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Bus Franchising Consultation:- key milestone reached as leaflets land in letterboxes
A major consultation on the future of bus services in the Liverpool City Region has this week passed an important milestone, with more than 2500 people, businesses and other organisations having responded so far. Launched last month by Mayor Steve Rotheram, the 12-week consultation is giving people chance to have their say on proposals to bring the local bus network under greater public control. The news comes as households across the City region also begin to receive information leaflets through their doors. A special ‘Moving Buses Forward’ booklet – which explains the Combined Authority’s proposed bus franchising scheme – is being distributed to every home in Halton, Knowsley, Liverpool, Sefton, St Helens and Wirral. The consultation is open until 3 August 2023, with Liverpool City Region residents, businesses, trade unions and stakeholders being encouraged to take part – whether or not they or their employees or members are regular bus users. Mayor Rotheram and the Combined Authority voted unanimously to confirm franchising as the region’s preferred future model for running the bus network and services. The region is 1 of only 2 in the country to run a consultation on the future model for bus services. Currently, in the Liverpool City Region, private operators decide the routes, timetables, fares and standards. There is also limited coordination between private bus operators and other forms of public transport. Bus franchising would give the Combined Authority greater control over fares, routes and timetables, allowing the services to be operated in the interests of local bus users with private operators running them under a contract with and to the requirements of the Combined Authority. Reform of the region’s bus network is a key part of Mayor Rotheram’s wider ambition to build a London-style transport system that makes getting about faster, cheaper, cleaner, more reliable.
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