Long quotation form Wiltshire Council Web site.
Proposed changes to the Connect2 Wiltshire Hopper service to the Royal United Hospital ^ have your say
Why are these proposals being made?Wiltshire Council recognises that the Connect2 Wiltshire Hopper service to the Royal United hospital plays an important role in helping people to get to outpatients appointments, to work, and for hospital visiting. It was the council that set up the service in 2001 jointly funded by Wiltshire Council, the NHS and the government. When funding from the government and the NHS ceased a few years later, Wiltshire Council continued to fund the service.
Unfortunately, in the years since the service began, the financial pressures on local authorities across the country have increased massively, leaving councils squeezed between huge reductions in the grants received from government on the one hand, and on the other a continuing growth in the cost of providing social care as the number of elderly and very elderly people increases. These pressures look certain to become even greater over the next few years. The council is therefore having to make some very difficult decisions about future spending, and local transport services (including Connect2 Wiltshire) have been identified as one of the areas where savings might be made.
Although the Hopper service is popular, it is also very expensive to provide and the council spends around ^150,000 a year supporting it. With nearly 15,000 passenger journeys a year being made, the support per passenger trip works out at over ^10. This is much higher than the ^3.50 per trip that is the council^s usual maximum, and which is published in the guidelines for supported bus service funding in the Local Transport Plan.
What is being proposed?Earlier this year the council proposed that it would enter into discussions with the Clinical Care Group (CCG), and the hospital, to discuss financial support to maintain the service. As a result of these discussions, money from the Better Care Fund has been set aside to provide a service until the end of the current financial year (31 March 2016), and a case is being prepared to seek further funding to keep the service running beyond this date. This may well require a reduction in the annual subsidy to make it more affordable and we have to consult on this reduced service, and the ceasing of the service should our current talks about next year^s funding fail.
We are therefore consulting on two scenarios;
* Changes to the service that would reduce the subsidy required, to be implemented early in 2016. These would include a reduced frequency of service and an increase in the fares charged.
* Complete withdrawal of the service, which may be a possible outcome if funding cannot be secured to keep the service running beyond March 2016.
Scenario 1 ^ changes to the service to reduce subsidy required.In order to make the service more affordable, it is proposed that;
* There would be fewer journeys to and from the hospital each day. The proposed timetable would be as follows (running daily Monday to Friday); Arrivals at RUH; 0720, 0820, 0920, 1020, 1220, 1320, 1520, 1720. Departs from RUH; 0830, 0930, 1030, 1230, 1330, 1530, 1630, 1730
There would be no change in the area covered by the service or to the arrangements for booking a journey.
* All fares would be increased by around 50%. For example, the new fare from Trowbridge, Bradford or Melksham would be ^12.60 single / ^16.20 return, and the flat fare for holders of a Wiltshire concessionary bus pass would be ^9.75 single / ^12.00 return.
It is anticipated that the combined effect of these proposed changes would be to reduce the annual subsidy required from around ^150,000 to around ^90,000. The changes would be introduced in February 2016.
Scenario 2 ^ complete withdrawal of the service.If funding cannot be secured for the 2016/17 financial year and beyond, the service could be completely withdrawn. Due to the need to give notice, this would not be before May 2016. Alternative means of transport are available to the hospital;
* There are frequent bus services from Bath city centre, and there is also a Park & Ride service to RUH from Odd Down.
* Some people who have a medical need for transport may be eligible for the NHS-funded non-emergency Patient Transport Service (ambulance or smaller vehicles); )
* People who are not eligible for non-emergency patient transport and cannot make the journey by public transport can ask their local Link or community transport scheme for help
* For patients on low income who qualify for it, the Healthcare Travel Costs scheme will refund the costs of travel to and from hospital
Further details of the transport that is available to the hospital can be found on the
RUH website.
How to respond to this consultationWe are asking people to tell us their views about both of the scenarios described above, and what impact they would have on their journey to hospital.
If you or a member of your family are using the service or have used it in the past, or may need to use it in the future, please complete the
questionnaire for individuals. Paper versions of the questionnaire are also available on the vehicles themselves and from the information desk at the hospital, and from local libraries in the operating area of the service.
There is also a separate
questionnaire for organisations who would like to let us know what the impact would be on them or the people they represent.
The closing date for responses to be received is Friday 27 November 2015. No decision will be made until the responses to the consultation have been considered, the impacts assessed and options investigated.
More information about the current serviceAt present, the Connect2 Wiltshire Hopper service to the Royal United Hospital;
* Provides a service to and from the hospital every hour on Monday to Friday daytimes, from a wide area of western Wiltshire including Warminster, Westbury, Trowbridge, Melksham, Corsham and Bradford on Avon. First arrival at the hospital is at 0720, and the last return departure leaves at 1730. It will pick up passengers from anywhere within the defined operating area on request, with bookings required to be made by at least 10.00am the day before travel.
* Fares range from ^7.20 to ^14.40 single / ^8.40 to ^15.60 return according to location, with a flat rate charge of ^6.50 single / ^8.00 return for holders of a Wiltshire concessionary bus pass.
* It began in 2000 as an experimental service funded by a successful bid to the government^s Rural Bus Challenge, with funding contributions from Wiltshire Council and the NHS. When after a few years the government funding ended and the NHS contribution was withdrawn, Wiltshire Council provided the full funding needed to allow the service to continue.
* Annual use of the service is nearly 15,000 single passenger trips, of which around 75% are for outpatient appointments, 22% for work and 3% for hospital visiting. Around 70% are by holders of an older or disabled persons^ concessionary bus pass. The vehicles are equipped with a tail lift and an electric raising passenger step.
* The service is expensive to provide as it needs four minibuses to maintain an hourly service on request to the whole of the operating area, a telephone booking service to be manned throughout the operating day, and requires constant scheduling to arrange pickups at the places required and to cope with the frequent last minute changes to return transport bookings if passengers are required to stay at the hospital for longer than expected.
* The gross cost of operation in 2014/15 was ^202,000, which was offset by income from passenger fares of ^48,000, and the remaining cost of ^154,000 was met by Wiltshire Council. The average support cost per passenger trip was ^10.79.