The following Statement was made in the House of Commons on Monday
9 September. “Today marks the first stop on this Government's
journey to deliver better buses. Day in, day out, buses shoulder
the needs of millions of working people across the country, whether
they are getting to work or school, or seeing the doctor or
friends. A reliable bus service is the difference between
aspiration and isolation, between getting on and being forced to
give up—a lifeline, plain and...Request free trial
The following Statement was made in the House of Commons on
Monday 9 September.
“Today marks the first stop on this Government's journey to
deliver better buses. Day in, day out, buses shoulder the needs
of millions of working people across the country, whether they
are getting to work or school, or seeing the doctor or friends. A
reliable bus service is the difference between aspiration and
isolation, between getting on and being forced to give up—a
lifeline, plain and simple. But over the past four decades of
deregulation, that lifeline has been on life support. Communities
have suffered cuts to thousands of services, with 1.5 billion
fewer journeys taking place in 2019 than in 1985, when
deregulation began. Since 2010, a staggering 300 million fewer
miles have been driven by buses per year. That is the legacy the
previous Government left behind: a shocking decline in this
country's bus services, which has done untold harm to communities
across the country.
Behind those stats lie human stories—of the poorest groups, who
catch 10 times as many buses as trains, regularly let down; of
people denied access to work or education, because they cannot
depend on the journey there; or women and girls denied access to
a safe journey home. They represent a steady cycle of decline
that reverberates beyond buses to our economy as a whole, and of
public services not working for working people.
Enough is enough. This mission-focused Government were elected to
repair what is broken, and to reform what does not work. We are
clear about the fact that better buses are essential to a better
Britain, and that buses are a route not just to connection but to
economic growth, cleaner air and a fairer chance in life for
everyone. That is why my right honourable friend the Transport
Secretary has made fixing this country's broken bus network one
of her top priorities in her department and it is why, just two
months into office, we are kick-starting a bus revolution that
will put services back into the hands of local leaders, achieving
in just 10 weeks what the last Government failed to achieve in
more than 14 years.
The statutory instrument that we laid this morning opens up bus
franchising for all local transport authorities in England. It
gives local leaders more flexibility to adopt a model that works
for their areas and, because we are streamlining the current
two-step process, authorities will now only need to obtain the
Transport Secretary's consent before preparing a franchise
scheme. This is a transformative change, one that will give every
community the same powers that mayoral combined authorities
across the country are currently using to deliver better
services, along with the power to match them to local needs. We
know that the franchising model works: we need only look at the
Bee Network in Greater Manchester, where buses were brought under
public control just one year ago and where reliability has
already improved, passenger numbers have already grown and a new
24/7 service has just been introduced; or at Greater London,
where public control has meant that more bus journeys are now
taken in our capital than in the rest of England combined.
We are taking aim at the current postcode lottery of bus services
to ensure that our most popular form of public transport starts
running in the public interest. Local authorities know best how
to deliver for their communities, which is why today we are
empowering them to follow in the footsteps of Greater Manchester
and London, to ensure that they have buses in the right place at
the right time, truly serving local needs. Our plan will help to
turn the tide after decades of decline. The statutory instrument
will be backed by a public consultation, which my right
honourable friend the Transport Secretary also launched today. It
seeks views on breaking down the barriers to franchising, and on
how we can support safer and more accessible services. By
delivering simpler guidance, it will support and speed up the
franchising process, meaning that councils will spend less time
and money filling in forms, and more time planning routes and
prioritising the interests of the communities that they
serve.
However, this is just the start of our journey. Today's steps
pave the way for a new bus Bill later in the current
parliamentary Session—a Bill intended to reform funding, to allow
franchises to be rolled out to more places more quickly and
cheaply, and to support councils that choose not to franchise but
still want the flexibility to deliver on local transport
priorities. The Bill will also allow us to remove the ideological
ban on municipal bus companies that was imposed by the last
Government despite the huge success of those companies, which can
be seen across the country where they are still in place—for
instance, the award-winning publicly owned services in Nottingham
and Reading. This, rightly, is not a one-size-fits-all approach,
and, crucially, it places no additional burden on taxpayers. It
simply acknowledges a truth with which many in the House will
agree: that the best decisions are not always made by Whitehall,
but are made in town and city halls throughout the country by
those who are accountable to local communities, and by those who,
day in day out, use the very services that we are talking
about.
