That’s not a new reason for delay on my local route but a regular occurrence. Most of the bus drivers are very good at not setting off until passengers boarding have sat down. It must be very frustrating for them when people stop on their way to their seats to pick up a free newspaper. They are very often elderly people who are not very mobile and slow at getting sat down even without stopping to pick up a newspaper.A new pointless delay this morning, someone messing about trying to pick up a free metro this morning as they left the bus![]()
Not to mention a lot of them insist on picking one up from the bottom of the pile! Yes Barbara, the 6th one down will have money in it or somethingA new pointless delay this morning, someone messing about trying to pick up a free metro this morning as they left the bus![]()
Get rid of 'em - never found anything worth reading in the metro anyway.That’s not a new reason for delay on my local route but a regular occurrence. Most of the bus drivers are very good at not setting off until passengers boarding have sat down. It must be very frustrating for them when people stop on their way to their seats to pick up a free newspaper. They are very often elderly people who are not very mobile and slow at getting sat down even without stopping to pick up a newspaper.
Not to mention a lot of them insist on picking one up from the bottom of the pile! Yes Barbara, the 6th one down will have money in it or something![]()
Depends where you are.I don't understand the premise of the thread
Most people buy App tickets or use Tap in and Tap off. There is no need for on street ticket machines or anything.
Perhaps in your area. Not everywhere in my experience. I guess your local operator gets it - who is it?
I agree TVMs are unnecessary.
This varies massively. But a traditional transaction is quite slow, whether cash or card.
This was in different areas, like Bournemouth, Leicester and Reading so assumed it was widespread.
It never ceases to amaze me how didactic and authoritarian some people are willing to be...Operators should be banned from busways, or any bus lanes for that matter, if they don't make boarding as fast as possible.
Yes and no. What about bus routes that cross local authority boundaries? There are plenty of buses that run across multiple local authorities, even if you group metro/mayoral areas together. You could end up in a situation where passengers are faced with more expensive journeys if an operator's network ticket is no longer available and they have to buy more tickets because their journey goes across the county line.Seen lots of people mention the bus operators are the issue here but I disagree. This is a local authority issue instead. The smart card or app which should be used to purchase these tickets should be done by the local transport authority, similar to TFL, which is being mentioned a lot.
This shouldn't be something which is done by each bus operator as it's just confusing. The same way there shouldn't be 20 different ticket types with each operator having their own and multi modal tickets in some areas not existing at all. This is what really slows boarding down.
Bus operations are not uniform across the country. What works for a major player like First Group might not work for Mrs Miggs' Minibuses running a few shopper journeys a week into the nearest market town. What's appropriate on Oxford Street might not be appropriate in a rural Oxfordshire village. Sometimes ruthless efficiency is detrimental to the service, if it turns some customers away and brings little in the way of marginal gains.Lots of operators still don't have Tap and Cap. Even where it is offered, buying tickets from the driver is still available, even including weekly tickets in most cases.
Cash is not the problem nowadays. Buying paper tickets from the driver using contactless is now the bigger problem.
It never ceases to amaze me how didactic and authoritarian some people are willing to be...
Maybe, just maybe, bus companies know how to run their own business, and know what works for them.
Yes and no. What about bus routes that cross local authority boundaries? There are plenty of buses that run across multiple local authorities, even if you group metro/mayoral areas together. You could end up in a situation where passengers are faced with more expensive journeys if an operator's network ticket is no longer available and they have to buy more tickets because their journey goes across the county line.
Bus operations are not uniform across the country. What works for a major player like First Group might not work for Mrs Miggs' Minibuses running a few shopper journeys a week into the nearest market town. What's appropriate on Oxford Street might not be appropriate in a rural Oxfordshire village. Sometimes ruthless efficiency is detrimental to the service, if it turns some customers away and brings little in the way of marginal gains.
Lots of people don't want to use an app, because (a) that relies on keeping your phone battery alive for the whole day, and (ii) if you have to download a separate app for each bus company you use and/or each council/metro area you travel in, that can be a lot of apps, and eg if you're on holiday and wanting to catch a bus then it's going to be really off-putting if you have to download an app first. And from the complaints we've seen about people boarding and wanting to pay with their phone but not having it ready and have the payment app open ... why do you think those people are any more likely to have the travel app loaded and ready to go?
What do you mean?Tap On Tap Off with classic card sales not permitted unless buying for more than one person isn't at all widespread. Unfortunately unless you disallow classic purchase it doesn't go away - plenty of places have it but seem to barely see it used, e.g. Cornwall.
Phone sales is slightly more common, but they don't sell singles in all areas so many people won't use it while the £2 scheme is ongoing and day tickets are poor value.
Yes, but you can also ask for your single/return/day/week ticket in the normal manner and still pay by card (or cash). It is this process that takes considerably more time, per passenger that chooses to pay this way, than tap and go.What do you mean?
It's the default mode of operation on Arriva and Go-Ahead. You get on and tap your card it beeps and you don't get a ticket.
