Concerns Over Changes To Prestonbus Bus Services

Preston Bus Station

I am troubled, distressed and angered by the proposed and possibly already set in stone changes intended for Preston Bus services 6, 23, 35, and 100.  I will be particularly affected by changes to the later bus timetable disruptions on the 35 which runs by my home just off Tanterton Road. (PR2 7EN). The changes are highlighted here. https://www.prestonbus.co.uk/news/routes-6-23-35-100-proposed-timetable-changes/

Routes 6, 23, 35, 100 are affected and my most frequently used service is the 35.  

A Prestonbus Bus

The curtailing of many late services, especially on Sundays and bank holidays will have a very bad effect on me. It will also hit hard on pubs, clubs and restaurants in the city centre as customers and staff may need to leave well before the ‘last orders’ calls to catch the last buses departing much earlier than that. The drain on the hospitality business, itself already struggling, will be enormous.   As someone who uses the services often. The late buses are invaluable, and not just to me. 

Preston Bus Station

The need for changes is being blamed on there being too few passengers using the services.  This is alas not entirely true. The fact is that even when running, the timetables on these services (and others operated by Preston Bus) are utterly unreliable.  Services are frequently late and in some cases simply don’t show up at all.   Worse, if travelling from the bus station itself, passengers find that after 10pm the station is closed and locked and we are expected to wait for our buses on the coach area, unclear exactly where our buses will come in (the 35 still comes in on the later sections of the bus station itself and is then only approachable at short notice by walking outside the station, which is dangerous, and many passengers miss the ever moved around buses for not being given clear information on where exactly the bus will come in and where best to wait for it.  Such practices deter potential passengers from catching the later buses. It often even deters passengers from going out at all as they don’t expect to benefit from a late stay out.  If buses are still running at all the bus station should be fully open and operational. Many of our homeless people make use of the inadequate seating provided in the station for overnight sleeping and I have no objection to this but they are now shut out by an insensitive greedy cost cutting measure.

That the 23 is affected hits me on occasions I have had to return from the hospital (located on that route) late on,  with a need to switch from the 23 to the 35 on route – affecting an NHS hospital serving service in this way is not in anyone’s interest. It forces potential patients, staff and potential bus passengers to have to get lifts, taxis or hospital transport (at cost to the already struggling NHS) to compensate for your abject failure to run the buses sensibly and properly in the interests of the passenger rather than the interests of your shareholders.

That the 100 timetable is affected too adds to the woes of the passengers on the other services impacted by the greed behind these cutbacks.  The 100 serves the Odeon cinema where the evening film screenings are likely to now finish sometimes too late  for passengers to expect a bus ride back to the city centre (or out to Larches), as some of those times might be the ones where your buses are now withdrawn from service.  The passengers, like myself, hoping to get the 100 to the bus station and then switch to the 35 or other services are likely to be doubly hit especially on Sundays and bank holidays (days when lack of need to get up for work the next day means going out and spending more time and money in the city).

The cutbacks are being excused due to empty seats on many services, punishing the passengers travelling rather than giving any incentive to those staying away to come back.  The buses do not run to make money for your shareholders but as a vital service allowing the people of Preston to get round their city safely and economically, whether they are on a packed bus or have one virtually to themselves.  Service improvements are the way to make more money – not withdrawing unproductive services to punish passengers further.

The buses are clearly cheaper than taxis, serve the environment better than cars in their potential to carry more passengers and use less carbon footprint fuel,  and they help keep other businesses, especially in hospitality, operating.

I am partly disabled following bowel cancer surgery, so prolonged waiting and pursuit of public transport, especially on cold wet nights is difficult and even dangerous.

To add insult to the inconvenience already generated Prestonbus are invited people like myself to send information to a public consultation page and give an e-mail address for it; care@rotala.co.uk (now replaced with a working e-mail address care@rotala.co.uk customer.care@rotala.co.uk) but messages sent for several weeks to this e-mail address (and not just by me as others are online referring to the situation) bounced right back.  We were effectively invited to send heartfelt serious grievances to nowhere.  Suetonius said Caligula was criticised for executing Romans for not paying tax he hadn’t told them needed paying, so he had tax notices  stuck on the roofs of the people’s houses knowing few would see them, but able to say they were posted.  #Prestonbus has the same mentality.

This really needs addressing and fixing properly and urgently.  To cap it all, Prestonbus are now raising their fares, charging more just as they offer less at the same time. 

Photos taken by me.

Arthur Chappell

Day Out Review – Bus To The Pub.

On Saturday 13th April 2024, I was among many passengers participating in the Merseyside Transport Trust’s Lancashire Beer And Buses day excursion, with vintage buses circling a route taking in 22 pubs, (including starting and finishing points for feeder services). I was able to get to try 11 ales in 9 of them. (I drank halves to maximize the different opportunities to hand).

Bus used during the excursion.

There were three routes, of which I completed on and a sizable portion of a second.  I got photos of several of the others. 

Base camp and starting/finishing point – The Guild Ale House Bar, Preston.

