An assessment of the value of new transport services to people living in deprived neighbourhoods in England.
Regeneration strategies for deprived areas are currently under review. To date there has been little if any direct evaluation of the contribution of transport services to local regeneration. This study evaluates the benefits – both monetary and quality of life – of transport services to the people who use them and to the local practitioners responsible for the wider regeneration of these neighbourhoods.
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This study assesses the social and monetary value of public transport initiatives in four deprived areas of England in order to identify who benefits and how they benefit in relation to wider social inclusion objectives.
The 2003 Making the Connections report by the Government’s Social Exclusion Unit (now the Social Exclusion Task Force) highlighted how poor transport contributes to social exclusion in deprived neighbourhoods. It recommended improvements to the bus network to address wider social inclusion objectives. This study was designed to assess what happened when new public transport initiatives were introduced in four deprived areas in England: who benefited, how and why?
The UK Government has recognised the importance of public transport in ensuring access to jobs, health services, shopping and leisure facilities. Local authorities in England (outside London) are now obliged to assess whether people living in their area are able to reach key services by public transport, as part of Local Transport Plans for 2006-2011. However, there is no longer any specific funding for public transport initiatives in deprived areas.
Funding for new transport services was available from the Department for Transport’s Urban Bus Challenge Fund, which ended in 2003. Other projects have been part funded by New Deal for Communities programmes or other Neighbourhood Renewal funds, which will come to an end by 2010.
This study reports on four transport projects: the Braunstone Bus in Leicester, the Trevithick Link in Cornwall, Walsall WorkWise and the Wythenshawe Local Link in Manchester.
Those running the schemes and those working towards wider regeneration objectives considered the projects highly valuable to individuals and to the overall vibrancy of the area. They highlighted the need to look at the physical availability of services in connection with other barriers, such as affording fares or having the confidence to travel. They recognised that improvements to public transport alone cannot address the difficulties of a “workless” culture, which requires a number of complementary interventions.
All the local professionals interviewed agreed that the bus services were important to the sustainable regeneration of low-income areas. For example, a representative of an Urban Regeneration Company in Cornwall commented:
“.. this is the start of a good network of public transport in the area that can allow people access to good jobs and be environmentally responsible at the same time.”
Professionals were worried by the lack of secure future funding. The Department for Transport’s Urban Bus Challenge funded the first few years of operation for three of the four projects, but it was clear the requirement of commercial viability would not be met by the time this funding ended. The officers involved felt this was not a realistic expectation and that it would be a challenge to find money elsewhere. Withdrawing or cutting back services would have a negative impact on local communities:
“If we end up with a diminished bus service we’ll have more excluded people, there’s just little doubt about it…” Social Inclusion Team representative, Braunstone
Service users were in unanimous support of the projects. Benefits to them included:
“Yes the hospital’s actually a nightmare to get to and it always has been, there’s never been a decent bus route to the hospital and I’ve had to use the hospital quite a lot fairly recently, so it was either relying on taxis to get me there or using the Local Link.” (Employed man, Wythenshawe Local Link, Manchester)
“I wouldn’t be able to get to work otherwise…. I don’t know, I’d probably have to change jobs…. I’d have to find another job… I love my job.” (Employed woman, Trevithick Link, Cornwall)
Walsall WorkWise had helped users expand the area in which they searched for work.
“I wouldn’t have gone looking for a job that far and that, that’s simple that is. I wouldn’t even attempt going 15 mile for a job for that money and transport.” (Unemployed man in a couple with children, Walsall WorkWise)
Unfortunately, this study was not able to identify a suitable approach for calculating the full range of social benefits to the Government of the job take-ups, new health visits or shopping, leisure and social trips that the projects facilitated. This is an important area of further research. The Department for Transport is working on a method for calculating the monetary benefits of these new trips, which it is due to report in 2009.
This study’s calculation of wider social benefit is based on the Department for Transport’s WebTAG guidance for transport project appraisal. It uses either:
Applying this method does not capture any additional value to society of new trip opportunities. However, by comparing the usage of each bus service with what would be expected for a new service it has been possible to calculate the percentage of trips due to better accessibility of key destinations. The results of both sets of calculations (individual user benefits and new trips due to better accessibility) are summarised in Table 1.
| Total grant awarded | Total annual trips | User annual benefits | Patronage growth | Employment uptake | New health trips | Other new trips | Current subsidy | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Braunstone Bus | £1.595m | 282,466 | £661,000 | 15% | 7% | 42% | 41% | 52p per trip |
| Trevithick Link | £800,000 | 59,017 | £80,000 | 5% | 67% | 17% | 29% | £1.48 per trip |
| Walsall Workwise | £127,974 | 732 referrals | £21,000 | n/a | 53% | n/a | n/a | £123 per client |
| Wythenshawe Local Link | £682,000 | 43,946 | £88,000 | 40% | 0.6% | 23% | 44% | £4.46 per trip |
This study highlights how public transport can be vital in the social inclusion of individuals and the vitality of low-income neighbourhoods. Smaller initiatives offering travel training and advice and help with costs also encourage socially excluded people to use public transport more.
The travel needs of socially excluded groups cannot be wholly met through the traditional commercial bus network. Relevant service routes are unlikely to be commercially viable and will require revenue subsidies to support them. All four projects studied are threatened by a lack of continued funding. This limits the opportunity to roll out good practice, despite the clear need for this throughout the UK.
If the Government is serious about reducing social exclusion through improved transport then it needs to do more to support socially necessary bus services. The authors recommend:
At the local level, the social benefits of new transport projects need to be systematically evaluated and articulated in policy objectives. This would involve:
Finally, this study encourages local practitioners to examine the following when delivering transport projects in deprived areas:
This study examined four transport projects in deprived areas in different parts of England. The Braunstone Bus and Trevithick Link are fixed route bus services. Walsall WorkWise provides free bus passes and travel advice to those starting a new job. Wythenshawe Local Link is a flexibly routed, door-to-door bus service, using a customer booking service.
The study included interviews with key professional stakeholders involved in service delivery or wider administration in the areas of operation; a mix of on-board bus, telephone and postal user surveys and 81 in-depth interviews with service users across the four case study projects. An analysis of survey, interview and service monitoring data was used to calculate the overall cost, benefits and cost effectiveness of each initiative.