grahame
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« Reply #1 on: October 25, 2015, 10:15:46 » |
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I have been set an element of a challenge to explain "Total Transport" ... a learned correspondent writes "Hmmm. I confess I did not understand what 'Total Transport' is, from this speech!" ... so I've had a go, taking the general down to a specific corridor.
"Total Transport" is about providing transport from "A" to "B" and back again from "B" to "A" when people want it, at a sensible cost, easy to find out about (times and fares) and not duplicating facilities or leaving holes. And in the context of this discussion, "A" and "B" may be a home, a place of work, a shopping centre, a hospital, a cinema, a school, a college, a supermarket or a beach.
Total Transport
The idea - instead of a whole lot of separate independent pieces of transport along a corridor, why not combine them and get them to work together? Much better take and consider the whole (as is done in London) rather than individual services / segments of services (as is done elsewhere in England.
An example - the current system
Let's take an example I know. We've got school transport, work transport, hospital transport and a couple of bus operators too - for daytime pensioner and work trips, and for leisure and shift work in the evening. With the bus operators running in commercial competition during the day, and the under council subsidy in the evening. The hospital and each bus operator have separate fare schemes and tickets that can't be interchanged except for a special arrangement on 2 daily buses. The hospital transport needs to be pre-booked. General passengers are allowed on some school transport but not other. And if you hit a gap in the buses, you can go indirect by train, but that's a different ticket. And as you stand at "A" needing to get to "B", you need a batchelor's degree to work out your mode of transport, and a doctorate to know whether to buy single, return, or a day zone ticket. And if you're a pensioner wanting to start to travel before 09:30, remember to buy a ticket for just part of the journey and get off and back on again just after 09:30 so the council picks up the bill for the rest of your journey.
You may think I'm stretching the truth with that description, but - alas - it's what we have from Bath to Melksham and some onward journeys to Devizes. During the day, there are two buses an hour (please dont read that as half-hourly) from Melksham to the centre of Bath - and a third to the hospital. There's a train that calls at Melksham about once an hour, and with alternate changes at Trowbridge and Chippenham that makes for a fourth service. There are a couple of extra morning buses to Bath schools and back, but the daytime service is pretty late in starting (both operators) and early finishing (one operator) so woe betide you if you need to start work early, finish late, or get to the hospital on a Saturday or Sunday (it's a five day service only) or at short notice (you need to book by 10 a.m. the previous day). The hospital bus costs the taxpayer 150,000 pounds a year for 15,000 journeys, and the evening and Sunday buses cost around 54,000 for a further 15,000 journeys. I don't know about the school bus finances, but the rest are "commercial" except that's not really the case as the bus companines count the concession card customers and the council pays for them too. Oh - and I forgot a further single extra bus that uses the corridor - comes from outside, runs once a day via Melksham to Bath and the hospital, and costs a further 54,000 pounds for 9804 journeys - 9029 of which are concessionary, so the bus company gets more money for them too. All in all a rather confusing and disjoint system.
This example - how it could be done with total transport.
The headlines ...
Two buses an hour (one in the evenings and on Sundays) from the hospital in Bath via Bath Bus Station to Melksham, with one continuing on to Devizes and Easterton, leaving at 30 minute intervals.
Service run under franchise agreement(s) by commercial operators, with income to the local transport authority but with an incentive in the agreement to encourage quality and traffic.
Routes to vary to serve intermediate communities once and hour (every 2 hours on Sunday), balanced to give half-hourly at key market towns.
Buses to connect with town services, with through and shared ticketing and combined timetables.
The detail ...
Yes, I could go on and add the detail - this is something that we've looked at, but perhaps that's to be filled in at county / local level rather than in a general paper without maps
The effect on passengers ...
Some changes will be seen and a few places where vehicle changes will now be needed. In general, the service will run not only for the current hours but extended into the "shoulder" periods - giving extra opportunities not currently available. Ticketing and infomation much easier, connections will actually work. Some over-provided villages may see a drop in service - e.g. two buses an hour (but NOT half hourly) to an hourly bus.
The effect on finances ...
Immediate saving of the majority of the subsidy described at the top of this article. Additional savings by routing one bus an hour via Corsham / increasing Melksham - Corsham from every 2 hours to every hour and saving a heavily subsidised vehicle on that run.
More useful total journey solutions and easier pricing will encourage additional passengers. Did you know that with just 3 extra fare payig passengers per journey, the need for any subsidy can be removed from most routes and many will make a profit?
Better services may encourage more passengers on concessionary passes to travel, and that will have a negative effect on finances - requiring the transport authority to fund those journeys.
The effect on bus operators ...
Much more the "London Model" so contracted per route / route group as a franchise / management operation. Still commercial, but with the ability to plan for longer term and lease vehicles rather than purchase and run old ones into the ground. Bus operators may object due to the loss of "Cash Cow" routes.
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