As I suspected, from the analysts presentation for the results, First bus are intending doing elsewhere what they have just done at Aberdeen regarding cutting drivers' terms and conditions.
Where is that presentation ?As I suspected, from the analysts presentation for the results, First bus are intending doing elsewhere what they have just done at Aberdeen regarding cutting drivers' terms and conditions.
On the FirstGroup corporate website.Where is that presentation ?
sorry - blonde moment. Did look and could only see the announcement/releases - got it now. However, can’t see much other than “driving efficiencies in local and divisional cost base” and local companies tailoring costs to local conditions. Am I guilty of more blondeness??On the FirstGroup corporate website.
That was what was said to the audience,
sorry - blonde moment. Did look and could only see the announcement/releases - got it now. However, can’t see much other than “driving efficiencies in local and divisional cost base” and local companies tailoring costs to local conditions. Am I guilty of more blondeness??
Fair point - Volvodart had originally said the investors presentation so I was more on a powerpoint train of thought and was looking at this http://www.firstgroupplc.com/~/medi...ons/presentation/fy-2018-presentation-may.pdf rather than the audioAre you sure you are talking about the same presentation as 'Volvodart'? Is he talking about an investors conference (audience)?
What else is there to do for FirstBus except look at costs? Borrowing costs are reducing, but it's not an overnight transformation. Where are the missing passengers gagging for a First bus? So what costs are there remaining to look at except staff t&s, which seem to vary quite a bit at least looking at advertised salaries; if First are to be competitive? (The competitors may have greater staff recruitment/retention issues, but they still cope, often better on margins). They've looked at depots, maintenance/replacement and back office, and reduced the lot. Unison hold the key, perhaps? The magic public funding will go to the successful, not the unsuccessful surely - it's not a lifeboat (or if it is, then a leaky one)?
Despite our best wishes FB don't exist in a bubble. Surely how they compare with their competitors/comparitors matters, a bit? Mostly on the operational side I don't see them doing much different to anyone else (except for investment and we know why that is) and t&cs. If buyers would make a success of the business, it'd be because they can tackle those issues where First can't (or can take advantage of consolidation - limited opportunities with the dispersed First "network"), and who is going to pour investment into a loss making business without making it operationally viable? Fares have gone up already, and First aren't the cheapest.
As for sales, should First be concerned that they do the hard work, and someone else then reaps the benefit? As a competitor or successor that's what I'd be interested in. Is that the code for the constant mentions of shareholder value? At least the remnants of Berkshire have one of the closest to a captive passenger base, perhaps?
The natural view is to go out for growth but a) there's no point in halving your fares to get twice the patronage and b) it is much easier to save £100k than to generate another £2m of revenue to make £100k. As it is, the steps that UK Bus have taken seem to be one of the few bright spots in the annual results.
Council will begin talks about potential take over of First Bus Aberdeen
High level talks between Aberdeen City Council and First Bus are to take place – with the local authority understood to be maneuvering for a future bid to run the city’s buses in the future.
First Bus took over Aberdeen services in 1989 and senior First figures have poured cold water on the idea of a sale, saying they are “not interested”.
Setting up a council-run bus company, similar to the city’s previous Grampian buses or Edinburgh’s Lothian buses, has however been at the heart of Aberdeen Labour’s manifesto during last year’s local elections.
And council co-leader Jenny Laing, of Aberdeen Labour, said she had instructed civil servants to begin talks about the “company’s intentions” for the future.
The break-up of FirstGroup has been predicted by city analysts since a preliminary takeover bid from North American private equity investor Apollo Asset Management.
It is understood that if the council took over First Aberdeen it would run all the services and take over the bus depot on King Street.
Council leaders are waiting on the publication of a new transport bill this month which is predicted to give powers to councils to run services.
Mrs Laing said: “I have today instructed our director of resources, Steven Whyte, to liaise with First Bus Aberdeen in order to get a better understanding of the company’s intentions for Aberdeen following the announcement that the First Group are looking to restructure the company.
“I am positive that the people of Aberdeen would be pleased to see a municipal bus company established in the city to run buses for and on behalf of the citizens.
“We are obviously at a very early stage of trying to progress these plans and the legislation which would enable local authorities to proceed is currently not in place.
