Winston/Robert
You say a lot that I agree with but I do have to argue the point back. In the Moir era, the business was micromanaged. There was little or no local decision making - local management was merely to execute whatever came from the top.
That is markedly different and OpCo Directors have a lot more scope to manage locally. The most obvious areas are things like local branding - Southampton Reds and the microsite being an example. Some businesses use Best Impressions extensively (long standing personal relationships) - others don't. Similarly, the OpCos have the ability to make certain strategic decisions like the creation of the Cymru Clipper network.
What they don't have is total autonomy but hey, no large business does that. Stagecoach don't do that. For example, when Stagecoach Devon decided to tender for North Devon work and then engage in commercial competition, that wasn't a unilateral decision locally nor was it a pronouncement from Brian Souter. The local management spot an opportunity and they will then look to agree it as a strategic measure - you don't give total freedom to local managers as they may well not have a full view on what is going on (e.g. why jeopardise a bigger deal by doing something daft locally).
There have been examples of this with First - Ipswich, Cornwall, Bristol to name but three. The local management have seen the position on the ground but they aren't just going to act unilaterally.
The main issue seems to surround the retrenchment in certain areas. Again, First is perhaps no different to many other businesses in that they will expect to achieve certain margins. For them, the issue is more pressing than others. Now, each OpCo will have financial objectives etc plus the need to comply with DDA. Surely, if this was some central diktat of cutting x% of mileage then why have some OpCos barely changed their operations (West of England, Cornwall, Wales)? Much more like hitting their numbers - the assumption is that the numbers are realistic but that stands for any business whether it be buses or biscuits.
Same with fleet movements (especially in terms of DDA compliance) and, in fact, you're seeing more evidence of "local deals and swaps" than with Stagecoach or Arriva. FHDB don't really like deckers - FWoE need more to cope with passenger figures so local swaps have happened to enable that. However, there is always the central control of much vehicle purchasing and the impact of cascading vehicles around the country. Prevalent now with DDA compliance but generally no different to Stagecoach - for First mobilising to cover WGL's failure, see Stagecoach diverting fleet to move into Plymouth?