By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms & Conditions.
Accept
routeonerouteonerouteone
  • News
    • Show all
    • Awards & Events
    • Deliveries
    • Environment
    • Exhibitor News
    • Euro Bus Expo 2024
    • Features
    • Legal
    • Minibus and minicoach
    • Operators
    • Opinion
    • People
    • Suppliers
    • Vehicles
  • Vehicles
    • Find a Vehicle
    • ZEV Comparison Tool
    • Sell a Vehicle
    • Vehicle Seller Dashboard
  • Insights
  • Careers
  • Events
    • British Tourism & Travel Show
    • Euro Bus Expo
    • Innovation Challenge
    • Livery Competition
    • routeone Awards
  • Advertise
  • Contact
    • Share your news
    • Subscribe
    • Update Subscription Details
  • Latest Issue
  • SIGN UP
Search
© 2024 routeone News. All Rights Reserved.
Reading: Opinion: Politicians overlook the value of coach and bus
Share
Font ResizerAa
routeonerouteone
Font ResizerAa
Search
  • News
    • Show all
    • Awards & Events
    • Deliveries
    • Environment
    • Exhibitor News
    • Euro Bus Expo 2024
    • Features
    • Legal
    • Minibus and minicoach
    • Operators
    • Opinion
    • People
    • Suppliers
    • Vehicles
  • Vehicles
    • Find a Vehicle
    • ZEV Comparison Tool
    • Sell a Vehicle
    • Vehicle Seller Dashboard
  • Insights
  • Careers
  • Events
    • British Tourism & Travel Show
    • Euro Bus Expo
    • Innovation Challenge
    • Livery Competition
    • routeone Awards
  • Advertise
  • Contact
    • Share your news
    • Subscribe
    • Update Subscription Details
  • Latest Issue
  • SIGN UP
Follow US
© 2024 routeone News | Powered by Diversified Business Communications UK Ltd
- Advertisement -
-
routeone > Bus > Opinion: Politicians overlook the value of coach and bus
BusCoachOpinion

Opinion: Politicians overlook the value of coach and bus

Ralph Roberts
Ralph Roberts
Published: April 17, 2023
Share
richard holden cpt
Buses Minister Richard Holden at the recent CPT UK Bus and Coach Conference
SHARE

Coach and bus as means of transport are crucial to our economy and way of life, says CPT president and regular routeone contributor Ralph Roberts

This month saw the Confederation of Passenger Transport UK Bus and Coach Conference. Around 250 attended, and from all accounts, it was a good catch-up with friends and colleagues. The panel sessions in the conference were a varied mix with a good blend of experience and expertise.

On the first day, Buses Minister Richard Holden MP gave a good account of his work to date and his plans for the sector. I do hope that he is left in post to deliver, as I like the cut of his jib. 

Shadow Buses Minister Simon Lightwood MP opened day two with a speech that, he said, reflected a need for certainty that he’d heard from across the industry. Certainty we received on one topic: The desire for greater regulatory control of the sector.

However, I want to hear more from a potential future minister. For example, where is the strategy for bus passengers? How would a Labour government tackle congestion? As the next general election approaches, we’ll need to ensure that Labour and all parties are getting to grips with the issues that really matter to our customers. 

As I write, our coach operators are queuing in Dover with tired staff and customers trying to get away on holiday. I’m pretty positive that this isn’t one of the promised sunny uplands and the government needs to get its finger out… quickly. We are an island and we rely on a smooth process for people and goods to enter and leave these islands. Our economy, our coach sector and our way of life depend on it. 

Like the broken record that many of us have had to become, I turn to funding for the industry: The government in England appears to understand how crucial buses are to people’s lives and has extended funding to stave off cuts to bus networks. This will give vital time for Bus Service Improvement Plans to be implemented and bring the benefits that will self-fund the retention of network mileage and grow bus usage. 

Scotland is in a very different place with government funding ended and network mileage being cut. The new Transport Minister, Kevin Stewart, is taking a hawkish view of the industry and appears to misunderstand the value of bus to the economy, local communities and the public purse.