It has been said before, and I will say it again: under this new
Government, the Department for Transport is moving fast and
fixing things. Today's steps place better buses at the heart of
this Government's plan for change. Four decades after buses were
deregulated, and after 14 years of decline, we are now empowering
communities to take back control of the services on which they
depend—to get Britain moving, to get our economy growing and to
get more passengers, wherever they live, back on board. I commend
this Statement to the House”.
3.05pm
(Con)
My Lords, I thank the Minister for the Statement. The Official
Opposition share the Government's desire for high-quality public
transport and we will hold the Government to account on this.
In government, the Conservatives prioritised buses, protecting
our network during the pandemic and introducing the “Get Around
for £2” scheme, saving millions of people money on their commute
and, most importantly, incentivising them to travel by bus again
quickly after the impact that the pandemic had on travel. We know
that our public transport sector desperately needs increasing
passenger numbers to make routes viable and this is an especially
acute problem in rural areas. The previous Government's policy,
driven by the “Get Around for £2” scheme, was successful in
driving up the number of passenger journeys in the year to March
2023 by almost 20%. While this is not yet at pre-pandemic levels,
our scheme is supporting the return of passengers and boosting
the bus sector. So, before addressing the specific issue of bus
franchising, can the Minister say what the Government's intention
is for the “Get Around for £2” scheme and whether it is also at
risk of means testing? Will the Minister rule that out?
I turn now to the subject of the Statement: the statutory
instrument. It seeks to give to all local authorities the powers
on bus franchising that are currently exercised in major
conurbations such as London and Manchester. Broadly and
generally, the Official Opposition welcome the granting and
devolution of more powers to local authorities, but this
statutory instrument, like a number of announcements from the
Government to date, is fundamentally bogus, for two reasons.
First, it is often argued that cities and towns outside London
should have the sorts of public transport services that London
has and the sort of system that provides those transport
services. As noble Lords will no doubt be aware, the bus service
in London is provided by private companies that operate under
concessions that have been granted to them, competitively, by
Transport for London in a way that ensures a degree of coherence
and system in the operation of the bus service across the
conurbation.
The fares risk, which is the crucial question in all this, is
borne by Transport for London. The bus companies themselves
simply supply the service for a fee. The truth is that this is
not something that just happened overnight. TfL did not suddenly
find a way to do something that nobody else had ever done.
Transport for London, in various guises, has been operating
transport services in London for over 150 years, and bus services
going back at least to the foundation of the General Omnibus
Company—a French company, actually—in the 1850s in London. It is
the historical core of what we now call London Buses. The
capacity of most local authorities to deliver these services is
extremely limited. They do not have those roots or those
abilities. Where, out of nowhere, are they to conjure the ability
to set up a bus concession management system?
The second reason that this is a fundamentally bogus statutory
instrument is the cost of doing it. Running bus services, on the
sort of basis that local authorities wish to provide them, is
very expensive and requires large subsidies. My figures might be
slightly out of date, but when the last Mayor of London, , left office, the subsidy to
London Buses was of the order of £450 million a year. The last I
heard, and it may not be totally up to date, was that under his
successor the cost of London Buses is of the order of £700
million a year. That is in a very large city, of course, but £700
million a year is a huge amount to have to find to subsidise bus
services.
Throughout the country, local authorities will have to subsidise
buses if they are to provide the sorts of services that this
statutory instrument and this Government are holding out as being
possible. Where is the money going to come from? Without massive
investment in capacity and the subsidisation of operations, this
statutory instrument is fundamentally meaningless.
So do the Government intend to publish a full assessment of the
expected impact of this policy on the quality, frequency and
accessibility of bus services? Will the Minister commit to
assessing the relative impact of this policy on rural communities
in particular, as opposed to urban communities?
