‘Eye-catching’ ticket prices could get more on buses
LAPSED or reluctant bus passengers could be tempted on board the county’s services with more appealing ticket prices as part of a plan to provide a better experience for travellers.
It comes after Lancashire County Council and Blackburn with Darwen Council were awarded £34.2m from the government after local authorities were last year invited to draw up bus service improvement plans.
The pair submitted a joint bid which saw them opt to pursue an “enhanced partnership” under which they will work closely with operators on issues such as tickets and timetables.
The county council’s cabinet member for highways and transport, Charlie Edwards, told a cabinet meeting at which the partnership model was rubber-stamped that
it would enable a tailored approach to bus improvement across the county.
“I like the fact that we are going to continue to work with individual operators [who] know the individual parts of the county better, but with the overall strategy [and] the priorities of better ticketing and better timetabling.
“So we can do that element of it, the central bit, but the operators will be able to excel in the communities which they already serve,” County Cllr Edwards said.
He revealed that the government had specifically requested when awarding the cash that the local authorities look into coming up with “eye-catching price measures” to make bus travel a more tempting prospect.
County Cllr Edwards said that the two councils and the county’s bus operators were now exploring ways that were “really going to inspire people to get back on the buses, especially young people and the elderly community, the two groups – especially the older people – that have not got back onto the buses like others [since the pandemic]”.
Labour opposition group leader Azhar Ali said that the best way of doing that would have been to opt for the franchising model that was also open to local authorities as part of their bus service improvement bids.
He said that such a system – as is being phased in by Greater Manchester from next summer – would have allowed the county to cap fares and should still be the ultimate ambition for Lancashire.
However, County Cllr Edwards said that he believed franchising would be a “retrograde step” for the county and did not believe that passengers would benefit from a return to the “dark days of nationalised bus services”.