Reversing the decline in passenger numbers
Reversing the decline in passenger numbers
(18 Aug 2021, 4:02 pm)omnicity4659 I think that public transport organisations need to consult with car drivers what would attract them out of their cars, rather than guess (in some cases, pretty badly) what they want. I couldn't care less if the bus is "posher than my car" or if it's "the green machine". I want to travel by the quickest and cheapest way possible.
In terms of cost, as an existing car driver, it's actually cheaper for me to use a Metro park and ride if travelling alone, or to drive into the city centre if I'm sharing the journey. I've broken down the costs of each mode of transport to show how poor value for money the bus is.
Metro park and ride
- drive to Northumberland Park | 20 minutes | £2.40 in diesel (round-trip)
- park, walk and wait for the Metro | average 5-10 minutes | £1.20 parking fee
- take the Metro to Haymarket | 17 minutes | £3.75 return with Pop PAYG
total journey time 42-47 minutes, total cost £7.35, two people (sharing cost of fuel and parking, add £3.75 Metro ticket) £5.55 per person
Arriva bus
- walk to bus stop and wait for X21 | 5 minutes
- take the X21 to Haymarket | 55 minutes | £7.50 return
total journey time 60 minutes, total cost £7.50, two people (sharing cost with duo ticket) £7.25 per person
Driving into the city centre (cheapest car park)
- drive to St James' MSCP | average 30-35 minutes | £3.64 in diesel (round-trip)
- find a parking space and pay for parking | 5 minutes | £0.80 per hour (£4.00 for 5 hours)
- walk to Haymarket | 10 minutes
total journey time 45-50 minutes, total cost £7.64, two people (sharing cost) £3.82 per person
Bus operators need to work on bringing their prices down, matching the specifications of cars, providing consistent levels of service and providing a similar journey time between major towns and cities, otherwise car drivers will not be interested. Instead, the one company actively marketing themselves, are focusing on claiming to be "better than ever", pushing anti-car messaging or promoting their green credentials - is this something that a car driver will actually care about?
(18 Aug 2021, 4:02 pm)omnicity4659 I think that public transport organisations need to consult with car drivers what would attract them out of their cars, rather than guess (in some cases, pretty badly) what they want. I couldn't care less if the bus is "posher than my car" or if it's "the green machine". I want to travel by the quickest and cheapest way possible.
In terms of cost, as an existing car driver, it's actually cheaper for me to use a Metro park and ride if travelling alone, or to drive into the city centre if I'm sharing the journey. I've broken down the costs of each mode of transport to show how poor value for money the bus is.
Metro park and ride
- drive to Northumberland Park | 20 minutes | £2.40 in diesel (round-trip)
- park, walk and wait for the Metro | average 5-10 minutes | £1.20 parking fee
- take the Metro to Haymarket | 17 minutes | £3.75 return with Pop PAYG
total journey time 42-47 minutes, total cost £7.35, two people (sharing cost of fuel and parking, add £3.75 Metro ticket) £5.55 per person
Arriva bus
- walk to bus stop and wait for X21 | 5 minutes
- take the X21 to Haymarket | 55 minutes | £7.50 return
total journey time 60 minutes, total cost £7.50, two people (sharing cost with duo ticket) £7.25 per person
Driving into the city centre (cheapest car park)
- drive to St James' MSCP | average 30-35 minutes | £3.64 in diesel (round-trip)
- find a parking space and pay for parking | 5 minutes | £0.80 per hour (£4.00 for 5 hours)
- walk to Haymarket | 10 minutes
total journey time 45-50 minutes, total cost £7.64, two people (sharing cost) £3.82 per person
Bus operators need to work on bringing their prices down, matching the specifications of cars, providing consistent levels of service and providing a similar journey time between major towns and cities, otherwise car drivers will not be interested. Instead, the one company actively marketing themselves, are focusing on claiming to be "better than ever", pushing anti-car messaging or promoting their green credentials - is this something that a car driver will actually care about?
To be fair, costings like this don't take into account wear and tear, decreasing value etc.
