A new film highlighting the problems of rail privatisation is being show on TV on Sunday 2 December.
The Navigators, to be broadcast by Channel 4 at 22.00, has been made with the help of railway workers who secretly collaborated with director Ken Loach.
The two-hour long drama shows the effect on some of the thousands of skilled workers forced out of their jobs by Railtrack and the companies which took over British Rail operations.
The inspiration for the programme was Sheffield railman Rob Dawber who wrote a script based on his experiences of mass redundancies at the British Rail depot in South Yorkshire where he worked.
Mr Dawber died of cancer in February after exposure to asbestos.
Film director Loach is famous for Cathy Come Home and the acclaimed 1969 film Kes.

Channel 4 is showing another programme about rail on Saturday 1 December at 19.10.
The hour-long A Secret History of Rail shows how, when and where the rail industry went wrong.
Journalist Ian Hargreaves, who was transport correspondent for the Financial Times in the 1970s, talks to key figures in politics and industry.
The programme looks at how initiatives to improve the system often failed. It provides lessons for the future.

Also on Channel 4, Dispatches investigates the London Underground. In Down The Tube at 20.00 on Sunday 2 December, reporter Jonathan Miller joins commuters on their daily journeys. The hour-long programme examines whether safety will be compromised by the Government's planned public-private partnership.
London Transport's response to the programme is at http://www.thetube.com/ontentprssreleasees/0112/03.asp#C4