
Bigger, better, greener – five impressive coaches are here to run the arterial service Continue reading

Bigger, better, greener – five impressive coaches are here to run the arterial service Continue reading
Earlier in 2008, there was a prolonged ‘Bus War’ between Stagecoach-owned Scottish Citylink and Argyll’s West Coast Motors, based in Campbeltown.
Citylink, which had contracted West Coast Motors as operators on its route between Glasgow and Campbeltown and Glasgow and Oban, attempted to force the Argyll company to accept a lower value contract when it came up for renewal. West Coast Motors refused and operated the routes itself, with Citylink then running a duplicate service and engaging in drastic fare-cutting to try to force them to back down or go out of business.
Argyll stayed faithful to its own company, seeing most Citylink buses running the routes virtually empty. In the end it was the mighty Stagecoach subsidiary that blinked first, agreeing terms acceptable to West Coast Motors and retiring from the duplicate service.
However, it seems to be payback time now, with passengers bearing the brunt of Citylink’s revenge.
A service running the length of Argyll to Glasgow – from Campbeltown on the Mull of Kintyre, up the long peninsula to Lochgilphead, across Mid Argyll and the head of the Cowal peninsula and down the west side of Loch Lomond into Glasgow – will usually require more than one bus on the main morning and evening services.
Previously the route was shadowed by a second bus on the stage between Lochgilphead and Glasgow or Inveraray and Glasgow on the days and times where operating experience could predict the need.
Now the route runs with a single bus and passengers are required to pre-book tickets – and pay a pre-booking fee – to ensure a place. Otherwise they may not be allowed to board if seats are scarce or they may be, in the aggressive language of the bus companies, ‘thrown off’ to make way for those en route with pre-booked seats.
The problem is that the arrangements for pre-booking require either an online capability, know-how and a credit card or going physically in advance to either of the main terminals or to Tourist Offices in the main towns en route.
Argyll has an ageing population who tend to form the majority of passengers using the service. Many have no computer, no online access, no know-how and many do not have a credit card.
Argyll also has a highly dispersed population with few large towns – so between Glasgow and Campbeltown many passengers need to join the bus from one of the many small villages or townships. How are they to get to a Tourist Office in their nearest larger town to book a ticket, except on a bus they may not be allowed to board?
What is happening today is that people are being left behind as a bus refuses to take them or is already full. Some are having to get off buses. In both cases there have been instances of risk to young people who, travelling alone, have been left behind or asked to leave.
The situation at the weekend only has been alleviated, because of families needing to go to Glasgow to shop in the run up to Christmas. Weekend services are now running a second bus on the relevant section of the route.
Weekday services remain an unpleasant, stressful and uncertain means of transport, with many unable to keep the appointments necessitating their journey. Some are forced to use their cars – at a time when people are being urged to make use of public transport as an energy saving strategy and at a time when the UK Government has just increased fuel duty.
According to West Coast Motors, Scottish Citylink, the lead company on the route, is in the driving seat and is refusing to run a second bus on the necessary part of the route. Some believe that the company is trying to claw back the revenue it lost in its failed attempt to force west Coast Motors off the road. Some believe it is punishing passengers from Argyll for supporting their home company in the earlier dispute.
Either way, the service is completely unacceptable and it is leaving vulnerable people open to an indefensible risk in being left behind.
Concern and anger is widespread. For Argyll has had sight of formal communications being sent from responsible local bodies to Argyll and Bute Council and to Councillors on the matter.
The Council is a major stakeholder and, to a degree, a paymaster in Argyll’s transport services. It is time to flex that muscle in the interests of its electors.
Solidarity won the day. Argyll’s unswerving support for Campbeltown-based bus company, West Coast Motors has seen Scottish Citylink renew its contract with the local firm to supply the Campbeltown to Glasgow and Oban to Glasgow routes. When the long running contract between the two expired in May, Citylink then offered West Coast Motors a new contact – but under less favourable terms in a context of rocketing fuel prices. West Coast rejected the offer and the two companies have since been engaged in a face off competition for passengers. As one of Argyll’s major employers, the county could not afford to see West Coast Motors emerge the loser. Throughout the cat and mouse tactics that became a feature of the contest, it was noticeable that the West Coast buses ran full where the Citylink buses often had no more than a couple of people on board. The outcome of the dispute is that West Coast Motors buses will deliver Scottish Citylink’s current schedules – if anyone can remember what these actually are. It’s been several months since anyone on the two routes could be sure which company was driving what schedule.
The bus war that has broken out following West Coast Motors’ rejection of the new and lower-value contract offered them by Scottish Citylink has been seen by our news staff to be developing new tactics. When the previous collaborative arrangement between the companies – in respect of the Oban to Glasgow (976) and Campbeltown to Glasgow (926) routes – broke down, Citylink began to run a duplicate and competitive services on these routes. West Coast Motors then re-scheduled its services on the routes to run ten minutes earlier than previously – and therefore ten minutes earlier than the new Citylink services. In Argyll and at the Glasgow end, service users from Argyll are noted largely to choose to travel by West Coast Motors while visitors, unaware of the situation, travel on either.
Citylink has been merged with Stagecoach for several years now, a merger that was the focus of an Enquiry by the Competition Commission, completed in December 2006. While a price-cutting war is of short term advantage to travellers -the potential loss to Argyll of a native employer in the public transport industry would be grave. Stagecoach have very deep pockets and can afford prolonged commercial guerilla warfare of this kind. Stagecoach / Citylink buses have been seen on the road recently running five to ten minutes ahead of the West Coast Motors’ services scheduled to run ten minutes ahead of them. When the Citylnk service arrives, travellers now face uncertainty on whether or not hey have missed the West Coast Motors service they tend to prefer.
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