Somerset County council have confirmed that they will be funding all of their Saturday bus services, check local press for more details.
Thank you everyone who took part in the councils consultation and all who have been campaigning hard to make this happen.
Thursday, 12 February 2015
Monday, 9 February 2015
DONT CUT US OFF Article in Shepton Journal
The “Don't Cut Us Off” campaign welcomes the
news that the County Council will not remove the bus services on a Saturday in
and out of Shepton. We would like to thank all those people that took part in
the consultation and those who lobbied the County Council.
The Don't Cut Us Off campaign recognises
that without public and bus user pressure the County Council would not have
removed the threat of bus services being axed; this against a backdrop of poor
advertising and the silence of our county councillor in regard to the bus
consultation.
During the process of our campaign we have
discovered many deficiencies in our bus timetable that fail to respond to the
travelling public’s needs. This includes timetabling that does not allow
connections to railway stations, and bus services that do not connect with other
bus services. One example of this being buses to Wells that do not connect at
the bus station, but force the travelling public to run to make connections
elsewhere in Wells to get to Bath and Bristol.
The supporters of Don't Cut Us Off are disappointed that all
Conservatives voted against the Town Council motion that included holding a
meeting between the County Council, bus operators and the people of our town and
surrounding areas to discuss better timetabling. Fortunately the motion was
carried on the chairman’s casting vote, so the planned meeting will go ahead and
be announced in the Journal soon.
Most people agree that the current timetable
does not meet the aspirations of this town. The County Council effectively
subsidises bus operators for running services that do not meet the needs of our
community. This is a waste of subsidy and an abuse of public money. We want
bus operators to earn their subsidy and this would include helping to design a
better timetable and promotion of integrated bus services matched to
need.
This reprieve of services is welcome, but
the complacent relationship that has allowed bus services in our town to fail to
serve our community must end. The Don't Cut Us Off campaign calls on all
stakeholders to improve public transport, with greater integration of routes and
better use of subsidy.
Thursday, 29 January 2015
proposals made at Shepton Mallet meeting
AGENDA ITEM – THE IMMINENT THREAT TO SATURDAY BUS SERVICES TO AND
FROM SHEPTON MALLET
Proposed by Cllr Chris Inchley and Seconded by Cllr Garfield Kennedy
THE CONTEXT
This council notes that Somerset County Council has conducted a
consultation on bus subsidies that finished in the Christmas holiday
period.
This town council is deeply concerned by the County Council’s
proposals to withdraw funding to our local bus services on Saturdays, adding to
the already damaging cuts to Sunday and evening weekday services.
For many in our community and the surrounding villages, buses are
lifelines for many – including vulnerable people, the young and old and those
who either chose not to drive or cannot afford to own a vehicle.
This council finds it unacceptable for our town and our community
not to have important arterial public transport links on Saturday. This council notes that this town will suffer
more from the proposed cuts to subsidies to ensure the provision of essential bus
services due to our already poor public transport service provision, and the
lack of many facilities in the town (including entertainment venues, year round
public swimming pool and a limited retail offering).
Shepton Mallet has many villages surrounding the town, yet the town
and the nearby villages have the worst provision of public transport services
of all neighbouring Somerset settlements (including Wells, Frome, Glastonbury,
Street, Yeovil, Midsomer Norton etc).
Regular and reliable public transport links should be seen as an investment
for economic renewal for our town centre and for the wellbeing of those living,
working and visiting here. Removal of
services will have a negative effect on business. Surveys conducted by the
national “Better Transport” group has shown that every pound spent on the
support of vital bus links will pay back between £3 - £5 in economic benefit to
communities.
OUR RESOLUTION
“Shepton Mallet Town Council calls upon Somerset County Council to
provide sufficient funding from the money already given to them by central
government for community transport links, and from the County’s substantial
reserves, to allow residents that need reliable bus services to other towns and
the City of Wells for work, leisure or to access essential public services. With a population of nearly 10,500, Shepton
citizens do not deserve to be cut off all weekend. We ask that public transport services should
be based on a timetable to meet the needs of a growing town, including the
reinstatement of evening weekday services.
Shepton Mallet Town Council further calls on Somerset County Council
to conduct a new more widely publicized consultation, and to request that the
County commission an independent economic impact study on the wider effects of losing
or curtailing our Saturday bus services.
Shepton Mallet Town Council also formally invites Somerset County
Council councillors and officers, bus operators, a representative of the
“Better Transport” campaign group, local MPs and prospective Parliamentary
candidates, District and Town Councillors and the community to a widely
advertised public meeting to establish a bus timetable that meets the needs of
our community now and into the future.”