As we are now 19 years away from net zero emissions, I would happily see anti car measures across all counties not just in Newcastle city centre. People have had the easy, responsibility-free life for too long. Public transport is the only viable option, people can either use it, and accept a degree of responsibility , or carry on the way they are and find themselves in deep water come 2040.
To be fair, costings like this don't take into account wear and tear, decreasing value etc.
As we are now 19 years away from net zero emissions, I would happily see anti car measures across all counties not just in Newcastle city centre. People have had the easy, responsibility-free life for too long. Public transport is the only viable option, people can either use it, and accept a degree of responsibility , or carry on the way they are and find themselves in deep water come 2040.
(18 Aug 2021, 4:02 pm)omnicity4659 I think that public transport organisations need to consult with car drivers about what would attract them out of their cars, rather than guess (in some cases, pretty badly) what they want. I couldn't care less if the bus is "posher than my car" or if it's "the green machine". I want to travel by the quickest and cheapest way possible.This is exactly why they need to make a big push in encouraging people to use the bus before they get a car.
In terms of cost, as an existing car driver when travelling to Newcastle, it's actually cheaper for me to use a Metro park and ride if travelling alone, or to drive into the city centre if I'm sharing the journey. I've broken down the costs of each mode of transport to show how poor value for money the bus is.
Metro park and ride
- drive to Northumberland Park | 20 minutes | £2.40 in diesel (round-trip)
- park, walk and wait for the Metro | average 5-10 minutes | £1.20 parking fee
- take the Metro to Haymarket | 17 minutes | £3.75 return with Pop PAYG
total journey time 42-47 minutes, total cost £7.35, two people (sharing cost of fuel and parking, add £3.75 Metro ticket) £5.55 per person
Arriva bus
- walk to bus stop and wait for X21 | 5 minutes
- take the X21 to Haymarket | 55 minutes | £7.50 return
total journey time 60 minutes, total cost £7.50, two people (sharing cost with duo ticket) £7.25 per person
Driving into the city centre (cheapest car park)
- drive to St James' MSCP | average 30-35 minutes | £3.64 in diesel (round-trip)
- find a parking space and pay for parking | 5 minutes | £0.80 per hour (£4.00 for 5 hours)
- walk to Haymarket | 10 minutes
total journey time 45-50 minutes, total cost £7.64, two people (sharing cost) £3.82 per person
Bus operators need to work on bringing their prices down, matching the specifications of cars, providing consistent levels of service and providing a similar journey time between major towns and cities, otherwise car drivers will not be interested. Instead, the one company actively marketing themselves, are focusing on claiming to be "better than ever", pushing anti-car messaging or promoting their green credentials - is this something that a car driver will actually care about?
(18 Aug 2021, 4:02 pm)omnicity4659 I think that public transport organisations need to consult with car drivers about what would attract them out of their cars, rather than guess (in some cases, pretty badly) what they want. I couldn't care less if the bus is "posher than my car" or if it's "the green machine". I want to travel by the quickest and cheapest way possible.This is exactly why they need to make a big push in encouraging people to use the bus before they get a car.
In terms of cost, as an existing car driver when travelling to Newcastle, it's actually cheaper for me to use a Metro park and ride if travelling alone, or to drive into the city centre if I'm sharing the journey. I've broken down the costs of each mode of transport to show how poor value for money the bus is.
Metro park and ride
- drive to Northumberland Park | 20 minutes | £2.40 in diesel (round-trip)
- park, walk and wait for the Metro | average 5-10 minutes | £1.20 parking fee
- take the Metro to Haymarket | 17 minutes | £3.75 return with Pop PAYG
total journey time 42-47 minutes, total cost £7.35, two people (sharing cost of fuel and parking, add £3.75 Metro ticket) £5.55 per person
Arriva bus
- walk to bus stop and wait for X21 | 5 minutes
- take the X21 to Haymarket | 55 minutes | £7.50 return
total journey time 60 minutes, total cost £7.50, two people (sharing cost with duo ticket) £7.25 per person
Driving into the city centre (cheapest car park)
- drive to St James' MSCP | average 30-35 minutes | £3.64 in diesel (round-trip)
- find a parking space and pay for parking | 5 minutes | £0.80 per hour (£4.00 for 5 hours)
- walk to Haymarket | 10 minutes
total journey time 45-50 minutes, total cost £7.64, two people (sharing cost) £3.82 per person
Bus operators need to work on bringing their prices down, matching the specifications of cars, providing consistent levels of service and providing a similar journey time between major towns and cities, otherwise car drivers will not be interested. Instead, the one company actively marketing themselves, are focusing on claiming to be "better than ever", pushing anti-car messaging or promoting their green credentials - is this something that a car driver will actually care about?