Finally, the Official Opposition, as I say, support the desire
for improved public transport and we generally support the
increase of powers to local authorities. But this policy appears
to put showmanship ahead of practical improvements. The
Government have yet again got their priorities wrong, focusing on
who runs local bus services rather than on delivering the
people's priorities, which are the quality, frequency and
reliability of our public transport network.
(LD)
My Lords, the Liberal Democrats welcome this Statement. As it has
emphasised, it is clear that buses are crucial to our economy and
society. They provide services for many of the poorest groups—the
young, the old, more women than men—and are crucial for access to
education, jobs, health services and other aspects.
We welcome rapid action to deal with our rapidly declining bus
network outside London and we are fundamentally in favour of
devolution, believing that decisions made locally are generally
more effective and efficient. If the Minister looks back to
Hansard in 2017, he will see that I put down during debates on
the Bus Services Bill amendments that did roughly what the
Government's proposed measures will do—allow all local
authorities to franchise and set up their own bus services. The
response from the then Minister was that it was all about issues
of capacity. To be fair, that is still an issue. On its own, this
will not be enough, so what are the Government going to do? Will
they provide additional funding and funding changes in the Budget
in order to ensure that franchising is enabled in those local
authorities that are not generally as big as, for example,
Manchester.
As with the rail Bill, our concern is that the key issues are not
necessarily included in the Government's proposals in order to be
broad enough to solve the problems. I have a couple of associated
questions. Reference has been made to government subsidies to
support the £2 fare cap. That will run out in December, and
another funding stream that is designed to support improved
services will run out in April. Can the Minister give us a
commitment that we will see the end of temporary funding and that
it will be replaced with a multiyear, more encompassing set of
funding that is less divided up? There are four sets of funding
that go to local authorities. They need, as the bus industry
needs, certainty and a long-term approach, so I hope the
Government will do that.
Finally, can we have an assurance that the Government will look
at badly needed incentives and assistance to encourage young
people on to our buses? For years and years, we have had free
fares for elderly people. Young people need a nationwide scheme
of at least reduced fares in order to get them on the buses and
encourage them to become the bus users of the future. Many rural
areas in particular need additional bus services, and young
people using the buses would be a great incentive to the
establishment of new bus services in those areas.
(Lab)
My Lords, I do not normally agree with anything that the
Front-Bench spokesperson says—
The Deputy Speaker () (LD)
It is the turn of the Minister.
The Minister of State, Department for Transport ( of Richmond Hill) (Lab)
I thank the noble Lord, , and the noble Baroness, Lady
Randerson, for their comments on this subject. Despite the noble
Lord, , having just congratulated me
on my position, I find myself virtually wholly disagreeing with
what he said, save only one thing, which is that the quality,
frequency and reliability of bus services are very important to
all those who use the most popular form of public transport.
The noble Lord raised the issue of the £2 fare cap. As the noble
Baroness, Lady Randerson, observes, the money for it runs out in
December. The Government are looking urgently at this to
determine its future, and we will respond on it as soon as we
can.
The noble Lord talked about the TfL system, which of course I am
as familiar with as maybe he is, having administrated it for the
best part of 15 years. He said that the fares risk is borne by
TfL and questions the capacity of local authorities to deliver
that. His observations about the capacity of other places in
England to do this do not need to be theoretical, because the
Mayor of Manchester, a combined authority, has had bus
franchising in place for some time.
One of the features which distinguished it in London is being
replicated in Manchester: in the last six months alone, the first
tranche of franchising in Manchester has produced revenue growth
of 5%. It has enabled the introduction of more buses, the service
is more reliable, and a night bus service has been introduced.
Those are features which occur because of the comprehensive
network, its promise of stability, its consistent information,
ticketing and planning, a closer interaction with traffic
authorities to allow buses to progress more freely, and the
introduction of real-time information. Those are all features
that local authorities can deliver if they choose to go down the
franchising road.
The noble Lord questions the capacity of local authorities to put
in such a system. My department is building its capacity in order
to give assistance on the ground to local authorities that want
to proceed down this route.
