25th October - the "Party Room" at the Melksham Campus - please come along for our relaunch of the Melksham Transport User Group. Two sessions - 14:30 and 18:30 so that the meeting is convenient for those who are available afternoon / during daylight, AND for thos who can't make it until the evening. In between, we'll be popping in to the park to dedicate a memorial bench to Peter and Margaret Blackbur. More details via https://grahamellis.uk/blog1383.html
In the headline I wrote last month (September 2024), this is a time of great risk an great opportunity. It's also the time for the
Melksham Transport User Group and
Option 24/7 to re-awaken after a strategic pause to recover from campaign fatigue and partner with others to encourage, promote and help facilitate a public transport network for the future.
We have had successes over the years which we often forget in because excellent public transport provision is still a goal and indeed a holy grail - we are mid-journey
In 2013, we stepped up from 2 trains each way per day calling at Melksham to 8, and passenger journeys rose from 3,000 to 75,000 per annum (and to 240,000 if you included journeys through Melksham.
In 2016, we successfully opposed Wiltshire Council plans to cut 50% of the supported buses - vocally answering a consultation as to whether we would prefer to lose town buses or rural ones, Sunday buses or evening ones with Option 24/7 - we belive that buses should run where people need them, and when then need them.
In 2020, when First Bus withdrew their commercial servics from Melksham, we sucessfully promoted their replacement providing an evening and Sunday service run by Faresaver and supported by Wiltshire Council.
Also in 2020, we fought the permanent withdrawl of Sunday trains - the morning service was at particular risk - and it came back post-covid
In 2022 and 2023 we nagged, persuaded the train service providers to fill evening timetable gaps and we now have evening trains seven days a week.
And in 2024 we saw the return of Sunday buses to Trowbridge and Chippenham, and on 1st September the Sunday service to Devizes and to Bath doubles to an hourly service.
Wow!! Just imagine how we would be without those various improvements. All of them are good improvements that were fully justified and have paid off, and once explained we have been pushing on open doors and working well together. But ...
* We have lost some requests too, and with it seen some backward steps
* We are in a process of review and policy change with a new government
* There is a very great deal still to go to have a system fit for future needs
Writing to continue ...(this is draft)
Footnote - what have we lost from Melksham?
* Second Town Bus
* Evening buses from Chippenham and Trowbridge
* Melksham Rail Link bus
* First Bus
* Santa trips
* Train reliability (if we ever had it)
And we need to look and learn at each of those - not simply target re-instament but rather looking to the future with what is needed for the future. Of the six, three "returns" suggested. Wider, losses include trains Trowbridge to Brighton and Londo, but lots of reallygood gains
What are the opportunities
* Reliable train services
* Clockface train including capacity works
* Bues to the station doubling up as second bus to serve dropped and new areas
* Porous and more friendly ststion and access
* Encouraging fares systems
* Real time at town centre bus stops
* Improved community inputs and ownership
* Better help if things don't work as they should
What are the risks
* Bus fare up 300%
* Loss of evening and sunday bus services
* Thinned and still unrelaibke trains and a shrinking network
* Reduction of train services at Melksham
The Melksham Transport User Group and its predecessors have partnered with the train operators over the years to promote growth of services and their use. However, we are embarrassed to promote the current service with its awful reliability record. For regular users who are robust to the issues it is still useful - for newcomers there's a significant risk of their first planned use going wrong, quite apart from the worry beforehand of not knowing if it will run.
Four officers of the group met in December 2022, and we have decided on a hiatus through 2023. We'll maintain insurance and CRN membership; our annual Zoom account runs until mid-year and we will occasionally feed online media and deal with correspondence from it.
On the topic of buses - we do not have the same reliability issues on the services between our towns, and I am delighted to remind Melksham residents of the following Faresaver ( https://www.faresaver.co.uk ) services:
* Services 271, 272 and 273 to Bath - 7 days a week including all evenings except Sundays
* Services 272 and 273 to Devizes - 7 days a week including all evenings except Sundays
* Service x34 to Chippenham, and to Trowbridge and Frome - daytime, Mondays to Saturdays
* Services 68 and 69 to Corsham, and to Holt and Trowbridge - daytime, Mondays to Saturdays
* Service 69 to Bradford-on-Avon - limited service, daytime, Mondays to Saturdays
All timetables on the Faresaver web site - proven reliable, and their tracking app is helpful
From January to the end of June (2023)
extended to November 2024, single bus fares are capped at £2.00 per person per journey, giving significantly lower fares for many. Bear in mind if you're going somewhere like the Royal United Hospital in Bath, which involves a change of bus in Bath, your best value ticket may still be an Avon Rider.
For holders of ENCTS cards ("senior bus passes"), your pass is valid all day, every day on local bus journeys staring in Wiltshire - also until the end of March 2023, so no payment will be required on any of the services listed above on presentation of your card, even before 09:30 in the morning or after 23:00 at night.
Melksham Transport User Group - travelling after Covid
The Melksham Rail User Group became the station friends member of ACoRP and has evolved into a more general transport organisation Melksham Transport User Group (MTUG). MRUG/MTUG have met online (via Zoom) since the start of the pandemic.
We are now at the point where travel is possible ... safety has always been paramount, but with knowledge, facemasks (please!) and new cleaning regimes - and most services to/from Melksham have plenty of capacity for social distancing.
Some good has come from recent times. Online meetings, monthly newsletters, and developing relationships with partners should not be lost, as we have our work cut out moving forward to rebuild public transport use to, from and within Melksham both for our community and for the wider environment and climate too.
A review of the last decade and a look forward
We started the last decade with around 3,000 journeys per annum, and with
Save the Train as the online campaign group for TransWilts services, looking to save the vestiges of the service that had been cut back a couple of years earlier.
We ended the last decade with around 75,000 journeys per annum, with the
Melksham Rail User Group providing local encouragement and support - a rebranding of the Development group - but very much a "station friends" group, working as partners with the rail industry and
our local CRP which grew out of "Save the Train".
Although passenger journeys have risen from 3,000 to 75,000 in a decade, that's based on a service that's risen only from unusable to "thin and poor". Gaps of 2 and half hours (10:01 to 12:32) in a service for short journeys such as Melksham to Swindon (25 minutes) or Trowbridge to Chippenham (19 minutes) put most people off using the service. Step up to a reliable hourly service, and passenger numbers at Melksham
by the end of this new decade should exceed 300,000.
2009 -
2019 -
2029? -