(18 Aug 2021, 4:25 pm)omnicity4659 They're costs that come out of my bank account on the day rather than taking into account the overall costs of running a car - which in fairness still apply regardless of which mode of transport I pick for that rare daytime journey into Newcastle, rather than my usual car journeys that'll take 30 minutes in the car but 3 hours on a bus etc.Depends a great deal on how the regime sees fit to expand electric buses. Costs need to reflect investment as well, the majority of car drivers can't afford EVs, and no government is going to underwrite the bill for complete vehicle replacement.
Electric cars will become the norm, and e-scooters may be legalised for private use - both would change my habits. But if buses remain the same, then it'll still be the least favourable option.
(18 Aug 2021, 4:25 pm)omnicity4659 They're costs that come out of my bank account on the day rather than taking into account the overall costs of running a car - which in fairness still apply regardless of which mode of transport I pick for that rare daytime journey into Newcastle, rather than my usual car journeys that'll take 30 minutes in the car but 3 hours on a bus etc.Depends a great deal on how the regime sees fit to expand electric buses. Costs need to reflect investment as well, the majority of car drivers can't afford EVs, and no government is going to underwrite the bill for complete vehicle replacement.
Electric cars will become the norm, and e-scooters may be legalised for private use - both would change my habits. But if buses remain the same, then it'll still be the least favourable option.
(18 Aug 2021, 4:02 pm)omnicity4659 I think that public transport organisations need to consult with car drivers about what would attract them out of their cars, rather than guess (in some cases, pretty badly) what they want. I couldn't care less if the bus is "posher than my car" or if it's "the green machine". I want to travel by the quickest and cheapest way possible.
(18 Aug 2021, 4:02 pm)omnicity4659 I think that public transport organisations need to consult with car drivers about what would attract them out of their cars, rather than guess (in some cases, pretty badly) what they want. I couldn't care less if the bus is "posher than my car" or if it's "the green machine". I want to travel by the quickest and cheapest way possible.
(18 Aug 2021, 4:02 pm)omnicity4659 Metro park and ride
- drive to Northumberland Park | 20 minutes | £2.40 in diesel (round-trip)
- park, walk and wait for the Metro | average 5-10 minutes | £1.20 parking fee
- take the Metro to Haymarket | 17 minutes | £3.75 return with Pop PAYG
total journey time 42-47 minutes, total cost £7.35, two people (sharing cost of fuel and parking, add £3.75 Metro ticket) £5.55 per person
Arriva bus
- walk to bus stop and wait for X21 | 5 minutes
- take the X21 to Haymarket | 55 minutes | £7.50 return
total journey time 60 minutes, total cost £7.50, two people (sharing cost with duo ticket) £7.25 per person
Driving into the city centre (cheapest car park)
- drive to St James' MSCP | average 30-35 minutes | £3.64 in diesel (round-trip)
- find a parking space and pay for parking | 5 minutes | £0.80 per hour (£4.00 for 5 hours)
- walk to Haymarket | 10 minutes
total journey time 45-50 minutes, total cost £7.64, two people (sharing cost) £3.82 per person
(18 Aug 2021, 4:02 pm)omnicity4659 Metro park and ride
- drive to Northumberland Park | 20 minutes | £2.40 in diesel (round-trip)
- park, walk and wait for the Metro | average 5-10 minutes | £1.20 parking fee
- take the Metro to Haymarket | 17 minutes | £3.75 return with Pop PAYG
total journey time 42-47 minutes, total cost £7.35, two people (sharing cost of fuel and parking, add £3.75 Metro ticket) £5.55 per person
Arriva bus
- walk to bus stop and wait for X21 | 5 minutes
- take the X21 to Haymarket | 55 minutes | £7.50 return
total journey time 60 minutes, total cost £7.50, two people (sharing cost with duo ticket) £7.25 per person
Driving into the city centre (cheapest car park)
- drive to St James' MSCP | average 30-35 minutes | £3.64 in diesel (round-trip)
- find a parking space and pay for parking | 5 minutes | £0.80 per hour (£4.00 for 5 hours)
- walk to Haymarket | 10 minutes
total journey time 45-50 minutes, total cost £7.64, two people (sharing cost) £3.82 per person
Reasons I prefer driving my car than using the bus....
