Bristol Post

Transport campaign system for region’s Calls for franchise public bus system

- Yvonne DEENEY yvonne.deeney@reachplc.com

NEXT month bus users from Bristol and South Gloucester­shire will hold a protest to demand buses are taken under public control and run as a public service by the West of England Combined Authority (WECA).

This comes after 178 First bus services were scrapped last month in the West of England, in addition to a further 1,450 bus journeys the firm last week said it would have to cancel each week.

A campaign group has written an open letter calling on Metro Mayor, Dan Norris and all WECA group leaders to suspend the deregulate­d bus market and provide a franchised bus service. As of Friday 768 people had put their name to the letter with most of them commenting on the personal difficulti­es the bus service has caused them.

Laura Fogg-Rogers is among those leading the ‘Reclaim our buses’ campaign which will hold its first public demonstrat­ion in Kingswood next month. The environmen­tal researcher and mum of two, who lives in Winterbour­ne, said people in her community are furious about the buses which have resulted in job losses and children getting detentions for being late.

Ms Fogg-Rogers sits on the steering committee of The West of England Shared Transport and Active Travel Network (WESTACT) which is campaignin­g for better public transport in the region.

She said the franchisin­g model has not been implemente­d in the region because the various local councils who make up WECA have failed to communicat­e, so they will be targeting council leaders next month in South Gloucester­shire to demand cross party talks take place to initiate a franchised bus model.

Ms Fogg-Rogers said: “We need a joined up voice rather than the local authoritie­s fighting, like they have done. Where I live in Winterbour­ne there are no buses, further up into the village there is one bus but it takes an hour and a half to get into Bristol when it can take 15 minutes in a car.

“We used to have regular buses and before Covid we used to have two an hour which wasn’t brilliant but they did mostly turn up. During Covid bus usage declined and now we have this driver shortage as well, people are reporting that they just don’t turn up or they will turn up and they’re full.

“What people are doing now is they’re getting a family member to drop them to the metro bus which has been taken over by First, and they are not even turning up now when they used to be every ten minutes. There’s loads of people whose kids need the buses for education and they can’t get to school on time and people who have lost their jobs for being late, people are really angry.”

In the recent round of bus cutbacks Winterbour­ne lost two of its bus services, the Y4 and the Y3. Passengers’ only option to get into Bristol if they

don’t drive is the now the Y6 which is hourly but often delayed, full or fails to show up.

Ms Fogg-Rogers said the situation has deteriorat­ed to the point where neighbours are considerin­g leaving her village as a result of the poor bus service

Rob Bryher who is also part of WESTACT said that the deteriorat­ion of bus services has impacted everyone. Where he lives in St Werburghs, there is no longer a reliable bus service which disproport­ionately impacts on elderly and disabled people as well as those on low incomes who can’t afford a car.

Residents in St Werburghs and communitie­s along the number 5 bus route came together to save their bus service, which has now been replaced by the 47. The 47 cuts off Stapleton village but is also an hourly service which travels all the way to Yate making it more subject to delays.

Mr Bryher said: “You’re getting a lot of cancelled buses because of the driver shortage which is down to Brexit. We have the 47 but it’s not frequent enough as there’s only one every hour.

“It’s a perfect storm at the moment, the frustratio­n is people trying to get to where they need to get to and then getting on the bus to find it’s absolutely packed because there’ve been so many cancellati­ons.

“It’s not going to be the richest people in the city who are affected by this, it’s going to be the people who can’t afford a car. It’s absolutely unacceptab­le that someone should have to wait over an hour for a bus in a major city.

“The horror stories I’m hearing from people who get it every day and that it’s hard. In the inner city you’d imagine there are other options and there are but for some people due to their disability, age or that they need to get to somewhere further away they have to get the bus.

“Dan Norris needs to bite the bullet and set up a franchisin­g system otherwise we can’t control anything in regards to the buses.”

The new campaign will officially launch on December, 17 at 6.15pm where a demonstrat­ion will be held on Kingswood high street outside the civic centre.

A spokespers­on for First West of England said: “In early October we implemente­d service changes designed to balance customer demand with available resource to deliver reliable services for our customers. The changes were a result of changing post-pandemic demand which has seen passenger numbers fall by around 25 per cent compared to preCovid figures. The effects of this have been further impacted by driver shortages, which are being felt by the rest of the industry but are particular­ly acute in our region. The very last thing any transport operator wants to do is reduce or cut services. We recognise the impact such changes have had on some communitie­s, such as Winterbour­ne and those previously served by service 5, and we are truly sorry for those who have been affected.”

 ?? ?? Bus cuts have left many passengers dismayed
Bus cuts have left many passengers dismayed
 ?? Paul Gillis / Reach Plc ??
Paul Gillis / Reach Plc

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