Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Gosh Tom, that is such a familiar story that I think I have heard it somewhere before. Oh yes. It happened to us in 1985.
We learned.
Your initial problem, was clearly "suggesting" something to the Council before having assured your position vis a vis the competitors (Eg. Councillor's Auntie's Brother's Nephew who runs a minibus etc.)
The way to approach these things, I have found, is as follows:
1. Gee up the support from the local councillors to get a tender issued. And say nothing about what you will provide before that date.
2. When the invitation to tender for the sixteen seater arrives, submit a non-compliant tender, setting out what you can offer along with its lower price, but without sufficient detail for them to run it.
3. Immediately after the tender submission date,
but before the replies have been issued, phone your local newspapers and bombard them with a really good quality presentation press release (that they can use without much editing) and simultaneously pass copies to all your local councillors and parish people.
The press release should explain what you are offering, but avoid any figures, or real facts for that matter. The idea is to fuel public interest. Not to embarass the County Council, but to make it clear that your idea was in fact a County Councillor's idea, and what splendid fellows they would all be if your (the Councillor's) idea went ahead. Then, if it doesnt, you will at least have the satisfaction of seeing them all row about it publically, and who knows, you might even get a question asked about it (from the other side so-to-speak) in the House of Commons. It has happened here!
"Why is it, Honourable Member, that our local village minibus service receives a subsidy of £124 per passenger"
(This actually got asked in Parliament. Its in Hansard).
Operating an efficient and reliable service is an afterthought. No one is interested in that side of things. Its the publicity and politics one should consider first.
Also, dont be fooled into allowing yourself to think that passenger demand is much of a factor. It doesnt really matter much whether anyone actually ever gets on your taxibus, if they do, thats just a bonus. Ideally, the services core route should lead to a village where the elections were fairly marginal last time, even if no one actually ever goes there.
One of the problems you may have where you are, is that there are no areas of deprivation close by. If there are, you might consider serving them and applying for Objective 1 grants to set it up as a new venture and bring much needed employment into the area. Thats always a good one anyway, we used it and there just aint any unemployment here.
Another idea, is to set it up as a not for profit community scheme, with one full time employee (guess who) on a salary of £45,000 a year.
There are endless options, but they need a lot of staying power to fight the sometimes moronic attitudes, and big bus operators, some of whom, will stop at very little to frustrate you.
Look forward to January.
Regards,
Anonymous.

[edited by admin] miself laughing can I and Paddington Bill come in January?
jesus guess what the poet will write about tonight?
How do you know what I write,
we are going to have a fight,
but this subject is one I like,
cost of busing has faced a hike.
subject not as simple as all make out,
as transport must be available to get about,
free taxis are not the solution,
they give off far too much polution.
we need to ween off the seccond car,
and move people cheaply to afar,
average subsidy on the bill,
is £60 per person, that could kill,
buses are here to stay,
and we must do all to make them pay,
Taxibus offers a cheap way to provide,
moving small amounts from villages where people reside.
the bus provided must meet a need,
an 18 seater travelling empty is greed,
research has found in every case,
a bus travelling empty is a waste,
if we find a bus just the right size,
collects more patronage, as they arise,
dedicated drivers help the case,
to build the patronage from low base,
as we succeade in our quest,
we may find a bigger bus will be best
though experimiments have shown,
a bigger bus has let patronage go down,
The smaller the bus, versitility is more,
to attract the passengers to the core,
They can stopp anywhere, just read the law,
if desired stopping outside the door.
Germany car ownership is higher than ours,
yet they use public transport more than us,
we must use our cars much less,
for theres no provision it causes a mess.
weve got to create a ballance thats true,
so youll leave the car, we need a bus for you,
it must be relevant to your need,
or you will use the car a fact indeed,
Toms solution actualy works,
his county council acted like birks
his theory on free taxis was so wrong,
in practice he overlooked the paying throng,
We shouldnt fear building the transport mix
without it congestion we are in a fix
its expensive until usage rises to the top,
for that to happen car usage must drop.
we cannot go on as we are,
were spending to much time in the car,
the polution is killing so is the stress,
good public transport is the best.
Paddington Bill.