From
this is Somerset:
Swingeing cuts to public transport could decimate the West's bus networks in the same way local railways were axed by the Beeching cuts 50 years ago. And it will be rural areas, school buses and those harder-to-reach routes that are hit first if bus operators have to cut routes and hike fares.
That was the stark warning from a newly-formed 'rainbow' coalition of local bus companies, local authorities, union leaders and green transport campaigners.
The West Country's rural bus network has steadily dwindled in recent years and it is feared that service cuts will leave many isolated.
They said a Government review of the Bus Service Operators Grant could mean big fare rises, jobs lost and services cut. Worried transport campaigners compared the impending cuts to the notorious 'Beeching Axe', a review of rail provision in 1962 that closed half of Britain's 6,000 railway stations and 4,000 miles of track.
"Scraping the Bus Service Operators Grant (BSOG▸ ) could do for Britain's buses today what Beeching did for the UK▸ rail network in the 1960s," said Stephen Joseph, the executive director of the Campaign for Better Transport. It could tip buses into a spiral of decline with fares rises, falling patronage and service cuts, all with impacts on some of the poorest in society."
The BSOG rebates bus operators for the duty they paid for fuel used to run official council bus services, including school buses and those in rural areas. And it would be the West's rural areas, where buses are a lifeline for village communities but not necessarily profit-making, which would be the worst hit, according to the Campaign to Protect Rural England.
Shaun Spiers, the CPRE▸ 's chief executive, said: "Cutting the bus grant may look like a quick way to slash spending, but the social, environmental and economic costs to the countryside would be huge in the long term. Those unable to drive could be forced to move out of rural areas or face isolation, while those living car-free in towns may be cut off from the countryside,"
The boss of Stagecoach, which runs bus services across the West, said jobs would be lost if the grant was axed.
"Scrapping it would mean a huge, regressive tax hike for bus passengers, would cost jobs and be bad for business," said Brian Souter. "The worst impact would be on the pockets of the poorest in our society whose bus services are a lifeline."