1. Cost - While the price of using the bus is higher per journey than the equivilant cost in diesel. Factoring in tax, insurance and maintenance makes the car considerably more expensive. But because I'd still need to keep the car for occasions buses don't run or the car is generally more approprate such as long trips or Sunday evenings. I'd still have to pay for tax, insurance and maintanence anyway, so by that stage, I can't afford bus fares on top of those costs. Particularly as I find myself on the wrong side of the Durham District / Peterlee District ticket border. This is made even less clear as the "East Durham All Zones" doesnt seem to cover the entire 3 East Durham zones as I'd assume it would.
2. Reliability - I appreciate there's a driver shortage and timetables have been adjusted to suit. But the operators are still missing trips out and I'm not willing to spent half a hour at the stop to see if the next bus is going to arrive or not. I also recall snowy winters when the buses ran whenever they ran - if at all! So there clearly isn't the local authority infrastucture to deal with cold snaps.
3. Seating - Arriva 24 is the only service through my village which invariably seems to be ran by their "Saphirre" fleet, with rock hard leather seats. Bus seating overall has became less comfortable generally since the l;ate 90's but those leather ones really are something else. My car also has leather seats - but they're comfortable, heated and have lumbar support and I happily drove non stop for 6 hour to the South West the other month and was absolutely fine. 30 minutes on one of those Shitirre buses and I've a numb bum and the back pain is unreal.
4. Windows - I've no specific issue regarding window adverts. But they always seem to put them at the bottom of the window, smack in the middle of my eye line when I'm sat down. And one of the major advantages of catching the bus is being able to look at the scenery instead of watching the road. I hate getting on a but and having to try and hunt for a seat where I can actually see through the window. In winter, this is impossible anyway as the windows are always rotten.
5. Rattles - This seems to be Wrightbus specific. The Scania's and ADL's I've been on recently have been okay. My car (like me) is getting on a bit and comes with the odd rattle here and there. But them Wright's!
Once we've got passed those little issues, I'll happily use the bus more.
(17 Aug 2021, 3:48 pm)MurdnunoC Transport for the North boss calls for debate on raising cost of driving
Obviously, as a car user, I should declare an interest in opposing such a measure, but I don't think the solution as to how you might encourage people to use public transport lies in pricing motorists off the road in an attempt to force them to switch. For me, the choice should remain with the user otherwise cars are destined to become the preserve of the rich and powerful. Obviously there is a ecological argument to be had against motor-vehicles powered by fossil fuels but what happens if (or when) the majority of motor-vehicles are powered by electricity or other means. Is it fair to penalise motorists if that ever becomes the case?
Thoughts?
(17 Aug 2021, 3:48 pm)MurdnunoC Transport for the North boss calls for debate on raising cost of driving
Obviously, as a car user, I should declare an interest in opposing such a measure, but I don't think the solution as to how you might encourage people to use public transport lies in pricing motorists off the road in an attempt to force them to switch. For me, the choice should remain with the user otherwise cars are destined to become the preserve of the rich and powerful. Obviously there is a ecological argument to be had against motor-vehicles powered by fossil fuels but what happens if (or when) the majority of motor-vehicles are powered by electricity or other means. Is it fair to penalise motorists if that ever becomes the case?
