https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-52122342Government bails out bus firms to keep routes open
The government will cover the losses of bus companies in England over the next three months to ensure that services can still run.
The UK▸ 's bus industry says passenger numbers have "fallen off a cliff" since the government advised people against all non-essential travel.
That caused bus firms to cut services.
But a new £167m fund will ensure that bus companies can cover their costs on essential services so that key workers, like NHS staff, can get to work.
With people advised to stay at home, many buses around the UK are being driven around with no passengers on them at all.
CPT boss Graham Vidler said the funding would "plug the gap" between the costs of running essential routes and the income received by companies. He said that would allow "critical journeys to continue".
Government support is conditional on bus companies operating about half of their routes.
Operators have also pledged not to let buses carry more than 50% of their maximum capacity to ensure that social distancing is possible onboard.
Before the coronavirus outbreak the government had earmarked funding to reopen bus routes which had been cut in recent years. Some of that money is now being spent on keeping existing routes running.