My chosen point of departure was The Guild Ale House, in Preston City Centre, a firm favourite with CAMRA and a superb live entertainment venue where I often get involved with open mic events, being a performance poet.

Event programme

Here I got my first ale, and the programme of events, transport routes and timetables.  Sales of the programme raised to help restore more vintage transport for museums and for events like this.

The first, plus the later buses used for the pub circuit were lovely and way more comfortable than current Preston Bus and Stagecoach stock. The passengers were all in great spirits (no pun intended) and there was a sense of good old fashioned charabanc in the air all day.  There was never any sign of trouble. 

First pub stop for me.

After a few other pick ups, our first potential alighting point was Tarlatan Village with three pubs close to one another to choose from. I went for The Cock And Bottle where staff were very welcoming and the décor delightfully eclectic. 

It was a little confusing at first working out where the bus would stop to collect me and others for the next phase of the journey.  I headed on to the Rufford village’s Hesketh Arms, which like other village bars on the route(s) was too isolated to head for on conventional public transport or as part of my pub sign studies. The pub had the finest sign I saw all day, a colourful heraldic presentation, though it looked like its frame was splitting.

Best pub sign of the day. The Hesketh Arms – Rufford.

As well as drinking in the pubs I was clocking up their histories and inspecting/photographing the inn signs for possible use in my future books on the subject. My first such study is already out,  Watch The Signs! Watch The Signs! (available through Shoreline Of Infinity https://www.shorelineofinfinity.com/product/watch-the-signs-watch-the-signs/  or directly from myself). Book two (independent of the first one) comes out on July 15th 2024 and hopefully  some of the signs captured on walks like the one described here will make it into future volumes.

The pub that nearly forgot it does sell real ale – The Bull And Dog, Burscough

From Rufford it was onto Burscough, the town with biggest concentration of signs in one area. Buses from all three routes converged on the Hop Vine which became a central hub for all the optional directions I could take. After capturing photos round the town centre and canal wharf area (which hosts several bars and diners)  I started by going out to the far end of Burscough, to the Bull And Dog.  At first I thought they had no real ales on, but when I asked the barman apologized for not putting the promotional clip on the one offered, and hurriedly amended that, producing another fine ale in a bar with a huge beer garden.

Canal View – Burcough

As well as pubs I captured images of other interesting sights like: A, The Canals

B/. Street art like this swan in Burscough.

Street Art Swan, Burscough

From there I went out to the two Scarisbrick bars, starting with The Kicking Donkey.  If not for the bus warden who ushered passengers on and off, I might well have missed this delightful pub entirely. Lacking signage, it is set back from the main road and hidden by hedgerows, approachable through a wooden gate. The weather was warming so much here that many of us sat outside in the beer garden. Our trip coincided with the Grand National Horse Race and this pub served a beer called National Hero which would have been cruel not to indulge in. (worth it too).

Beer clip for National Hero, on Grand National Day.

A few minutes ride up the road we came to Heaton’s Bridge, still is Scarisbrick,  with some eccentric artwork on display, fish swimming in a tank and a specially blended in house ale commemorating a 1970’s TV show, On The Buses.  This was another must to try seeing as we were indeed very much travelling ‘on the buses’. 

On The Buses beer clip

With time pressing on, I swung back round on the buses going widdershins and re-entered Burscough, with time to call in three more bars in close proximity to one another. The first was The Bridge, which was a big sports bar by the railway station.  The Grand National itself was on live on the TV’s so many punters were engaged in that which made getting served easy.

Over now to the canal-side Thirsty Duck (previously called The Blue Mallard), an excellent tap house with a great range of ales, though no true pub sign.  The bar was quite crowded so I went out to the beer garden with my first ale only to find the climate changing severely and a sudden gust of wind swept my barely sipped beer glass to the floor before my eyes. 

Gorgeous tapestry in The Thirsty Duck, Burscough

I went in to reorder and spotted a pump promoting Rivington’s Green Light ale, a chocolate mint porter. I decided to switch to that and stay indoors.  A sip of the beer told me it was not only delicious but that its thick syrupy texture screamed strength. I walked to bar to check what I should have read on the beer clip before ordering. The Green Light was 10.2% in strength. I felt relived to have only ordered a half.

My penultimate port of call was the hub bar itself, the Hop Vine which was extremely crammed, largely as many passengers had the same idea as I did and all the last buses would be departing from close proximity to the pub just over thirty minutes onwards.  I purposely ordered the lightest ale I could see, at less than 4%, after my 10.2% number at the previous pub.

Bus used during the excursion.

The return ride went well and everyone was cheering and tipping the bus crew who had worked incredibly hard to look after us and get us safely from bar to bar with great efficiency.  We dropped various passengers off at points along the route back to our starting pub, The Guild Ale House where I enjoyed my final ale of the day and headed for an ordinary bus home to my flat from the bus station a few minutes walk from the pub.

Thank you so much to the staff of the Guild Ale House, the passengers who I travelled with, the drivers and bus monitors, the staff and patrons of all the bars frequented and I can already not wait for next year’s trip.  Awesome stuff.

All Photos taken by me.

Arthur Chappell