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£2 bus fare cap to be extended and bus services protected with new funding
MILLIONS of passengers across England will benefit from £155 million in Government support to cap bus fares at £2, maintain services and ensure people can travel affordably. The Transport Secretary has confirmed £80 million from:- 1 April to 30 June 2023, to protect vital bus services people rely on for:- work, education, medical appointments, and shopping. The Government has also announced plans to provide up to £75 million so that bus operators can continue to cap single bus fares outside of London at £2 until the end of June 2023, saving passengers money and encouraging more people back on the bus. With the average single local bus ticket costing £2.80, passengers can save almost a 3rd of the ticket price. Bus operators which are continuing the £2 fare cap scheme will be confirmed in due course. During the pandemic, bus usage dropped as low as 10% of pre-pandemic levels, and the Government has provided unprecedented financial support totaling more than £2 billion since March 2020. With bus patronage still at around 85-90% of pre-Covid levels, there are a number of ongoing challenges for bus operators. The Government is working closely with the sector on the challenges they face with changing travel patterns since the pandemic and will continue to work on delivering the National Bus Strategy. The Government’s existing £60 million investment to cap single bus fares has already shown early signs of increased bus use, with an independent survey of 1,000 people from passenger watchdog Transport Focus showing 7% of people saying they are using the bus more. During these difficult economic times, these trends already indicate that the Government’s support to cap fares is a welcome intervention, helping families, commuters, and all passengers to ease with the cost of living. The recovery grant support comes in addition to Government investment of £3 billion in bus services by 2025, including over £1 billion to improve fares, services, and infrastructure. In 2021, the Government published the National Bus Strategy and asked all English Local Transport Authorities outside London to publish their Bus Service Improvement Plans (BSIPs) setting out local visions for the step-change in bus services that is needed, driven by what passengers and would-be passengers want. Since then, over £1 billion has been awarded to 34 counties, City Regions, and unitary authorities to deliver service improvements, bus priority, and ambitious fares initiatives. In addition, £5.7 billion investment has been provided to eight mayoral combined authorities in England to support integrated, cross-modal transport networks over the next 5 years through the City Region Sustainable Transport Settlement(CRSTS), including supporting bus infrastructure. Commenting on the extension of Government’s extension of the £2 fare scheme as well £85 million to run services until the end of June, Cllr David Renard, Transport spokesperson for the Local Government Association said:- "The LGA has been calling on the Government to urgently step in to ensure thousands of vital bus routes in April are not lost and so we are pleased that both the £2 scheme and the operator grant has been extended. Buses act as a lifeline for so many people in our local communities. They are one of the keys to getting people out of their cars to save money, tackle congestion, and improve poor air quality. However, our bus services cannot survive on a hand-to-mouth existence. The Government should use the time this funding buys to work with councils and operators to develop a long-term, reformed bus funding model with significant new money. Only this will help the delivery of the Government’s ambitious National Bus Strategy that councils are fully committed to.”
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