SCOTTISH Labour leader Anas Sarwar has raised the case of a Dumbarton woman in the Scottish Parliament as he pressed the deputy first minister on the ScotRail pay dispute.

Mr Sarwar told First Minister's Questions at Holyrood on Thursday that he had heard from a woman called Leanne, who was having to pay for a taxi to get home to Dumbarton from her work in Helensburgh after ScotRail cancelled dozens of services across its network.

Under ScotRail's temporary timetable, which was introduced on Monday, May 23 for an indefinite period, the last train of the day from Helensburgh leaves at 8.02pm. 

With the normal timetable on First Bus's Helensburgh-Dumbarton-Glasgow route featuring no departures from Helensburgh after 7pm, that leaves people wanting to travel between Helensburgh and Dumbarton later in the evenings facing an expensive taxi journey.

At Thursday's question time Mr Sarwar pressed deputy first minister John Swinney to introduce replacement bus services for ScotRail trains disrupted due to the pay dispute.

Mr Sarwar said he had been told that no replacement bus services were available anywhere in the country.

Mr Swinney, who was standing in for Nicola Sturgeon, said work was ongoing to resolve the dispute and train new drivers.

ScotRail, which was nationalised in April, cut more than 700 services across Scotland on Monday due to deadlock discussions with train drivers’ union Aslef.

Drivers are refusing to work overtime and on rest days because of an unresolved pay dispute after they rejected a 2.2 per cent increase offer, with the option of a revenue share agreement which would have taken the package to five per cent.

Citing Leanne's story, Mr Sarwar said: “In the middle of a cost of living crisis, she has to spend £20 on a taxi.

“That means she has to work two hours just to pay to get home. That’s the reality for thousands of people across the country.”

He asked how many of the cut services had been replaced with a bus service.

Mr Swinney said he sympathised with the situation people like Leanne were in.

He said train driver training had been paused during the pandemic and there was now a pool of 900 pending driver applications.

The Deputy First Minister said: “We are in a period of difficulty just, though, because drivers are exercising their voluntary right not to undertake rest day working.

“We are trying to resolve those issues by the negotiation that is taking place.”

Mr Sarwar responded: “(When) the Deputy First Minister spoke, he didn’t actually answer the question.”

The Scottish Labour leader said he had sent a WhatsApp message to ScotRail to ask about replacement bus services and was told “no, there isn’t any”.

Mr Sarwar said: “Shouldn’t he and every other minister hand back the keys to their ministerial chauffeur cars until they get this sorted and get Scotland moving again?”

Mr Swinney said the Government was providing help with the cost of living.

He replied: “What is the Labour Party doing? The Labour Party is getting into bed with the Tory party in council administrations around the country.”