Decisions about funding post-16 transport made by the SCC Cabinet in 2014 are now hitting the street. These resulted in a significant tightening of SCC’s ‘discretionary’ transport offer, due to a double whammy created by conflicting governmental expectations: On the one hand young people are now expected to remain in education, training and employment until 18 – thus creating a de facto if unofficial statutory leaving age of 18. On the other hand, continuing cuts in central funding, assisted by ideological reluctance to increase taxation at either national or local level means that SCC are trying hard to cover impossible bills.
This has left many rural families with significant problems..
The London-based, urban-centric nature of central government has a track record of making decisions without funding support, that put rural-dwelling young people at a very particular disadvantage. They have so much further to travel to education and so much less in the way of public transport to fall back on than their urban peers. This is my letter in today’s EADT, 2-07-2015.
Sir,
Many people have contacted me re with concerns about SCC’s new post-16 ‘discretionary’ policy which will offer students travel to the nearest place of education only. This sounds reasonable, until you look at the plight of the rural young.
The government’s Raising the Participation Age (RPA) insists on education, training and employment until 18. However, almost all support for travel finishes at 16. And for many rural post-16 students , there may be literally no other transport to education apart from the SCC-chartered bus the discretionary pass is used on, because the bus services have been cut.
A few years ago SCC replaced many rural bus routes with ‘demand responsive transport,’ A Rural Transport PDP working group last year found this was incompatible provision for school attendance. Remaining bus routes often run a regular service except for the one bus at school times which has been taken off-route so as to run a school- specific service – ironically for bus-pass holders only. And if a student wants to continue their studies at their catchment school since age 11 (Farlingaye, for example) – but there is another education provider a shade closer, too bad!
Let me remind readers that a discretionary bus pass is not free. It costs the student £600 a year. But the bonkers bus deregulation laws – aimed at promoting competition -won’t allow one to pay for a seat on a school bus if one has no discretionary entitlement. It’s a deeply unhelpful scenario for those who just need transport to get from A to B!.
I have yet to establish what is the situation of the rural young person who is literally unable to attend mandatory school college or training because there is no public transport and they do not drive. Are they sanctioned?
In February’s 2015 Budget debate, I suggested affordable transport was so crucial to education that we take money out of reserves to support educational transport for disadvantaged post-16 year olds. My plea was ignored. The council needs to revisit this decision.
I also call again on the county council to lobby for the extra funding to support RPA. Compare the prospects of our rural young with those in London – an Oyster card gives free, accessible and appropriate travel for all young people. We cannot continue to lose out to the Londoncentric travel funding policies of successive governments – who simply ignore the problems faced by rest of us . Young people in Suffolk also deserve to achieve their potential!
And finally, it is surely time for Suffolk to lobby for the re-regulation of local bus services, so that we do not carry on spending our council tax payers money patching together pieces of a fractured system that fails in a rural setting
Caroline Page
LibDem Spokeman for Transport