Rochdale Observer

Mayor aware of bus travel tickets which will go up

- BY ETHAN DAVIES

THE Mayor of Greater Manchester is ‘aware’ that there will be instances where new Bee Network buses will cost MORE than the existing services.

Andy Burnham made the comments following an event where he announced the next phase of buses being incorporat­ed into the Bee Network.

Buses in Rochdale, Oldham, parts of Bury, Salford,

and north Manchester join the fleet on Sunday, March 24.

But the roll-out means some passengers will pay more for a weekly ticket than they currently shell out. Blackley’s David Hopes is one of those, as he commutes to work in Leeds daily.

Usually, he catches the 17 or 18 service along Rochdale Road, gets off at Shudehill, and walks to Victoria Station to catch a train to the Yorkshire city. Until March 24, he can take advantage of Go North West’s Rochdale Road 7-Day ticket, which costs £14.50 online, and a pound more from a driver.

However, when his service comes under public control, the cheapest weekly ticket will be £21, with it actually more costeffect­ive to get 10 singles to commute.

That means David’s commute will cost at least 38 percent more in a few weeks, for what’s expected to be the same service.

It’s prompted Andy Burnham to clarify ‘there will be an opportunit­y to get financial compensati­on’ for passengers in David’s position.

“We are aware that there are those situations where the cap and the structure of Bee Network fares may be higher than what it’s replacing,” he told the Local Democracy Reporting Service.

“I think there are some student fares on Oxford Road that are in a similar place. To that gentleman, I would say contact TFGM because we will be running a reimbursem­ent scheme for people who are financiall­y disadvanta­ged by the change. There will be an opportunit­y to get financial compensati­on.”

When asked for more informatio­n on the compensati­on scheme, he added: “There is a scheme people can use to apply.

“People in that position can make an applicatio­n to TFGM, and we will look at it sympatheti­cally. Our intention is not to leave anyone out of pocket, we are trying to save people money with the Bee Network.”

A Transport for Greater Manchester spokespers­on added: “Better integrated and simpler ticketing is a key benefit of the Bee Network, and the introducti­on of capped fares in September 2022, has reduced the average cost of travel for bus users by almost 20%.

“Through these fares and the Anybus + tram and new Bee Bus Family ticket, we are working to bring down the cost of travel for the vast majority of people, while also providing ticketing options that cover multiple operators for services across Greater Manchester.”

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom