THE biggest rail union today announced it is to ballot members over strike action at Virgin East Coast.

The news comes just a day after the Transport Salaried Staffs Association (TSSA) also warned of possible strike action against the company.

Members of the RMT will start voting next week on whether to launch a campaign in the row over jobs and working conditions.

The union said the dispute has been brewing for months, accusing the company of trying to "bulldoze through" cost-cutting measures which would "decimate" jobs.

It has warned that bosses at Virgin East Coast are planning to close ticket offices and make cuts to on-board train staff and management and supervisory roles in an attempt to maintain profits.

RMT general secretary Mick Cash said: "RMT is aware that Virgin management are putting out regular propaganda messages to their employees, to justify the company's attempts to attack job security, terms and conditions of employment and current working practices.

"Long-standing agreements between our two organisations dictate that the company must negotiate with RMT, as a recognised trade union to those agreements, yet the company say these changes are a consultative process. That is simply not true. Any changes to staff terms and conditions are negotiable matters.

"The company have chosen to treat the negotiations as a game thus far, merely going through the motions of pretending they did not yet know what their plans entailed. To behave like that is to treat the union and its members with pure contempt.

"RMT will not sit back while our members' jobs, conditions and safety are threatened by a franchise which is clearly in financial trouble. Our members will not pay the price for a crisis cooked up in the Virgin boardroom. The ballot is on and the union remains available for talks."

The ballot result is due on August 9.

The union is also embroiled in industrial disputes at Southern Rail and ScotRail.

The TSSA is alarmed at planned changes to travel centres operated by Virgin East Coast which it says will see the centres replaced by open plan "customer zones" - where staff will be on hand to help passengers buy their tickets through machines.

It says the plans could lead to the loss of 46 jobs on the East Coast Mainline.

A Virgin Trains spokesman said: "We have big plans for the East Coast franchise with £140 million of investment aimed squarely at making the customer experience the best it can be. The on-board changes are part of those plans which put the customer at the heart of all our operations.

"We are puzzled by the RMT's decision to ballot as we have ruled out compulsory redundancies. A strike would also cost our people pay for no reason, and we have well prepared contingency plans which mean we expect to run a full timetable with customers travelling as normal. We would welcome the RMT reopening discussions at any point."