(27 Jul 2022, 6:32 pm)F114TML wrote Probably because Nexus seem to have a rule that everyone should have a bus stop (with a service) within 400m of their house (presumably just a radius and not by walking distance). If a bus stop loses its commercial service and it serves people who have no other alternative bus within 400m, that service gets subsidised (hence the 39B). As to why the evening services are only hourly - I'm going to guess that either they can't afford it, or none of the bidders proposed a more frequent service for a descent price.
That's fair enough to some degree. I still don't understand why for instance they fund for a bus to go through several side streets in Springwell for example when the main stops are probably within a reasaonable walking distance for pretty much all parts of the village. They have two high frequency services run through the village throughout the day that run to Wrekenton, Concord and the Galleries. I agree parts of Donwell need service coverage and I think Go North East should send the 84/5 to serve the bus stop near the shops instead. That shouldn't add too much time if any onto the journey.
(27 Jul 2022, 6:35 pm)Storx wrote It still doesn't really make much difference though. GNE at the same time have paid millions to their shareholders while every single tax payer has been finding bus services that the majority will never use whether that's the 23, 84 or 85 etc.
The 23 runs in local estates or TB14 which I believe it is now which otherwise wouldn't have a service at all.
The reason it's been cut is because they're funding the 25, 28, 29, 39B, 81, 82, 83, 67 and 69 instead pretty much.
That's fair enough, and GNE are far from innocent. I'm certainly sceptical of how they flood certain areas with services and give others few or next to nothing! They could certainly do more to make things fairer, no doubt!