysiders have been warned that more than 1,000 train services are expected to be cancelled by the end of Wednesday while those that do run could suffer hours-long delays, as the state government vows to explore legal action to quash “intolerable” industrial action from continuing into Thursday.
By Wednesday afternoon, about 400 services had been cancelled, with just 16% of services having run on time or at all. The T4 Eastern Suburbs and Illawarra, T1 North Shore and Western and T8 Airport and South lines had been the worst affected by work bans from combined rail unions.
Some delays on the T4 line reached nearly 300 minutes, Transport for New South Wales said. More than 25% of services in the morning peak were cancelled.
On Wednesday evening, online trip planners put the delay to some services on the T4 line at 437 minutes late – in excess of seven hours.
The chaos wrought havoc throughout the morning, leading to long queues for bus alternatives and reports of 40-minute travel times between two suburban stations, with trains routinely stuck on platforms due to shortages of rail workers to staff them.
Transport authorities said disruptions were set to worsen later in the day and further deteriorate on Thursday if certain work bans, especially to do with maintenance, continued to be observed.
The acting NSW premier, Penny Sharpe, said the work bans in force on Wednesday had led to “serious impacts” across Sydney for commuters and businesses, and that “we’re currently looking at all of our legal options to make sure that these conditions can be rolled back and that we can get the trains back running on time”.
Sydneysiders with critical travel over the rest of the day were told to begin their journeys as soon as possible.
Commuter Jesse posted on X on Wednesday: “Platforms dangerously overloaded. Train after train cancelled … Everyone deserves fair pay but fair go Sydney Trains, you’re losing public support with these stunts.”
One commuter reported they had been sitting on a Blue Mountains Line train on platform 6 at Central station for more than an hour with no announcement on when their delayed service would be leaving. Sydney Trains responded there was no crew for the service and they had no estimated time of departure.
Other commuters said they would be late to their shifts at hospitals.
The transport department secretary, Josh Murray, said: “As we look towards the afternoon and evening, the scenario is going to get worse in terms of train and crew availability, and we also see some inclement weather on the horizon, which may make afternoon travel even more difficult.
“We are saying to vulnerable travellers, we are saying to emergency workers or those that have critical travel this afternoon, to leave now, to make those arrangements and not rely on afternoon peak services.”
The Electrical Trades Union’s (ETU) refusal to conduct maintenance overnight on Tuesday was responsible for significant delays earlier on Wednesday, according to Sydney Trains’ chief executive, Matt Longland. But actions by several of the combined rail unions – stuck in negotiations with the government for a new pay deal – were contributing to the disruptions.
Longland said he had received advice from the ETU that it intended to continue maintenance bans on Wednesday evening, an indication the commuter chaos would continue on Thursday.
Commuters turned to other modes of transport, with long queues for buses forming outside some train hubs, including Bondi Junction station, while Metro services – which are separate to the train network work bans – were increased to cope with extra demand.
One of the bans in place on Wednesday was an order for drivers to operate trains slower than necessary – a speed level that has gradually decreased as the pay dispute continues.
The impact of the work bans was felt across the state, with one of the daily Bathurst Bullet services cancelled and replaced with buses between Lithgow and Bathurst.
The state transport minister, Jo Haylen, described the unions as a “boa constrictor strangling” the train network.
She first made the comparison late in 2024, leading one of the main groups, the Rail, Tram and Bus Union (RTBU), to redesign its logo, which now features a boa constrictor wrapped around a train set.
This week’s fresh industrial action came as the combined rail unions considered an improved pay offer from the state government.
Eight months into negotiations for a new pay deal, and amid proceedings in the Fair Work Commission and federal court, Haylen announced an offer of an improved 13% pay rise plus 1% efficiency rise and 1% super rise across four years – much lower than the combined rail unions’ demands of 32% over four years.
Haylen said the sweetened offer, made public this week, was possible due to an agreement to merge the two state bodies that run Sydney trains and regional trains over the next four years. The merger was expected to drive productivity gains and financial savings – including from possible job cuts – that would fund an additional 1% rise.
Haylen urged rail unions to “act in the interests of taxpayers” and consider what she described as the government’s “final offer”.
Rail unions have until Thursday to consider the offer.
Toby Warnes, the NSW secretary of the RTBU, appeared lukewarm on the proposal. “We’re a little bit perturbed by the fact that the government only managed to find 1% in savings from it, and that those 1% only came from job losses,” he said.
“So that’s obviously something we’re not extremely happy about. I don’t think 13% over four years is going to cut it.”
In a statement, the RTBU said the government needed to “stop playing politics” and come back to the negotiating table.
“It is clear that the government’s strategy is to drag this dispute out for longer than necessary in order to sway public opinion against the unions,” the RTBU said.
“The ball is in the government’s court. It can choose to take us down the legal avenue again and waste tens of thousands of dollars or they can meet with the union and finally put an end to this dispute.”
The FWC cannot be asked to settle the substantive dispute – pay and conditions – until February.
As a result of the industrial action, the usually bustling Martin Place station in the heart of Sydney’s business district was sparsely populated on Wednesday afternoon, with just a trickle of customers making their way through the barriers.
Retiree Sue did not know a strike was happening when she headed out and did not usually commute on a Wednesday.
“I just noticed there’s an issue so I’m going to change the course of my day and get on with something else,” she said.
Another commuter, who wished to remain anonymous, said she had waited at her platform for more than 20 minutes but eventually decided to “give up”.
“It’s too hot,” she said.