Bath Chronicle

Tap-on, tap-off system to ease travel by bus

- Adam Postans Local democracy reporter adam.postans@reachplc.com

❝ The idea is you can get on any bus, tap in with your debit card and out again when you reach your destinatio­n. You can do this on as many journeys as you want, in one day, but you will only be charged one set daily price.

Metro Mayor Dan Norris

A major revamp of the region’s bus services will see daily and weekly fares capped through contactles­s tap-on, tap-off payments allowing passengers to hop across different operators.

Five months of talks have just begun between transport authoritie­s and bus companies to shape huge improvemen­ts allowing seamless travel, eventually including trains, similar to Transport for London (TFL), and new local low-fare zones and cheaper point-to-point journeys.

Under-11s will ride for free, with youngsters aged 11 to 18 getting halfprice discounts across all operators, while frequent daytime turn-up-andgo services are proposed alongside better evening timetables.

And one common transport brand will be created for the West of England, inspired by TFL, with the same livery emblazoned across all single and double-deckers.

Currently the majority of buses accept contactles­s cards but tickets are only valid with the same firm, while ‘tap and cap’ is available only on First buses for daily and weekly tickets in flat-fare zones.

The improvemen­ts are outlined in a weighty document called the Bus Service Improvemen­t Plan (BSIP) submitted to the Government by the West of England Combined Authority (Weca) and North Somerset Council at the end of October.

It envisages an “enhanced partnershi­p” with operators, primarily First because of its dominance in the region, which is the subject of negotiatio­ns now under way, to be completed by March 31 before undergoing public consultati­on and coming into force 70 days later on June 10.

First Bus has welcomed the plan’s “level of ambition” and says it is committed to rolling out tap-on, tap-off capping across the region next year and more flexible tickets to ensure faster, reliable buses.

Up to 1,000 contactles­s bank-card readers, compatible with Apple Pay and Google Pay, will be installed on vehicles, allowing customers to tap on entry and exit without the need for tickets or stopping to pay the driver, like on the London Undergroun­d, with the correct, cheapest fare calculated and boarding times reduced.

Adult tickets and price-capping involving single operators will come first, followed by multi-company and discounted fares.

West of England Metro Mayor Dan Norris said: “This is an exciting plan to make bus travel simpler and cheaper for passengers. The idea is you can get on any bus, tap in with your debit card and out again when you reach your destinatio­n. You can do this on as many journeys as you want, in one day, but you will only be charged one set daily price.

“I want to make it as easy as possible for people to do the right thing so they can greatly reduce car journeys and use public transport, walk, cycle and wheel so we can reach our very ambitious net zero 2030 target and deal with congestion, pollution, and obesity.”

Mr Norris said he wanted a brand for the West of England’s transport so that people thought about it in the same way as London’s network.

First West of England managing director Doug Claringbol­d said: “First Bus is very supportive of the Government’s ambition, outlined in the National Bus Strategy, to improve bus services and increase the number of people travelling by bus across the country.”

He added: “Our focus is on improving the experience for our customers, with a commitment to a zero emission fleet by 2035, the roll-out of tapon, tap-off contactles­s capping across our network in 2022, a more flexible ticket offer that meets changing travel needs and ultimately, the operation of faster, more reliable services made possible by the delivery of the bus priority measures set out in the BSIP.”

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