Monday 6 January 2020

Government Announces Open Data Plans for Buses

Information on bus timetables, fares and "real-time" location of buses should soon be easier to find electronically according to the Department for Transport (DfT)
In what is described as a "pioneering" and "ground breaking" project, information from bus operators will be collated, standardised and made available to passengers - at least those with access to the internet. 
New Government Regulations will require bus operators to provide data on bus times, routes, fares and real-time bus locations in a standardised format to allow third-party developers to add the information to existing apps or develop new products. Information on routes and timetables will be available early in 2020 with fares and vehicle locations following next year.
Not all of this is new. Locally Stagecoach, like many operators nationally, provides on-line timetables and fares information via its website and app. Users of Apple iPhones can also track the location of their Stagecoach bus in real time on a map, although this facility isn't available on the company's website or to users of other makes of 'phone.  
Other large bus operators, such as First, Arriva and Go-Ahead provide similar services although, of course, each operator only provides information on its own buses. This doesn't matter too much in areas such as Lancaster, where Stagecoach run the majority of services, but doesn't make life easy for passengers in places such as Manchester or Liverpool, where an intending passenger might have to look-up a number of different apps or websites to find the information they need.  Even in Lancaster this can be an issue as Stagecoach doesn't provide information on Kirkby Lonsdale Coach Hire bus services or vice-versa.  
You might think it strange that such an obviously useful tool for bus passengers has not been developed independently by bus operators working together in the interests of their customers, but the bus industry is not renowned for its ability to sell its own services, with fares in particular being seen by many parts of the industry as a "state-secret" only to be divulged to passengers when they have committed themselves to making a journey by boarding the bus!  What could they possibly be worried about?!

It's Not All New

Some third-party developers have already been making use of data that has been made available on a voluntary basis. The BUG would heartily recommend Bus Times.Org 
This is a website that contains timetables for every bus service in the country, together with maps and stopping places (but not fares) all presented in a standard, easy-to-read format. For many operators, including Stagecoach, it enables the passenger to track his or her bus in real-time as shown below:
Stagecoach buses in and around Lancaster at about 17.15 on a Monday afternoon
Of course, as with all computer-related activity, the quality of the output is directly related to the quality of the data that is inputted. The founder of the Bus Times site, a private individual who reportedly developed it "just for the sake of it" has identified a number of discrepancies in timetable data from certain operators, which he has then had to get them to correct.
Another issue is the regrettable lack of standardisation between information providers when it comes to the names of the bus stops themselves. Despite every stop having an official name on a National Database it is not uncommon to see the same stop being described differently by different operators or by county councils, where they also provide information.  Lancaster BUG has identified a large number of such discrepancies locally, but thankfully both Stagecoach and Lancashire CC have so far been happy to work with us to eliminate these.

But What About Fares?

We do, however, see a problem looming when it comes to fares data. Bus operators are reasonably good at providing accurate information on multi-journey tickets, such as Day Riders, Megariders and the like but they seem to find providing accurate information on ordinary single and return fares more difficult.
Some, including our local operator Kirkby Lonsdale Coach Hire, simply don't bother (hence the need for government intervention), but even large, well-resourced operators such as Stagecoach can't always get things right as this enquiry made on the company website shows:
It would appear (erroneously) that a journey from the University to the Bus Station will cost you "from" £2.20 on service 1A and service 42, but a whopping £4.10 if you decide to get service 40!

The First Rule of Public Transport

Service 100:  The Secret Service?
This enquiry was made in order to show up the inconsistencies in Stagecoach's fares data, but it inadvertently also uncovered a problem with timetable information.  The enquiry was for a bus leaving the University "at 18.45" (We didn't specifically ask for times from the Sports Centre, that's just the stop that popped up at the top of the list when we typed in "Lancaster University"). The result we got suggests that there are buses at 18.59 (1A); 19.12 (42) and 19.27 (40).  Perhaps not a bad service given that the students are all on holiday, but what it doesn't tell you is that there are departures on service 100 at 18.55 and 19.15.  This might be because service 100 follows a more circuitous route and takes longer to get to town. Someone at Stagecoach seems to have decided that because service 100 buses take longer to reach the city centre, and that it can be quicker to let them go by and wait for a bus on the more direct route, that passengers shouldn't be told about them. But anyone who thinks that way obviously isn't aware of the First Rule of Public Transport: "Never wait for the 'other' bus" or "If it's going your way and it's at the stop - get on!"
It will be interesting to see whether the new "standardised" system allows such anomalies to continue but in any case, surely passengers should be given the information and left to make up their own minds about which bus to catch?
And, by the way, none of these - or other - developments negates the need for the continued provision of information in that easily-portable, easily-read, sustainable and recyclable format that doesn't need a signal - or a battery - to access: the paper leaflet!