Sunday, 18 January 2015
Minutes for meeting on 14th January
At this meeting we were joined by all five Prospective Parliamentary Candidates for the Somerton and Frome constituency, councillors Garfield Kennedy and Chris Inchley from Shepton Mallet who are involved in the campaign to save the Saturday services from Somerset County Council's subsidy cuts, Peter Travis of the Rode 267 campaign, and Victoria Flynn, representing Tessa Munt, MP for Wells.
Each of the PPCs gave their thoughts on the local situation for bus services, and buses as a public service:
David Warbuton (Conservative)
David has spoken to James Freeman, the Managing Director of First Bus, who has said that the 267 (Frome-Bath) is not currently profitable. First will be reviewing the route, and attempting to boost usage. He says they would like to consult properly with users next time, following the protests which followed their last cuts to the 267 route. The Rode leg of the route is not currently under threat. The withdrawal of Somerset County Council funding to the 161, however, will mean that that Saturday service will be cut. David has also spoken to John Osman at the council, and discussed the possibility of DRS (Demand Response Services) providing an alternative to those services which will disappear.
John Freeman is currently recruiting to replaces Jon Barnard, who was formerly managing routes in this region. He would be willing to come to FAVBUG meetings, and is interested in community feedback. John has also indicated that there will be communication between First Bus and First Great Western with the goal of greater integration between bus and rail services.
David Rendell (Liberal Democrat)
David congratulated the group on its proactive approach, and commented that monitoring bus usage was particularly useful. He said we need to prove to bus companies that services are capable of being profitable. The response to the council's consultation which we took steps to bring to the public's attention also sounds promising.
David Oakensen (Labour)
David argued that the problem with local bus services is the lack of money being made available to councils - a 40% reduction in local authority funding since the Coalition government took power at the start of this Parliament. Also, the Conservative-led Somerset County Council will not increase council tax to increase revenues - this has a proportionally greater benefit for richer people. The result of such cuts across all services is that groups such as ourselves fighting for public services and representing vulnerable people are in effect fighting each other for a dwindling pot of money - if any of us succeed in saving a service it means that another service elsewhere will be cut.
Theo Simon (Green Party)
Theo applauded FAVBUG working with campaigners from Rode and Shepton Mallet - it is a great example of the importance of communities being linked up, links which are threatened by the isolating cuts to public transport. Theo argued that it is unacceptable that bus users should need to 'prove our case', as a comprehensive and sustainable public transport system ought to be a central part of government policy. One of the reasons why it is not seen as important by the current government is that it is not regarded as a vote-winner - the loss of public transport primarily affects more vulnerable people, and their votes are not seen as key in winning elections. The Green Party would re-regulate bus services to create a functioning public service, consulting with communities and transport workers to design a system that works. This is not an infeasible dream - high quality, sustainably powered transport systems exist in other countries (e.g. Denmark) - the reason we have such a terrible system in comparison is down to the lack of political will among the parties who have held government.
Roger Clark (UKIP)
Roger argued that, while UKIP weren't opposed to all subsidies, public trasport provision must be run as a business, and therefore if people want to have a bus service they must use it in sufficient numbers to make it profitable. If there's a bus service that we want and that isn't available from any of the bus companies, we should fund it ourselves. 'Capitalism is harsh' and we should 'use it or lose it', rather than just complaining about cuts. He warned us to expect further cuts and tax rises whoever takes power in the next election.
SOMERSET COUNTY COUNCIL CUTS
Somerset County Council intend to cut subsidies to many services in the region, including all Saturday services passing through Shepton Mallet. This includes the 161 Frome-Wells service.
Garfield Kennedy made the point that cuts to public transport are short-sighted and are not real savings, as they have a detrimental effect on local economies. It has been estimated that every pound spent on public transport recoups four or five pounds for the economy. We discussed the knock-on effects that the cuts will have - preventing people from being able to take jobs in neighbouring towns, impacting the business of local shops, and increasing isolation and associated health problems. Bus services in Somerset are already poor and infrequent - we should be strengthening the services we have, not weakening them by cutting them further. Services may not be well used, not because they are not wanted, but because they have already been run down by cuts, becoming too infrequent or unreliable to be usable by many people.
Chris Inchley criticised the way that the council's consultation was conducted, over a short period over Christmas, and poorly publicised. The consultation garnered around 1300 responses - and wouldn't have had that many if groups like ouselves hadn't publicised it.
