Evening Telegraph (First Edition)

Urban-rural divide in bus pass take-up

- BY CALUM ROSS

FREE bus travel for young Scots is proving far more popular with under-22s in Aberdeen and Dundee than with those living in rural areas, it has emerged.

New figures obtained by Labour show dramatic difference­s in the uptake of the scheme, which was launched by the Scottish Government in January.

The opposition party said the data was a “humiliatio­n” for the SNP and the Greens.

But a spokesman for Transport Minister Jenny Gilruth said Labour had forgotten about the impact of the pandemic.

According to the statistics, Inverclyde has had the highest number of sign-ups in Scotland, at more than 80% of those who are eligible, after local schools helped with applicatio­ns.

Dundee is next, recording an uptake rate of more than 53%, a total of 14,151 free bus passes.

Aberdeen and Edinburgh are also not far behind, at 40% and 49%, leaving Glasgow as the only major Scottish city with a below-average level of 23%.

The picture is more mixed in the rest of the country, with a lower number of passes issued in many rural council areas.

These include Orkney with an uptake rate of 15%, Angus on 18%, Highland at 19%, Argyll and Bute with 21%, Moray at 23%, Perth and Kinross with 25%, and Aberdeensh­ire at 28%.

Western Isles is bucking the trend among rural authoritie­s, with a rate of 42%, while in Shetland it is at 33%, and the proportion in Fife is 34%.

Across Scotland the average number of successful applicatio­ns among those eligible is 30% so far, or 284,328 out of 949,000.

The government was accused of sending “mixed messages” about the scheme at the time of its launch.

Anyone aged between five and 21 is eligible for a card to give them free bus travel across Scotland; however, young people were initially told to only apply if they need to make “essential journeys”.

Labour said Inverclyde Council led the way by co-ordinating applicatio­ns through schools and helping people apply.

The party has now called for the process to be streamline­d across Scotland.

Labour transport spokesman Neil Bibby said: “Free bus passes for young people should have been a good news story but these dire figures are a humiliatio­n for the SNP and the Greens, who have spent years talking about this card but still failed miserably to deliver it.

“The botched scheme is a huge missed opportunit­y, which could have unlocked opportunit­ies for children and young people, eased the cost of living crisis for families and helped us tackle the climate emergency.

“Instead, the SNP’s rampant incompeten­ce has let a rare good news story descend into chaos – and it is young people who are paying the price.”

A spokesman for Ms Gilruth said the coronaviru­s crisis had impacted uptake.

“The Labour Party and Mr Bibby appear to have forgotten that in January of this year Scotland, like many other nations, was in the grip of the omicron variant,” he said.

He added that a number of changes had been made to the online applicatio­n process.

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