April 04 2020

The package, agreed jointly with the bus industry, will keep key routes running to provide a lifeline for those who cannot work from home, including those travelling to jobs on the frontline of the UK’s fight against Covid-19, such as NHS staff.  

New funding of up to £167 million will be paid over twelve weeks under the new Covid-19 Bus Services Support Grant. As a condition of the funding, bus operators will be required to maintain necessary services at a level which is sufficient to meet much reduced demand, but also to allow adequate space between passengers on board. This is expected to be up to 50 per cent of normal service levels. 

Transport Secretary Grant Shapps said:  

“We have been very clear during the outbreak that the best way to stop the spread of the virus and protect the NHS, is to stay at home if possible. 

“Our buses are a lifeline for people who need to travel for work or to buy food – including our emergency services and NHS staff – and it’s absolutely vital we do all we can to keep the sector running.  

“This multi-million-pound investment will protect crucial local transport links across England, bolstering the sector and minimising disruption for passengers in the long term.”   

Operators will also be required to keep passengers properly informed about revised timetables to ensure that people know which services are running and when.  

The Government has also promised that £200 million of existing funding under the Bus Services Operators Grant will continue to be paid as normal even though not all services may run during this time. This funding is usually paid according to fuel consumption, and so the Government’s commitment to pay this on pre-Covid-19 levels will help ensure that bus companies are able to benefit despite fewer fare-paying passengers travelling. 

This is in addition to up to £30m of extra Government bus funding, originally earmarked for starting new services, which will instead be paid to local authorities to maintain existing services. 

The Chancellor of the Exchequer, Rishi Sunak, said:   

“It’s vital people protect our NHS by staying at home during the outbreak – but we also need to ensure that doctors, nurses and other key workers, can travel to and from their jobs. 

“This funding will provide a lifeline for those on the frontline as well as and those who cannot work from home.” 

Councils have also been encouraged to maintain their existing subsidies for concessionary fares to ensure that older and disabled people can still travel when they need to, for example to reach the shops, hospitals and doctors' surgeries. 

CPT Chief Executive Graham Vidler said: 

“Bus operators of all sizes across the country are providing an essential service at a time of national emergency. We thank the thousands of drivers and other staff doing an incredible job to keep routes running. We're pleased the Government has recognised the necessity of an emergency bus network at this time, and is working with us to ensure it is delivered.

“This funding is designed to plug the gap between the costs of running the emergency network and revenue currently being received by operators and will help the country through the outbreak by allowing key workers to get to work, and other essential journeys to be made. We will work closely with Government to ensure that network remains viable. The industry is ready to gear up to a full network as quickly as possible once it is appropriate to do so.

“Operators will continue to play their own vital role in the national effort to combat Coronavirus, working hand in hand with local authorities to provide the emergency network that key workers rely on to move about.” 

This is the latest step in a string of urgent measures being taken forward by Government to support vital public services, including emergency measures to sustain rail services as operators manage the impacts of coronavirus, and support for crucial links to different parts of the UK.