Manchester Evening News

I’m confident bus firms will slash fares, says mayor

- By JOSEPH TIMAN

ANDY Burnham says he is ‘confident’ bus companies will agree to slash fares by the end of the summer as he fasttracks plans to cap tickets at £2 per ride.

The mayor said single journeys on all buses in Greater Manchester will cost £2 for adults and £1 for children with day tickets for all operators available at £5.

This flat fare structure was supposed to come into force once buses are under public control and the new franchisin­g system is rolled out from autumn 2023. It comes after a judge gave Mr Burnham the green light to bring buses back under public control – but he is still fighting another appeal by a bus operator. Previous promises of ‘hopper’ fares – allowing passengers to ride multiple bus services for one flat fee – and tickets which can be used on trams too will have to wait until this franchisin­g system is rolled out, according to Mr Burnham. But the Labour metro-mayor is calling for fares to be slashed sooner, starting from September, in an effort to help people cope with the cost of living crisis.

Bus operators must agree to the plans, but there have been signs of support for the scheme which is not expected to come at a cost to these companies. Mr Burnham said he is ‘absolutely confident’ the government’s Bus Services Improvemen­t Plan funding will cover the costs to subsidise fares for the next financial year - but he admitted there is uncertaint­y about future funding.

Speaking in Salford Quays yesterday, he said the success of this scheme relies on more people using buses and urged the public to back his ‘Bee Network,’ the London-style public transport system he is trying to build.

He said: “Please back us on this – your city-region does need you right now. Use the bus so we can make these low

fares permanent. Use the bus and help us build the Bee Network.” Mr Burnham cited ‘evidence’ that such a scheme should increase bus usage by around 5 per cent , but said he hopes even more people will start using buses again. It comes as bus patronage remains around 21pc lower than pre-pandemic levels – but transport bosses say passenger numbers are slowly recovering.

Bus companies have received emergency funding from the government throughout the pandemic, but this is set to come to an end in September. Mr Burnham dismissed claims that his announceme­nt about slashing fares was ‘premature’ which made before the bus companies agreed to doing it.

He said he would be ‘surprised’ if operators did not sign up to the scheme, saying that the government funding would cover the costs of his proposal.

OneBus, which represents the ‘vast majority’ of bus operators across Greater Manchester – including Stagecoach, First, Diamond Bus, Go NorthWest, Transdev, Arriva, High Peak Buses – has expressed its support for the scheme.

Chief executive Gary Nolan said: “OneBus and its members support any initiative that will increase bus use. Reducing bus fares is one element of a wider package of measures needed to achieve this. We also need further and focussed investment in bus priority measures and urgent schemes to address traffic congestion to speed up bus journeys and make them more reliable. The [Bus Services Improvemen­t Fund] bid also included these initiative­s.

“There will obviously be a cost to the bus companies and we look forward to further discussion­s to agree how that will be covered using the BSIP funding.”

Mr Burnham said the new fares will not require a council tax increase next year – but he said future funding depends on how many people use the buses.

 ?? ?? Andy Burnham is planning an overhaul of the bus system. Below: Yesterday’s M.E.N.
Andy Burnham is planning an overhaul of the bus system. Below: Yesterday’s M.E.N.

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