On the full assessment of the impact of this policy, I have
already described the interim assessment from Manchester, which
is wholly good. Throughout England, in towns and cities and in
the countryside, there are huge variations in the quality, volume
and reliability of bus services. The Government's suite of
measures, of which the introduction of franchising is one for
those local authorities that wish to take advantage of it, will
stabilise things so that the quality, frequency and reliability
of the bus service is more certain. That will encourage people to
travel and give the bus service itself more passenger volume and
revenue.
The noble Baroness, Lady Randerson, supports local devolution,
and this Government strongly support that too. Franchising is a
measure which will be available to all local authorities. They
can choose what to do in their particular circumstances. She
refers to the end of temporary funding. We certainly have a
keenness to amalgamate funding streams; there are several, and it
would be easier for local authorities and bus companies to
understand one funding stream. We would like to give certainty on
multiyear funding, but that must be subject to the parlous state
of public finances that this Government have inherited. She is
right that giving certainty in this direction will improve the
quality, frequency and reliability of bus services in
Britain.
Lastly, the noble Baroness refers to young people. Greater local
authority control of bus services gives the opportunity for more
local authorities to give concessions to young people, where that
is justified. There are already concessions for young people, but
we agree that getting young people into the habit of public
transport usage is extremely important.
3.22pm
(Lab)
My Lords, I apologise for leaving the depot prematurely a few
moments ago.
I rarely agree with anything that the main Opposition
spokesperson on transport has to say, and I notice that he
glossed over the fact that hundreds of bus routes and thousands
of bus miles disappeared under the previous Government's
policies. However, he does have a point as far as the financing
of franchising is concerned. Does my noble friend accept from me,
the former chairman of a major bus operator, that franchising
outside our major cities in particular will be an expensive
business, and that if franchising is to succeed, as most of us on
these Benches would hope, it must be properly funded? What
discussions have been held between his department and His
Majesty's Treasury to ensure that proper funding is in place?
of Richmond Hill (Lab)
I thank my noble friend for his contribution. I should have said
in my previous remarks that this is all preliminary to a buses
Bill, which will be introduced to the House in due course and
cover a wider range of subjects.
This is offering a choice to local authorities. It gives them the
opportunity of franchising, if they believe that it is the right
thing to do. Of course, all funding is being considered in the
round as part of the spending review. I cannot share details
about the discussions with His Majesty's Treasury at this stage,
but, in the meantime, the department is building its capacity to
provide tangible, on-the-ground support to local transport
authorities that wish to take back public control of bus
services. We are also working with all stakeholders to determine
how the buses Bill will make franchising easier and cheaper to
deliver and further reduce the barriers to its introduction.
(Lab)
My Lords, I very much welcome my noble friend's Statement,
because it is about time that buses fulfilled their role of
providing local transport for so many people. I worry about where
they will get the money from and how many people will use them,
if they use them to start with. As the noble Baroness said, it is
important to get young people into the idea of using buses. How
young is young? They need to be school kids right up to people
starting their first job, who may well be in their 20s. If they
live a long way from an established bus route, they will not get
a job.
It is quite clear from what my noble friend said that all local
authorities will be invited to do this and to participate one way
or another, be it concession or franchise. But what happens if
they do not want to do it? How will the Government encourage
them? It is important to enable everyone who needs it to access
public transport.
I have one example that I ask my noble friend to look into,
although he may not be able to answer today. For those who live
in the Isles of Scilly who want to go between the islands, the
average fare in the winter is somewhere between £10 and £100—to
get to the doctor, to the chemist or to work. It seems to me that
what is good for city centres and the countryside in England
could also be useful to people who live on islands. It might
apply to the Isle of Wight as well, I do not know. I look forward
to my noble friend's comments.
of Richmond Hill (Lab)
I thank my noble friend for his contributions. What would happen
if local authorities did not want to pursue this course? The
existing and partnership arrangements for bus operations, which
have been in place locally for some time, would continue. It is a
fair observation that there is a huge variation in standards of
bus provision across Britain. If local authorities do not wish to
participate or to pursue franchising, they can continue to pursue
the arrangements that they currently have with their bus
operators.
