Friends of the Earth identifies “silent war” on bus users
Bus services outside of London have seen a dramatic decline over the past 15 years, with provision plummeting by more than 60% in 80 local authority areas, new research shows.
Researchers from the University of Leeds, on behalf of Friends of the Earth, analysed every bus timetable in every neighbourhood across England and Wales since 2008 for the local environmental data project.
Key findings include:
On average, across England and Wales, urban bus services have dropped by 48% and rural buses by 52% since 2008.
Some regions have fared worse than others, with services down 60% in the East Midlands, 57% in Wales and 52% in the North East.
The local authority areas of Hart, Fenland and Broxtowe have all seen a staggering decline in services of more than 80%.
A new interactive map shows the fall in services at constituency level and a breakdown of the data by local authority area and region is available here .
The data shows the constituencies that have fared worse since 2010 are North East Hampshire, which has seen an 82% fall in services, Bridgwater in Somerset (81%), Staffordshire Moorland (78%) and Stoke-on-Trent North (78%). Of the 100 constituencies with the greatest decline in buses, 82 are Conservative, 15 are Labour, two are held by the Liberal Democrats and one is Plaid Cymru.
Friends of the Earth points out that good quality, regular bus services are essential for the 22% of households that don’t have access to a car, which disproportionately affects people living on low incomes.
The research finds that evening and night time services are particularly poor outside of London, which impacts shift workers without cars and those who want to travel for social or cultural reasons.
While bus services in London have remained at similar levels over the past 15 years, the analysis highlights a stark contrast with urban areas outside the capital which have an average of 14 buses per hour, compared to up to 120 in parts of London.
Ahead of the next General Election, Friends of the Earth is calling on all political parties to include a manifesto pledge for a ‘public transport renaissance’ and for the next government to commit to return bus services to 2010 levels within five years.
Mike Childs, head of science, policy and research at Friends of the Earth, said, “There has been a silent war on bus users for over a decade. This is not only disproportionately impacting those living on low incomes, people of colour and disabled people who are less likely to own a car, but also people who have had to give up their car as they’ve got older or due to poor health.
“A bus renaissance is essential both for the millions of people who do not own a car in the UK and as part of a fair, green transition to a zero-carbon economy.
“To reduce pollution and cut emissions, we need the government to invest in our crumbling public transport system to make it far easier for people to use their car less and switch to greener ways to travel like buses, trains and cycling.”