“However, the administration is keen to continue to explore all options regarding the setting up of a municipal bus company in Aberdeen.”
David Phillips, operations director for First Aberdeen said in response: “We are not interested in selling all or part of the business.
“We simply would not have gone through the heartache and pain of scaling the business over the past year in a bid to meet the challenges of the current economic climate in Aberdeen, if our plans were simply to sell up.
“Aberdeen is birthplace of First Group and will remain an important part of our business moving forward.”
Tbf, you can make the argument in any circumstance. Do nothing and invest nothing - it’s because it’s not worth doing as you’re ready to offload. Do something like a new ID or face into IR issues - it’s because you’re prettying it up to be ready to offload.Isn't 'going through the heartache and pain of scaling the business' just what an owner would do if he wanted to sell it for the best possible price?
Saw that news article earlier, typical Aberdeen Journals dribble. Aberdeen City Council can't manage a toilet cleaning rota, never mind a full scale bus service.
Simple answer is it ain't gonna happen!
As the article acknowledges, they can't legally do it anyway. The question must also be asked that if it's in such a state that First want rid, are Aberdeen council in a position to invest to turn it round, or to bear the losses?
Much as I'd like to see city bus operations returned to local control, I can't see this happening either. Aberdeen is arguably the "spiritual home" of First, as well as the location of a their fairly new headquarters, so I can't see them getting rid of the operation any time soon. Having said that, the Aberdeen operation is very much self-contained and isolated from the rest of the group. If First were to relinquish control, they'd have no real reason to keep head office functions in the area.It's very highly unlikely that First want rid of Aberdeen, anyone with a brain and knowledge of the area can realise that! it's a good preforming area that's not got any real troubles. Aberdeen City Council would likely allocate most of the budget to vanity projects such as Marischal Square, pointless bus gates and then moan about them not having the money to run the bus services, leading to cuts.
That said they currently fund the 15A and 94, both of which are really just pointless money pits. The 94 carries more ghosts than passengers, ironic as it goes from the hospital to the crematorium!
It always strikes me as funny when people use examples such a Lothian Buses, they seem to forget that LB operate in Edinburgh the capital with a massive tourist industry. So of course they're going to splash the cash on them! Where as places such as Aberdeen, Dundee and possibly Glasgow would get somewhat ignored.
Personally i think the industry needs to be kept in the private sector, but there needs to be more locally based operators (Craig Group for example) as these large nation wide companies really just don't work.
"rant" over...![]()
Colchester has two other players in the town.. you can't just blame First.
Much as I'd like to see city bus operations returned to local control, I can't see this happening either. Aberdeen is arguably the "spiritual home" of First, as well as the location of a their fairly new headquarters, so I can't see them getting rid of the operation any time soon. Having said that, the Aberdeen operation is very much self-contained and isolated from the rest of the group. If First were to relinquish control, they'd have no real reason to keep head office functions in the area.
Refusing to register realistic timetables and drivers summarily parking up! Don't you have a Traffic Commissioner in the South East?As a user of First buses in Colchester for over 20 years, I suggest we should be surprised they have any passengers left at all here. They seem to function better at Chelmsford, but failure to even acknowledge Colchester's chronic traffic congestion proplems has driven the optional traffic away.
Examples? They refuse to time their routes differently during congestion periods versus quiet times, making timetable collapse inevitable. Likewise they structure routes so that they cannot run to time. To add injury to injury, their late-running drivers shut down and run empty to depot, effectively cancelling all evening service at an extreme.
Essex is a prosperous county with good roads and rail services, First Essex are a joke here. Good riddance to them!
Yes, Eastern, and First Essex have been hauled before them, when the (former) management promised to be good boys and do better in future. The future is here and I defy anyone to find any difference. Chelmsford (or Basildon) better . . . that's the biggest joke of the lot! The kindest thing we can probably say is that they are trying (the wrong word, perhaps) to do too much with too few resources. Why? the biggest mystery of the lot. It makes no sense the way they collect and cling on to uneconomic routes. More buses = better buses. It doesn't when reliability goes to pot. Closing Clacton and Braintree doesn't, I suspect, even begin to address their real problems.Refusing to register realistic timetables and drivers summarily parking up! Don't you have a Traffic Commissioner in the South East?