I cannot, of course, comment on the costs of transport between
the islands of the Isles of Scilly or the minimal bus service on
St Mary's. However, as my noble friend knows, the provision in
Cornwall, which is a largely rural county, is very good. That is
an example of an arrangement that has been tailored to a rural
area. None of these new arrangements would prevent existing
arrangements from continuing.
The Lord
My Lords, I declare an interest: I got the bus on Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday and today, and shall be getting it tomorrow.
As I live in Greater Manchester, I have been a real beneficiary
of what the previous Government allowed for franchising in my
city and its surrounds. The buses have become more reliable: I
can now go to a bus stop and expect a bus to turn up within 10
minutes, not 40 minutes, which I sometimes had to wait for
before.
I have two questions. First, I am old enough to remember when
local authorities in Greater Manchester often had joint boards.
The wonderfully named Stalybridge, Hyde, Mossley and Dukinfield
joint board provided buses in parts of what is now Tameside.
(Lab)
Green buses.
The Lord
They were indeed green. I remember them very well. I wonder what
the possibilities are for rural areas that are not part of a
combined authority like Greater Manchester. Will local
authorities have the capacity to combine together to franchise
bus services jointly, rather than doing it by themselves?
Secondly, we made great progress in Greater Manchester; we got
the buses and the fantastic Metrolink tram system. It would help
to integrate the whole thing if we gained control of local rail
services at the same time. For many people, local rail, as well
as buses and trams, is necessary to make journeys. Could the
Minister give any indications of plans to allow the franchisement
of local rail services in places such as Greater Manchester?
of Richmond Hill (Lab)
I thank the right reverend Prelate for his comments. I
particularly note his support for the effects of the initial
tranches of franchising in Manchester, which have indeed
increased service and produced better reliability. He refers to
the very old organisation of public transport in Manchester. Many
of those magnificent vehicles are in the Manchester transport
museum at Queens Road.
These days, the increasing number of combined authorities are of
a good size to take advantage of this Government's franchising
proposition. It is, in effect, bringing together local
authorities of sufficient size to be able to take advantage of
the benefits of a network. I do not have an answer to whether
this will allow individual local authorities to join together,
but I am happy to write to the right reverend Prelate about
that.
The right reverent Prelate raised the subject of the integration
of rail services. We have already made a lot of progress with the
Mayor of Greater Manchester, and with the Mayor of the West
Midlands, in integrating rail services into the local transport
network in information and in ticketing. Although this is not the
subject of today's discussion, I have no doubt that there will be
some announcements on that. He is right to aspire to an
integrated local network that is modally agnostic and includes
rail and, in Manchester's case, metro and buses.
(CB)
My Lords, if we are going to use TfL and the London bus network
as the example for going around the country, the dread problem of
safety goes around again. Carrying on from the question I asked
the Minister earlier this week, it often seems that in
London—where, from memory, someone is killed by a bus every six
weeks—the bus companies investigate their own incidents, with the
DVSA checking for legalities. Who will be responsibility for
safety in these franchises, and will they have teeth?
of Richmond Hill (Lab)
One of the benefits of London's large system of bus franchising
is the work that Transport for London has done on the design and
safety of bus travel. The noble Lord has to remember that those
vehicles are on the road for 18, 20 or 24 hours a day, and they
form a major part of the mileage of vehicles in London, even
though their numbers are fairly small.
A significant amount of work has been done on the safety of
driving and drivers, and on the design of vehicles. I know that
has been shared with manufacturers and bus operators across the
country, and with organisations such as Transport for Greater
Manchester and the Urban Transport Group. I would expect more of
that to happen.
The safety of buses is considered by the Driver and Vehicle
Standards Authority, which is an executive arm of the Department
for Transport and has the power to investigate serious bus
accidents, which it does. It has the power to prosecute the
drivers and operators of those vehicles. None of these proposals
would alter its powers to continue to do so.
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