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Boris Johnson's vicious attack on public transport users

Misery TubeBy Simon Fletcher

More on this later, but the Standard has the detail of the above-inflation fare increase on London's public transport. It is a vicious attack.

A seven-day bus pass will rise an eye-watering 20% from £13.80 to £16.60. Most Oyster pay-as-you-go Tube fares will rise 20p per trip. That would put a single Oyster bus fare at £1.20, up from 90p when Ken Livingstone was mayor. Overall, bus fares will rise by 12.7% and Tube fares by 3.9%. Yet CPI inflation is currently at 1.1%.

The Standard reports that TfL “expects the changes to result in a small fall in bus passenger numbers.” So the shift towards bus use is now being openly reversed.

There are also reports of cuts to services, including yet another attack on outer London from a mayor whose actual policies, rather than his words, have been repeatedly damaging to the suburbs: “The Mayor said there would be a cut in bus schedules and fewer off-peak Tube trains in outer London,” reports the Standard.

The whole direction of transport policy in London is now going the wrong way: higher fares, lower investment, cuts to services.

Let no one be under any illusion that Boris Johnson is ‘red Boris’ or a cuddly, kindlier sort of Tory.

It is claimed - though we will have to see - that the higher fares will raise an extra £125million. Yet Boris Johnson’s own actions have cut millions from TfL’s budgets – £50m-£70million a year will go when the western extension is abolished; £50million a year has been lost through the cancellation of the £25 CO2 charge on gas guzzlers; millions are being wasted through the new Routemaster plan, the removal of bendy buses and the ending of the mutually beneficial agreement with Venezuela.

Fares should have been held down to protect people in a recession, but the opposite is happening.

It’s a bad day for Londoners and transport in London.

This post was also published at Simon's blog.

Posted on Oct 15, 2009 at 12:08pm

3 Comments · Show / Hide
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I'm of the view that if that's what the fares cost then that is what the public should pay. Why should people be taxed for use of their car to subidise other's travel?

Why I live it costs £4 for a round trip on a bus to the nearest town which is 2-3 miles away.
Road Hog @ 21 weeks and 6 days ago
Yes because as we all know money grows on trees, we should be angry at Boris for not using this tree money to pay for the things that we can't afford with real money.
Robtro a @ 21 weeks and 6 days ago
Hi Labourlist

Can i ask ,As we have given lots of people free travel (which i agree with ) is this a way of making up for the lost revenue?

On Bus fares , I dont have a oyster card , Whenever my partner goes into hospital it cost £4 a day to go 2 miles and back , when i was a teenager it was only 20p and that was in the 90 s .

ricki
ricki lake @ 21 weeks and 6 days ago