Bus Services England 2024-03-21

2024-03-21

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Response quality

Questions & Answers

Q1 Partial Answer
Fabian Hamilton Lab
Leeds North East
Context
Unreliable bus services in Leeds have been an ongoing concern.
Our bus services in Leeds have been unreliable for years, and yet the Leeds City Council Conservative group wanted more of the same and hoped the problem would just go away. Will the Minister join me in congratulating Labour's West Yorkshire Mayor, Tracy Brabin, on taking the significant decision to bring our buses back into public control, so they can once again be run for people and not for profit?
I had the dubious honour of being praised as the hon. Gentleman's favourite MP earlier this week—damned by faint praise. I would gently push back that the West Yorkshire Mayor is able to do that only because this Government have provided unprecedented funding of in excess of £2.1 billion in the devolved settlement under the city region sustainable transport settlement.
Assessment & feedback
Did not explicitly join in congratulating the mayor but defended government's role in providing funding
Response accuracy
Q2 Partial Answer
Kerry McCarthy Lab
Bristol East
Context
Local residents are facing difficulties due to the lack of bus services in Stapleton, Bristol. The Minister promised guidance on what constitutes socially necessary bus services for which local authorities can provide subsidies.
It has been three years since the Government published their national bus strategy, but we are still waiting for the promised guidance on what constitutes “socially and economically necessary” bus services for which local authorities can provide subsidies. While we wait, people in Stapleton, in my constituency, are having to walk a mile to get to a bus stop to catch a bus to the city centre, because First Bus says it is not commercially profitable to run a service through Stapleton and there is no money to subsidise it. Last July, a Minister told me that guidance would be issued in this Parliament, which is clearly close to coming to an end. When will we see that guidance?
We particularly want to try to assist the hon. Lady and her local authority with the finances. The West of England combined authority receives £1.1 million every year through the bus service operators grant to subsidise socially necessary bus services. It has also been allocated in excess of £1.2 billion in city region sustainable transport settlements 1 and 2 to deliver transport infrastructure, which includes the bus infrastructure the hon. Lady requires.
Assessment & feedback
Did not provide a timeline for issuing guidance on socially necessary services
Response accuracy
Q3 Partial Answer
Richard Foord Lib Dem
Honiton and Sidmouth
Context
Regular bus users in rural Devon face issues with unreliable services that affect college students' productivity and their parents' working days.
As a regular bus user myself, I recognise it when people in rural Devon tell me that some buses fail to appear, meaning they miss connections with trains as a result. The services are well used by college students. Unreliable bus services not only affect the productivity of the college students, but of their parents who are then called upon to help the students make the journey to college, curtailing their working day. What can the Government do to encourage better co-ordination between rail and buses to get students to college on time?
That depends on funding, as the hon. Gentleman will be aware because I raised it with him in his Adjournment debate on 19 December. Devon County Council has been awarded £17.4 million to deliver its bus service improvement plan, but there should be better integration between the providers, the local authority and the rail companies.
Assessment & feedback
Did not provide specific measures for coordination, only mentioned funding and need for better integration
Response accuracy
Q4 Direct Answer
Fabian Hamilton Lab
Leeds North East
Context
The Southend area has benefited from £1 million of bus service improvement plan funding that enabled the reinstatement of the much-loved 25A route. The questioner seeks more funding and invites the Minister to attend a high-level bus summit.
Southend welcomes the £1 million of bus service improvement plan funding that has already enabled Conservative cabinet member Kevin Buck to reinstate the much-loved 25A route, but we need more. Will the Minister commit to come to my high-level bus summit on Monday, to listen to residents and see what more we can do?
In the time-honoured tradition, I can only say yes to my hon. Friend. She is a doughty champion for Southend. I would be delighted to attend her bus summit, to speak to the relevant councillors and to explain how the bus service improvement plan and the bus service operators' grant funding is transforming local bus provision.
Assessment & feedback
Response accuracy
Q5 Direct Answer
Context
Parents in Gloucestershire are struggling with rural school bus transport, raising concerns about reliability, safety, and fairness compared to urban areas.
Never mess with busy mums and dads, not least because I am one and I know that the Minister is as well. Parents in Arlingham, Frampton, Elmore and Longney are really struggling with rural school bus transport. This is not all about money; it is about reliability, safety and fairness. Indeed, they feel that their children are discriminated against versus what children in towns and cities receive. Gloucestershire County Council is doing a lot. It is stretching itself, but we are really struggling to find solutions. Will the Minister meet me and Councillor Stephen Davies to see whether we can find solutions for our parents in the communities?
I would be delighted to do so. I welcome the fact that my hon. Friend is standing up for her local community in this way. Clearly, it is a question of integrating the particular services, whether they are local or school provision, but it is definitely something that we can sort.
Assessment & feedback
Response accuracy
Q6 Direct Answer
Context
The removal of the X21 bus route has disconnected communities in Fishburn, Trimdon, and Sedgefield from Newton Aycliffe and Darlington.
It was good to meet my hon. Friend the Minister and the residents of Fishburn in the Sedgefield constituency recently; and he then followed up with Arriva. Will he endorse my campaign to reconnect Fishburn, Trimdon and Sedgefield back with Newton Aycliffe and Darlington, which were cut off by the removal of the X21? Does he also agree that rural services to places such as these are the critical platform to enable opportunity to be spread and a key reason for the BSIP funding?
It was a pleasure to attend the meeting at Fishburn Community Hall, meet the local residents and councillors, be offered a pancake on Shrove Tuesday and discuss bus services and bus funding. I have to say that there is no doubt whatever that the improvement of the X21, in particular taking residents and workers into Newton Aycliffe and Darlington, seems to be utterly sensible, and I will continue to support my hon. Friend's campaign and meet again with Arriva to ensure that it happens for the people of Fishburn and Trimdon.
Assessment & feedback
Response accuracy
Q7 Partial Answer
Simon Lightwood Lab Co-op
Wakefield and Rothwell
Context
Transport Focus published a report finding significant regional variation in bus passenger satisfaction, with some operators as low as 66%, compared to an average of 80%. The report highlighted that the number of people working from home has increased by 40%.
Good morning, Mr Speaker. Passenger watchdog Transport Focus published a report last week which found huge regional variation in bus passenger satisfaction across the country, with large numbers of passengers 'being let down'. Under the Tories' deregulation of the bus sector, passenger satisfaction with some operators is miles below the average of 80%, with some as low as 66%. In places such as West Yorkshire, Labour Mayors are not standing for it any longer. As my hon. Friend the Member for Leeds North East (Fabian Hamilton) said, Tracy Brabin has announced her intention to pursue franchising to reverse decades of Tory decline. But the vast majority of local authorities do not have those powers, so will the Minister adopt Labour's plan to give every local transport authority the same powers to take back control of their bus services?
Unlike the hon. Gentleman, I was at the launch of the said report and have read it. He will be aware that, for example, one reason for the complications is that the number of people working from home has increased by 40%. We have a plan to tackle that with the record investment that is being made to Mayors. He talks about franchising, but it is also the case, without a shadow of a doubt, that he does not have a plan to finance it, particularly for rural local authorities. What is the case is that, when Labour organisations are challenged on this, they struggle to find out how they will deal with the funding.
Assessment & feedback
Adopting Labour's plan to give every local transport authority power to franchise and take back control of their bus services
Challenging The Opposition On Lack Of A Financing Plan
Response accuracy