He added: ‘We are now on the cusp of major disruption which will cause misery for people right across the country.
‘Many people who do not get paid if they can’t get to work face losing money at a time they simply can’t afford to. Children sitting exams will face the extra distraction of changing their travel plans.
‘And vulnerable people trying to attend long-awaited hospital appointments may have no choice but to cancel.’
After bailing out the sector for £16 billion during the epidemic – the equivalent of £600 per home – ministers expect the business to save roughly £2 billion.
They also point out that train workers earn a median pay of £44,000, which is higher than the national average.
The strikes ‘could not have come at a worse moment,’ according to business leaders, for companies expecting for a summer boost after the Covid devastation.
‘The train and Tube strikes will impose another lockdown on the West End at a time when central London’s economy needs all the help it can get,’ said Ros Morgan, chief executive of the Heart of London Business Alliance, which represents over 600 firms in the capital’s West End.
As pubs, bars, and restaurants, as well as other leisure and tourism activities like as theatres, have been damaged, trade organisation UKHospitality has warned that the cost to the sector might reach £1 billion this week alone.
‘For a shattered hotel industry beginning its timid post-pandemic recovery, the planned strike action couldn’t come at a worse moment, and may deal a deadly financial blow to those firms already battling to survive,’ said its manager, Kate Nicholls.
Emma McClarkin, the CEO of the British Beer and Pub Association, said the strikes are a “real danger” to the business, since they might prevent employees from going to work and customers from getting to venues.
Greater Manchester’s night-time economy adviser, Sacha Lord, said the strikes will have a ‘drastic impact’ on businesses relying on footfall from local workplaces.
Unions reacted with fury to reports Labour has banned its frontbenchers from picket lines, in a memo leaked to Politics Home.
Sharon Graham, general secretary of Unite, told the PA news agency: ‘The Labour Party was founded by the trade unions and we expect Labour MPs to defend workers, by words and by actions.’
Pupils and parents are being urged to make an alternative plan for getting to school for A-level and GCSE exams. Motorists were warned to expect a surge in traffic as train passengers switch to road transport. The AA predicted that the worst affected roads are likely to be main motorway arteries, as well as rural and suburban areas.
About half of Great Western Railway’s trains due to serve Castle Cary in Somerset, carrying revellers to the Glastonbury Festival between Wednesday and Friday, are cancelled.
Prime Minister Boris Johnson is expected to say ahead of a Cabinet meeting that unions are ‘harming the very people they claim to be helping’.
He is set to accuse unions of ‘driving away commuters who ultimately support the jobs of rail workers’, while also hitting businesses across the country.
He will say: ‘Too high demands on pay will also make it incredibly difficult to bring to an end the current challenges facing families around the world with rising costs of living. Now is the time to come to a sensible compromise for the good of the British people and the rail workforce.’
Mr Lynch said Network Rail had offered a 2% pay rise with the possibility of a further 1% later dependent on efficiency savings.
He told BBC’s Newsnight that Network Rail had ‘escalated’ the dispute during Monday’s talks, saying: ‘They have issued me a letter saying that there are going to be redundancies starting from July 1. So rather than trying to come to an agreement in this dispute, they’ve escalated it by giving us formal notice of redundancy amongst our Network Rail members.’
He warned the dispute could continue for months, adding: ‘It is clear that the Tory Government, after slashing £4bn of funding from National Rail and Transport for London, has now actively prevented a settlement to this dispute.
‘The rail companies have now proposed pay rates that are massively under the relevant rates of inflation, coming on top of the pay freezes of the past few years.
‘At the behest of the Government, companies are also seeking to implement thousands of job cuts and have failed to give any guarantee against compulsory redundancies.’
The Department for Transport disputed Mr Lynch’s clams, adding that it has cost taxpayers about £600 per household to keep the railway running during the pandemic.