Tuesday 24 December 2019

The 1907 Haslingden Bus Trial


Lancaster didn't get its own buses until 1916, although it did have trams from 1903.  In  those days, local councils, especially in the north of England,  were often pioneers of new technology and fierce local rivalries also played a part.

Early buses were rather primitive and their operation was fraught with difficulty. Perhaps January wasn't the best time to hold a trial run, but Haslingden Corporation seems to have had a particularly adventurous beginning in bus operation. This poetic account by Ann Rawcliffe, based on contemporary press reports and reproduced with permission from "The Lancastrian", the journal of the Friends of Real Lancashire makes for an entertaining read and we hope you enjoy it!


This isn't the actual bus used on the trial, but the design and the terrain would have been very similar.
When Rossendale thought to geet buzes
T'Council from Haslingden said...
Let's beat that Rawtenstall to it
Let's show 'em we're forging ahead
Now they'd bin to a demonstriation
Of buses in Manchester town
But difference 'tween Hasy and Manky
Is one's flat, t' other's all up and down.

But in January 1907
They decided to put one to t' trial
And 27 Council officials
Were took on a jaunt of ten mile
They'd hired a 36-seater
An open-topped jobby it were
A proper double-deck motor buz
And them on top could breathe fresh Rossendale air

Being January, t'weather weren't too great
Ice on t'ground and fog up in th'air
And they set off up th' ill toward cemetery
Hoping they'd not end up there
Unfortunately, on t'way up Free Lane
A passenger on the top deck
Were struck by a telephone cable
It copped him reyt across t'neck

The Grey Mare, seen here on Street View, would have
been even more isolated in 1907 and the roads much more basic.
You can see why some passengers were tempted to "stop for a tot"!

After much skdding and sliding
They turned left o'er Grane past t'Grey Mare
And there were some as were tempted to stop for a tot
To wearm up and steady t' nerves there
All t' passengers were shivering and freezing
And t'going were terribly rough
And they coundn't see owt for the fog and the mist
But Hasy folk, they're made of stern stuff

On going down th' ill into Blackburn
T' bus slithered, and spun raound and raound
It were facing wrong way now, so most folk got off
So as t' driver could safely back daown
At this, some ut Council turned chicken
And wouldn't get back on again
As fer t' rest, they were big cock-sure fellas
Who brazened it out in the rain

T' streets o' Blackburn proved hard for the driver
They were narrow and obstacle-filled
He hit one 'lectric light, missed a few maore
It's a wonder that no-one were killed
Boosted up by "success" he reached Langho
Where under a low bridge he ran
T' folk up top, had to lay flat on their backs
Losing yeds weren't part of the plan
Early motor buses suffered frequent accidents. This one, belonging
 to Rawtenstall Corporation, came to grief in Burnley in 1908.
All t' roads were still slippery and slidy
And tyres weren't too good in them days
T' bridges were narrow and steep up-and-down
No better than on t'packhorse ways
At Cock Bridge, t' buz skidded badly
And hit un 'igh wall wi' a crash
T' conductor went reyt through t' back window
And a load o' stones tumbled on t' path

At Hyndburn Bridge, t' driver had trouble
He drove up than slid back again
It took him three goes to get o'er that bridge
And he'd shaken and scared them brave men
Most o' t' Council now said "Enough is Enough"
And on reaching Clayton-le-Moors
They got off t' bus and took t' tram for home
So as only four finished the tour
Even the primitive early trams were seen as a safer bet than the bus!

After resting their nerves and debating
And tekin' some legal advice
T' Council decided that these motor buses
on Haslingden's roads weren't that nice
Once Hasy were out of the runnin'
Rawtenstall saw it's big chance
In November that year, they got a new bus
While Haslingden looked on askance
Haslingden's first bus was a "nice single-decker" but lasted only two years.
Course, Haslingden wouldn't be beaten
Now they had to have a buz too
So they chose a nice single-decker
Wi' conductor and driver for crew
But after just two years of toiling
On the Hasy to Helmshore bus route
They'd tu swap it for one pulled bi horses
Which their steep hills did much better suit

When in th' end Hasy's first proper motor bus
In 1914 it were bought
T' Government took it for war-work
So their plans had once more come to nought
Till, finally, in 1920
Hasy got buses agate
Havin' started in 1907
They were nobbut 13-year late

So look sharp and learn from our history
And mark what this tale does prove true
When it comes to daft Council projects...
Who's footin' t' bill?  That's You!

All photos, other than Street View, (c) Rossendale Library