Victoria Flynn, representing Tessa Munt, Lib Dem MP for Wells, read out a prepared statement on the cuts to services. This stated that she had been inundated with complaints about many type of cuts made by Somerset County Council. These cuts were typically short-sighted and ended up costing rather than saving - for example, library closures which resulted in a high court battle. Typically short-sighted are bus service cuts to Saturday services, stranding people at the weekends, when people naturally want to travel out of their towns into the surrounding area (there is already no Sunday service). Tessa Munt argues that central government should not be blamed for these cuts - there is a fund which has been made over to SCC to cover transport but which has not been used for that purpose by the council. Furthermore, SCC cannot plead poverty as they are keeping £30m in reserve in the bank - at 10% of their yearly budget, this exceeds the 3-5% recommended by the National Audit Office. Therefore SCC appear to making these cuts for political reasons, not because they are short of funds.
Derek Tanswell, Lib Dem councillor, said that he believes that regardless of the responses to the consultation, SCC will be cutting the subsidies as originally proposed.
Peter Travis suggested that if the council wanted to increase bus usage, one strategy would be to increase the cost of parking.
NEXT STEPS
Garfield is hoping to organise a meeting in Shepton Mallet. He spoke about working with Martin Abrams of Better Transport. Garfield has a background in film-making and we could think about making a film of the campaign.
Theo suggested making the most of press, events and photo opportunities to increase the visibility of the campaign.
You can find the Shepton Mallet campaign online at
Sunday, 11 January 2015
News article about bus cuts
Budget cuts by councils have left bus services facing a crisis, a report by the Campaign for Better Transport says.
The group says half the councils in England and Wales have
cut funding for buses in 2014/15, amounting to more than £9m when
compared with 2013/14.The CBT said its figures came from Freedom of Information Act requests.
A Department for Transport spokesman said decisions about buses were best made locally but the government provided "substantial funding".
The CBT said local authority funding for bus services had been slashed by 15% since 2010, or £44m, with more than 2,000 routes being reduced or withdrawn entirely.
Its report also says that:
- Rural areas have been worst hit by cuts, seeing average budget reductions of 19% this year
- In 2014/15, nearly 500 bus services were cut, altered or withdrawn
- 22 councils cut bus funding by more than 10% in 2014/15
- The overall reduction in Wales in 2014/15 is more than £900,000, with 86 bus services having been cut, altered or withdrawn
"Across the country, bus services are being lost at an alarming rate.
"Year-on-year cuts to budgets mean entire networks have now disappeared, leaving many communities with little public transport and in some cases none at all.
"It's very worrying that further steep cuts in budgets are threatened next year and beyond. The government must introduce new initiatives which recognise the vital social, economic and environmental role buses play."
'Poisonous cocktail' Mick Cash, general secretary of the RMT transport union, said: "This shocking new report lifts the lid on the trail of misery left strewn across the country as multimillion-pound cuts to bus services condemn hundreds of thousands of people to lives of isolation and imprisonment in their own homes.
"The poisonous cocktail of cuts and privatisation reinforces our call for bus services to be taken back into public ownership with the resources required to run as a comprehensive public service."
The DfT spokesman said that it regarded bus services as "vital", especially for many older and disabled people.
"That is why the government provides substantial funding, protected until 2015/16, to bus operators to help more services run and keep ticket prices down.
"A further £1bn a year is provided for the free national bus pass.
"Decisions about bus services are best made locally in partnership between councils and the companies which run the buses."
Wednesday, 10 December 2014
Shepton Mallet joins the fight to save the 161 Saturday bus and other buses
Shepton mallet has joined the fight to try to save the 161 Saturday bus service and other buses in their area.
If you use any of these buses from Shepton
1 Yeovil - Shepton
161 Frome - Shepton - Wells
669 Shepton - Glastonbury
776 Shepton - Midsomer Norton
You will need to take part in the councils consultation in order to try to save these buses from being cut next May. A direct link to the Councils consultation can be found on our campaigns page or near my picture with Fromes town crier. You have until the 29th December to respond to the survey.
If you use any of these buses from Shepton
1 Yeovil - Shepton
161 Frome - Shepton - Wells
669 Shepton - Glastonbury
776 Shepton - Midsomer Norton
You will need to take part in the councils consultation in order to try to save these buses from being cut next May. A direct link to the Councils consultation can be found on our campaigns page or near my picture with Fromes town crier. You have until the 29th December to respond to the survey.
Monday, 1 December 2014
Frome and Villages Bus User Group Minutes, 19th November 2014
Here
are the minutes of the last Frome and Villages Bus Users Group meeting,
held at Frome Town Council offices. Our primary purpose
was to discuss next steps in gathering evidence for bus usage, and
responding to the consultation being conducted by Somerset County
Council on bus funding cuts.