AFAIK, neither the Arriva nor First apps allow you to purchase single tickets on the app, by virtue of not having a fixed single fare.A lot of the bus companies use the same app with a different skin. Go-Aheads looks the same as Reading buses etc. Shows you where the buses are on a map overlay and sells all the tickets including singles and day tickets
The split for a large non-metropolitan regional operator I have been working with is roughly 60% card/40% cash.I don't understand the premise of the thread
Most people buy App tickets or use Tap in and Tap off. There is no need for on street ticket machines or anything.
Only a handful of people pay cash, it's neither here nor there in terms of the overall duration of the bus journey
It's certainly not an option on Arriva in Kent. Indeed, according to the company's website, it is only available inWhat do you mean?
It's the default mode of operation on Arriva and Go-Ahead. You get on and tap your card it beeps and you don't get a ticket.
This appears to depend on the area. The Arriva app will sell me a £2 single for Stevenage.AFAIK, neither the Arriva nor First apps allow you to purchase single tickets on the app, by virtue of not having a fixed single fare.
It's certainly not an option on Arriva in Kent. Indeed, according to the company's website, it is only available in
- Leicester
- North East
- Wales
- Yorkshire
From 30th October 2022
Arriva to launch Tap and Go contactless payment scheme in the Liverpool City Region – giving customers a new quick and easy way to pay for bus travel at the best price.
What do you mean?
It's the default mode of operation on Arriva and Go-Ahead. You get on and tap your card it beeps and you don't get a ticket
It was recently announced that the Bee Network wouldn be doing TOTO and the thing that immediately sprang to my mind was... WHY???!!!? it seems completely pointless given Andy Burnham has long planned a flat fare for Greater Manchester. Indeed the plans predated the £2 fare cap in England!Tap On Tap Off is a strange requirement at a time when most operators have a flat £2 fare, the "tap off" element seems superfluous if it doesn't matter where you get off, which is why TfL buses don't require it. And in the real world, how much quicker is TOTO than paying for a single journey with each tap? If the delay is caused by the issuing of a physical ticket then that is the easiest bit of the process to remove.
It was recently announced that the Bee Network wouldn be doing TOTO and the thing that immediately sprang to my mind was... WHY???!!!? it seems completely pointless given Andy Burnham has long planned a flat fare for Greater Manchester. Indeed the plans predated the £2 fare cap in England!
I don't think that's correct. The press release says:It was recently announced that the Bee Network wouldn be doing TOTO and the thing that immediately sprang to my mind was... WHY???!!!? it seems completely pointless given Andy Burnham has long planned a flat fare for Greater Manchester. Indeed the plans predated the £2 fare cap in England!
That doesn't sound to me like a touch out will be required.Under the new system, people travelling by Bee Network bus will simply touch on as they board, and their fares will be worked out for them
That reminds me of over the pennines in Sheffield, where First has fairly recently introduced TOTO (but without removing conventional payments). I hardly ever see anyone use TOTO, though plenty of people just get on and ask for a £2 single and pay by card... some drivers do advise passengers to touch in but most do not.It would be good if they ban conventional contactless for adult bus fares but I suspect that won't be the case.
So the press release (that I have only now seen) does not match the reporting of the story by the media.I don't think that's correct. The press release says:
That doesn't sound to me like a touch out will be required
Rollout of the final tranche of franchising will complete before that date. Introduction of capped tap on, tap off payment on Bee Network buses will build on the system already available on Metrolink tram services in the conurbation.
A tap-in tap-out system for both buses and trams is due to be introduced in Greater Manchester in March.
The trouble is the Bee Network have to keep conventional contactless for child fares, so they can't remove that functionality altogether
At least one operator does tap on tap off using the same reader under the ticket machine as the tap off reader. Also, if the one on the way out is broken this can be done.Arriva Milton Keynes don't even offer it, or if they do it isn't in any way publicised and they haven't fitted grab pole tap off readers so when we return to graduated fares it wouldn't work.
This is quite naive. Uptake of this is very new and large parts of the country don't have it.What do you mean?
It's the default mode of operation on Arriva and Go-Ahead. You get on and tap your card it beeps and you don't get a ticket.
This already exists, it's the igo card. However, the 5-15 product is not free travel, unlike the 16-18 one (yes, really). Making bus travel free for children would end up costing a lot given how big the market is.I'd expect in time to see an Oyster Zip style card of some kind for that. Child fare fraud is endemic and it would end that.
I'd expect in time to see an Oyster Zip style card of some kind for that. Child fare fraud is endemic and it would end that.
This was High Wycombe before it closedCertainly not at all Arriva companies. Arriva Milton Keynes don't even offer it, or if they do it isn't in any way publicised and they haven't fitted grab pole tap off readers so when we return to graduated fares it wouldn't work.
It should be as you suggest, but it isn't in most areas of the country at present.
It is good that they seem to be considering it, however.