Thoughts?
(19 Aug 2021, 12:32 pm)Chris 1 I'm aware it appears I'm in the minority on this one, but the principle of something like road charging I think I could get behind. Obviously depending on the devil in the detail. If not road charging, then something. Car use is only going continue going one way unless somthing changes, leather seats and wifi alone aren't going to change peoples habits. So long as the stick of road charging is more than compensated for by the carrot of better public transport.
(19 Aug 2021, 12:32 pm)Chris 1 I'm aware it appears I'm in the minority on this one, but the principle of something like road charging I think I could get behind. Obviously depending on the devil in the detail. If not road charging, then something. Car use is only going continue going one way unless somthing changes, leather seats and wifi alone aren't going to change peoples habits. So long as the stick of road charging is more than compensated for by the carrot of better public transport.
(19 Aug 2021, 2:33 pm)MurdnunoC But herein lies a major issue which is never really fully addressed. What are we opposing? Pollution? Congestion? Single-occupancy car-use? Everything gets rolled into one argument when, to me at least, it is not that simplistic. For example, reducing or eliminating pollution is an absolute must and, hopefully, new and emerging vehicle types will do this. But once you do that, one of the main drivers for reducing congestion - the environmental impact - is also reduced.
(19 Aug 2021, 2:33 pm)MurdnunoC But herein lies a major issue which is never really fully addressed. What are we opposing? Pollution? Congestion? Single-occupancy car-use? Everything gets rolled into one argument when, to me at least, it is not that simplistic. For example, reducing or eliminating pollution is an absolute must and, hopefully, new and emerging vehicle types will do this. But once you do that, one of the main drivers for reducing congestion - the environmental impact - is also reduced.
Personally I still think DRT will be the future but ran by someone like Uber. You go on an app, and choose where you want to travel and it gives a prediction on how long it will take to travel there by a bus being routed via stops. I know the small dabbles in it so far haven't done so well but I still think there's potential but more for a taxi replacement than anything.
They'd work very well at night imo at places like factories or pub kicking out time. If there's 100 workers going to certain places all in a similar area then it would be easy to route it around to serve multiple areas. Similar with pubs out of Newcastle when you'll see a flow of taxis all heading to the same places; Jesmond, Heaton in particular especially if the pricing was right.
Like for example around where I live near Blyth you might have 3 people wanting to go to Sainbury's at Monkseaton, 2 to Tynemouth Morrison's, 2 people wanting to go to Silverlink and 5 going to Newcastle. It'd be easy to have a bus that picks people for each of them then go non-stop from Silverlink to town while moving people from Sainburys between the two at the same time. Even if it diverted by an estate around Monkseaton.
It'd need work but imo it's the realistic future and fixes the problem we keep having about buses going to the 'wrong' places.
One of the core reasons for high fares on bus is the inadequate DfT reimbursement model for the ENCTS scheme. It is no longer realistic.
Given ENCTS accounts for anywhere between 40-50% of usage in some locations, the regular fare payer is probably forced to help balance the books, which makes your regular user fares, higher than they really should be.
Until the government sort that out, slashing fares is always a risk operators aren't willing to take. You cannot sustain losses for very long (even if there is an appetite to try to begin with).
(19 Aug 2021, 9:18 pm)Storx Personally I still think DRT will be the future but ran by someone like Uber. You go on an app, and choose where you want to travel and it gives a prediction on how long it will take to travel there by a bus being routed via stops. I know the small dabbles in it so far haven't done so well but I still think there's potential but more for a taxi replacement than anything.
They'd work very well at night imo at places like factories or pub kicking out time. If there's 100 workers going to certain places all in a similar area then it would be easy to route it around to serve multiple areas. Similar with pubs out of Newcastle when you'll see a flow of taxis all heading to the same places; Jesmond, Heaton in particular especially if the pricing was right.
