Edinburgh Evening News

New Dumbiedyke­s bus service could be running by summer

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One of Edinburgh's most deprived communitie­s could have a bus service restored by the summer.

Dumbiedyke­s, just a stone's throw from the Royal Mile, is currently one of the Capital's cut-off communitie­s, without any regular bus service. But an extra £240,000 was set aside in the city council budget, passed last week, for subsidised buses to serve the estate and also the Lady Nairne area of Northfield.

And now the council has begun work on designing the new routes and launched the tendering process to renew contracts for the existing supported bus services providing vital links for Ratho and other communitie­s in rural west Edinburgh. The budget also allocated £300,000 to improve these existing services.

Transport convener Scott Arthur said: "It's really important to get Dumbiedyke­s connected. Edinburgh has a fantastic bus service, but if you live in Dumbiedyke­s, which is just at the edge of the city centre, you probably get angry every time you hear that because you've no bus service."

Designing the Dumbiedyke­s service, engaging with residents over the plans and then tendering for it will take time, but the council said if all goes smoothly the new service could be up and running by the summer.

Lothian Buses withdrew the No 6 service serving Dumbiedyke­s in 2020, but more recently residents were able to use the No 35 while it was diverted along Holyrood Road during resurfacin­g of the Royal Mile. When the No 35 returned to its normal route in 2022, residents called for a new bus service, saying they had to struggle up what they call "Oxygen Brae" to reach shops and other services in the Pleasance and the Southside.

Cllr Arthur said: "We talk a lot about inequality around income, but there is an inequality in Edinburgh around access to transport.

There are parts of the city that are just not wellconnec­ted. That's why these supported bus services are so important."

He said the bus for Dumbiedyke­s was likely to be a smaller vehicle, probably as 16-seater, due to the street layout, and would be fully wheelchair accessible.

 ?? Picture: Alistair Linford ?? Residents of Dumbiedyke­s protest at the closure of the No 6 bus route in 2020
Picture: Alistair Linford Residents of Dumbiedyke­s protest at the closure of the No 6 bus route in 2020
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