The bus priority funding seems as far away as ever and discussions more and more turn to franchising and control as a panacea. The underlying message appears to be one of public control at any cost. 

I’m sure that common sense will prevail in all of these matters, but I do wish that foresight was used more often and that our sector was more valued in the eyes of a significant portion of politicians.

It is perhaps time to write to your local MPs by way of an update to advise them of the number of jobs you create, the amount of tax revenue coming out of your business and the number of people relying on your business to get them from A to B with their essential mobility needs. 

TAGGED:president's diary
Share This Article
Facebook LinkedIn Threads Email Copy Link
Previous Article Current holders throw down gauntlet ahead of IRTE Skills Challenge return in 2023
Next Article Stagecoach Inverness Yutong E10 battery electric bus Stagecoach Inverness: Electric proves network potential
- Advertisement -

Latest News

Go-Ahead London – Managing Director
Careers Jobs
andy burnham tfgm £15.6 billion (1) The funding announced by Chancellor Rachel Reeves today (4 June) has been allocated to several combined mayoral authorities to use on rail, tram, road and bus infrastructure. Transport for Greater Manchester revealed today that part of the £2.5 billion it will receive will go towards making the Bee Network fully battery-electric by 2030. An as-yet undecided portion of that will support a planned investment in 1,000 new zero-emission buses over that period, the mayoral authority said. That is part of plans to build the UK's "first fully integrated, zero-emission public transport system", with trams and trains also set to benefit. Liverpool City Region's already announced BRT system is among the projects to which its £1.6 billion will be allocated. Under those plans - due for realisation by 2028 - a high-speed network will be served by articulated buses which are modelled on the 'Glider' in Belfast. It is due to link Liverpool city centre with John Lennon Airport, and Liverpool FC and Everton FC's respective stadia along three routes. Although the model of bus has not been confirmed, a Van Hool Exqui.City on loan from Belfast was last year used as a demonstrator. That 18m vehicle can accommodate around 30% more passengers than a typical bus and has three sets of double doors. The funding will also go towards buses elsewhere in the city as the region heads towards franchising services by 2027. Liverpool Mayor Steve Rotheram with a 'Glider' which was on loan from Belfast last year - an example of the sort of bus which could serve the new BRT Bus services in the East Midlands region will be boosted by the funding, thanks to the £2 billion handed to it today by the government. Some of that allocation will be used for a rapid transit network on the Trent Arc between Nottingham and Derby. Between the two cities, the Freeport, Infinity Park Investment Zone and Ratcliffe-on-Soar will also benefit from the improved bus services. South Yorkshire Mayoral Combined Authority's newly announced commitment towards bus franchising has been boosted by £350 million in funding as part of that region's allocation. The funding for West Yorkshire will help build new bus stations in Bradford and Wakefield. Likewise, the Tees Valley Mayoral Authority will put its sum towards a new £15 million bus station in Middlesbrough. Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander says: "Today marks a watershed moment on our journey to improving transport across the North and Midlands – opening up access to jobs, growing the economy and driving up quality of life as we deliver our Plan for Change. "For too long, people in the North and Midlands have been locked out of the investment they deserve. With £15.6bn of government investment, we’re giving local leaders the means to drive cities, towns and communities forward, investing in Britain’s renewal so you and your family are better off."
TfGM’s all-electric bus plan boosted by new £15.6 billion package
Bus Electric News Politics Top Story
Local Transport Minister opens First Bus electric depot in Hengrove
Local Transport Minister opens First Bus electric depot in Hengrove
Bus
Contract pricing conundrum for coach and bus
Contract pricing conundrum: Unlikely to get easier any time soon
Editor's Comment
- Advertisement -
-

routeone magazine is the indispensable resource for professional UK coach, bus and minibus operators. The home of vehicle sales and the latest bus and coach job vacancies, routeone connects professional PCV operators with complete and unrivalled news coverage.

  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • GDPR Policy
  • Sustainability
  • Advertise
  • Latest Issue
  • Share Your News
routeonerouteone
Follow US
© 2024 routeone News | Powered by Diversified Business Communications UK Ltd