AS the next RMT rail strike grows closer, bosses and union leaders have exchanged statements on their likeliness to return to the negotiating table.

Southern Railway franchise owners Govia Thameslink announced that they were "ready willing and able" to sit down with union leaders.

In response the RMT issued a luke-warm response, saying that they would return to talks, but calling for Govia to reverse the introduction of role changes which began at the weekend.

As things stand a 48-hour walkout will begin at one minute after midnight on Wednesday September 8.

Southern Passenger Services Director, Alex Foulds said: “We’ve had a summer of travel chaos for hundreds of thousands of people and they are now proposing yet more misery and disruption in the week when people go back to work and back to school.

"This futile dispute is not about safety and no-one is losing their jobs or taking a pay cut.

"The fact is we are creating good jobs - jobs that attracted over 850 enquiries within 24 hours of being advertised, with good terms and conditions.

"We’ve made a fair and comprehensive offer and perhaps it’s an offer that the RMT should put to their members to consider.

“Mick Cash says it’s an urgent priority to talk.  We 100% agree and our door remains open to the RMT to sit round the table with us, directly or back at Acas, to find a solution.

"Customers are expecting and demanding that we both make every conceivable effort to find a way forward.

"For our part we remain ready, willing and able to do that and we’ll clear the diary to try and sort it.

“We have an open mind to all options that lead to the implementation of our proposal to introduce the new on-board roles on our trains and enhance the services we want to provide our customers.

"Enough is enough. Let’s stop the strikes and settle it!  We need to get back on track and give customers and staff their normal lives back”.

In response union general secretary Mick Cash said: "RMT is committed to serious and genuine talks and has been right from the moment that the proposals on the guards on Southern were first unveiled.

"That position has not changed and we remain committed to getting back round the table with the company in proper negotiations.

"That talks process has been repeatedly undermined by Southern trying to bind us into a set of rigid pre-conditions.

"A major obstacle to progress now is the fact that Southern fired the starting gun on the dash to Driver Only Operation at the weekend.

"We would call on the company to row back, get back round the table and allow talks to take place without preconditions and without the immediate threat to their safety critical role hanging over our members heads.”

A spokesman clarified to The Argus that the union was not setting the undoing of the changes as a precondition for talks, but said it would be "very difficult to achieve progress if they're continuing to implement what we're supposed to be discussing."