Jon Barnard
We
have just heard that Jon Barnard has left First Bus as Operations
Director, and does not yet have a replacement, although the commercial
manager, Simon Ford, is responding to emails. This could be a setback
for us as Jon was quite willing to engage with us, and we don't know if
his replacement will be - however, we can expect them to have the same
focus on making a convincing business case
for any proposed changes to services.
Withdrawal of 161 and 424 Saturday services
Somerset
County Council are intending to cut bus service funding, and are
proposing that these cuts should fall on the 161 (FirstBus,
Frome-Wells) and 424 (Frome Minibus, Frome-Midsomer Norton). We'd
expect the Saturday timetables on both these services to be cut
entirely, with the Monday-Friday services unaffected. While it's
possible that the on demand Slinkybus service might be able to
replace these services to some extent, there is no guarantee that this
would be available to any passengers who required it. (The Slinkybus is
also subsidised, so costs the council money to run!)
There is currently a consultation on these proposed cuts running on the Council website here: http://www.somerset.gov.uk/have-your-say/consultations/bus-service-changes/
This survey is running until
the 29th December.
John
Leach, the Chair of the Public Transport Users Group has been talking
through some other options with Frome Minibuses. In the
event of the proposed funding cuts to the 424, there is a possibility
that Frome Minibus would considering cutting the weekday 17:45 service
to Radstock while retaining some service on Saturday mornings. Frome
Minibus may be able to provide us with some information
about the current usage of these services.
It
would be good if we could get some idea of how well used the threatened
services are, both in terms of numbers of people and their
purposes (shoppers, commuters, tourists). There may be a quality of
life issue for some passengers eg. users of mental health unit who are
not able to drive, which ought to be considered by the council. There is
also the possibility that some buses are not
as well used as they could be because they don’t
have the optimal timetable e.g.
join up with other services poorly, or are not well timed for
commuters. Cutting the number of timetabled departures makes a service
as whole less useful and less used because an infrequent service is less
convenient than a more frequent one - hence cutting
underused services can be a vicious circle which leads to yet lower
usage, even if people would prefer to use buses if it were practical.
Encouraging consultation participation
We
are trying to encourage as many people as possible to have their say by
completing the consultation survey, and have been publicising it on
our blog, on posters on bus stops round Frome. We're also going to have
a visit from Mike Bishop the Town Crier on Saturday 22nd Nov to cry for
the buses in Market Place!
Frome Town Council are also putting printed copies of the consultation in the library for people to fill in from the 27th
November.
The deadline for all consultations, printed and on-line is the 29th
December. There could also be notices in some of the retailers like
Sainsburys and Homebase - some of these have already proven themselves
to be more sympathetic than others.
Advice from Rode
Peter Travis from Rode
talked about his experience of the 267
campaign in Rode. The success of the campaign there hinged on being able
to demonstrate to First Bus that their analysis of the usage of the
buses through Rode had been faulty - specifically that
the fact that there was no fare stage at Rode meant that people
boarding in Rode were registered at the Beckington or Norton St Philip
fare stage. Campaigners had to prove this by doing their own counts on
the buses and taking the evidence to First. Arguing
the business case to operators is critical - they're unlikely to be
swayed by poor publicity. Councillors ought to be more susceptible to
social good concerns and are more worried about public opinion! However
councillors are not currently prioritising transport
in their budgets.
Doing research
We need to start finding out as much as we can about how people use buses in the area, and what service they would like to see.
We could have two stages of research:
1.
"Anecdotal": Gather "travellers' tales" from bus users about their
experiences, both of quality of services and about how well used they
are.
Use this to get a general picture of bus use, and any major problems or
anomalies. Also find out people's 'wishlists' - services they would use
if they existed. We could encourage people to submit their experiences
through our website's Contact page.
2.
"Scientific": focus on services based on the information gathered in
stage 1. - have people on services taking counts of passengers using the
services and where they board and alight. We might also need to take
this action when particular services are threatened, to make a case for
their retention, as was done in Rode.
We
could also survey people on possible changes which seem to us to make
sense e.g. serving the Medical Centre with the Town Shuttle (30) rather
than services going out of town, and potentially running the 30 to the
train station too.
Also..
- The promised reinstatement of the 267 to Sainsbury's has still not occurred and there has been no information on this
- A new bus stop is due to be created at Frome train station early next year
-
First have had a fare restructuring, so passengers from Frome can now
get an 'Outer Bath' ticket to get them to Bath and back for £6. This
return
journey had previously cost £7 as an all-day ticket.
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