Like for example around where I live near Blyth you might have 3 people wanting to go to Sainbury's at Monkseaton, 2 to Tynemouth Morrison's, 2 people wanting to go to Silverlink and 5 going to Newcastle. It'd be easy to have a bus that picks people for each of them then go non-stop from Silverlink to town while moving people from Sainburys between the two at the same time. Even if it diverted by an estate around Monkseaton.
It'd need work but imo it's the realistic future and fixes the problem we keep having about buses going to the 'wrong' places.
(19 Aug 2021, 9:18 pm)Storx Personally I still think DRT will be the future but ran by someone like Uber. You go on an app, and choose where you want to travel and it gives a prediction on how long it will take to travel there by a bus being routed via stops. I know the small dabbles in it so far haven't done so well but I still think there's potential but more for a taxi replacement than anything.
They'd work very well at night imo at places like factories or pub kicking out time. If there's 100 workers going to certain places all in a similar area then it would be easy to route it around to serve multiple areas. Similar with pubs out of Newcastle when you'll see a flow of taxis all heading to the same places; Jesmond, Heaton in particular especially if the pricing was right.
Like for example around where I live near Blyth you might have 3 people wanting to go to Sainbury's at Monkseaton, 2 to Tynemouth Morrison's, 2 people wanting to go to Silverlink and 5 going to Newcastle. It'd be easy to have a bus that picks people for each of them then go non-stop from Silverlink to town while moving people from Sainburys between the two at the same time. Even if it diverted by an estate around Monkseaton.
It'd need work but imo it's the realistic future and fixes the problem we keep having about buses going to the 'wrong' places.
(20 Aug 2021, 11:15 am)Chris 1 I can't quite work out in my own mind how DRT would ever work. In its current guise, at least. Any 'transport' system needs go cover its costs and pay for itself to be sustainable. DRT isn't. In the various trials that have happened so far, the subsidy per passenger is huge. To make it viable, you surely need bigger and fuller vehicles. But the more people that use it, the longer the wait and the worse the passenger experience.
However, it's 'different' to the status quo so good to see operators give it a go, even if nobody has so far been able to crack it.
(20 Aug 2021, 11:15 am)Chris 1 I can't quite work out in my own mind how DRT would ever work. In its current guise, at least. Any 'transport' system needs go cover its costs and pay for itself to be sustainable. DRT isn't. In the various trials that have happened so far, the subsidy per passenger is huge. To make it viable, you surely need bigger and fuller vehicles. But the more people that use it, the longer the wait and the worse the passenger experience.
However, it's 'different' to the status quo so good to see operators give it a go, even if nobody has so far been able to crack it.
(20 Aug 2021, 4:28 am)RobinHood One of the core reasons for high fares on bus is the inadequate DfT reimbursement model for the ENCTS scheme. It is no longer realistic.
Given ENCTS accounts for anywhere between 40-50% of usage in some locations, the regular fare payer is probably forced to help balance the books, which makes your regular user fares, higher than they really should be.
Until the government sort that out, slashing fares is always a risk operators aren't willing to take. You cannot sustain losses for very long (even if there is an appetite to try to begin with).
(20 Aug 2021, 4:28 am)RobinHood One of the core reasons for high fares on bus is the inadequate DfT reimbursement model for the ENCTS scheme. It is no longer realistic.
Given ENCTS accounts for anywhere between 40-50% of usage in some locations, the regular fare payer is probably forced to help balance the books, which makes your regular user fares, higher than they really should be.
Until the government sort that out, slashing fares is always a risk operators aren't willing to take. You cannot sustain losses for very long (even if there is an appetite to try to begin with).
(20 Aug 2021, 11:29 am)streetdeckfan How is DRT any different from what the likes of Uber do in the US with their 'ride sharing' option?
(20 Aug 2021, 11:29 am)streetdeckfan How is DRT any different from what the likes of Uber do in the US with their 'ride sharing' option?
(20 Aug 2021, 12:57 pm)Chris 1 Not quite sure how that works over there, so can't comment?
However, based on my own admittedly limited experience of Uber over here, I paid for my Uber journey in full myself, i.e. it wasn't subsidised. And, an Uber driver over here tends to be an owner driver. Neither of which apply to DRT in its current form.
(20 Aug 2021, 12:57 pm)Chris 1 Not quite sure how that works over there, so can't comment?
However, based on my own admittedly limited experience of Uber over here, I paid for my Uber journey in full myself, i.e. it wasn't subsidised. And, an Uber driver over here tends to be an owner driver. Neither of which apply to DRT in its current form.
(20 Aug 2021, 1:27 pm)streetdeckfan As far as I'm aware they basically have an option to share the ride with other passengers, reducing the cost.
So say I was in Newcastle and wanted to travel to the Metrocentre, and there was another person in Gateshead wanting to go to Metrocentre, it would go via Gateshead and pick them up, and we'd both get a reduced fare.
Ah I see.
In that scenario, you and a.n. other are still paying the full fare. Be it half each, split 3 ways or whatever. A similar journey with DRT, what each passenger pays is less than it costs to operate. So each passenger journey is subsidised. It's the economics that prevent DRT from working, crack that and the potential is huge.
(20 Aug 2021, 1:27 pm)streetdeckfan As far as I'm aware they basically have an option to share the ride with other passengers, reducing the cost.
So say I was in Newcastle and wanted to travel to the Metrocentre, and there was another person in Gateshead wanting to go to Metrocentre, it would go via Gateshead and pick them up, and we'd both get a reduced fare.
(20 Aug 2021, 1:43 pm)Chris 1 Ah I see.
In that scenario, you and a.n. other are still paying the full fare. Be it half each, split 3 ways or whatever. A similar journey with DRT, what each passenger pays is less than it costs to operate. So each passenger journey is subsidised. It's the economics that prevent DRT from working, crack that and the potential is huge.
Apologies for drifting off topic, but the ride sharing with a stranger comment sparked a memory - a number of years since, I remember seeing a feature on Look North. Taxi drivers from Gateshead, were wanting to pick up fares to get them back to Gateshead. As in, they take a fare from Gateshead to say Crawcrook, and were wanting to pick up on the streets (or bus stops) in Crawcrook on their way back so they weren't running all the way back to Gateshead empty. I can't remember what happened with it, though I seem to recall Go North East weren't big fans of the idea!
(20 Aug 2021, 1:43 pm)Chris 1 Ah I see.
In that scenario, you and a.n. other are still paying the full fare. Be it half each, split 3 ways or whatever. A similar journey with DRT, what each passenger pays is less than it costs to operate. So each passenger journey is subsidised. It's the economics that prevent DRT from working, crack that and the potential is huge.
Apologies for drifting off topic, but the ride sharing with a stranger comment sparked a memory - a number of years since, I remember seeing a feature on Look North. Taxi drivers from Gateshead, were wanting to pick up fares to get them back to Gateshead. As in, they take a fare from Gateshead to say Crawcrook, and were wanting to pick up on the streets (or bus stops) in Crawcrook on their way back so they weren't running all the way back to Gateshead empty. I can't remember what happened with it, though I seem to recall Go North East weren't big fans of the idea!
(20 Aug 2021, 11:15 am)Chris 1 I can't quite work out in my own mind how DRT would ever work. In its current guise, at least. Any 'transport' system needs go cover its costs and pay for itself to be sustainable. DRT isn't. In the various trials that have happened so far, the subsidy per passenger is huge. To make it viable, you surely need bigger and fuller vehicles. But the more people that use it, the longer the wait and the worse the passenger experience.
However, it's 'different' to the status quo so good to see operators give it a go, even if nobody has so far been able to crack it.
(20 Aug 2021, 11:15 am)Chris 1 I can't quite work out in my own mind how DRT would ever work. In its current guise, at least. Any 'transport' system needs go cover its costs and pay for itself to be sustainable. DRT isn't. In the various trials that have happened so far, the subsidy per passenger is huge. To make it viable, you surely need bigger and fuller vehicles. But the more people that use it, the longer the wait and the worse the passenger experience.
However, it's 'different' to the status quo so good to see operators give it a go, even if nobody has so far been able to crack it.