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Dear Minister for Roads and Local Transport
This is Dorset Council’s third Bus Service Improvement Plan and as the recently elected Cabinet member responsible for Place Commissioned Services, I am pleased to present our 2024 update.
We continue to work closely with our local bus operators within an Enhanced Partnership, exploring new ways to provide a bus network that will link with other forms of transport to provide all Dorset residents and visitors opportunities to access work, education, training, health services and leisure opportunities within Dorset and adjoining council areas. An efficient bus network will give users the confidence to leave their cars behind and contribute towards the council’s target to reduce our carbon emissions by 2050.
We have made progress over the last two years and this edition of the Dorset BSIP reflects our successes but more importantly sets out our aspirations for the future that can be introduced as suitable funding is identified.
Jon Andrews
Cabinet Member for Place Commissioned Services
Initially published in 2021, The Dorset Council Bus Service Improvement Plan (BSIP), was a response to the Government’s National Bus Strategy, Bus Back Better. It contained measures to improve local bus services across England. It continues to be the strategic document which sets out how the council and local bus operators will work together to plan and deliver services across Dorset through the Enhanced Partnership with bus operators. The document will be updated regularly to keep the contents relevant.
This 2024 update reaffirms our commitment to improve bus services in Dorset by working closely with operators, and raise standards by providing:
There are still challenges to be addressed:
The Government’s National Bus Strategy was published in March 2021. It sets out a vision to improve local bus services by making them:
In response to the National Bus Strategy and the government’s priorities, Dorset Council working closely with local bus operators prepared a Bus Service Improvement Plan (BSIP) to set a vision to transform bus services up to 2030. The plan was updated in 2022 and this latest update (2024) ensures that the plan remains up-to-date and relevant to local priorities. This plan sets out an improvement programme for 2024/25 and a pipeline of proposals for 4 years from 2025/26.
BCP Council and Dorset Council are preparing a new joint Local Transport Plan (LTP4), replacing the existing plan from 2026. The BSIP will be reviewed and updated in 2025/26 to align with the publication of LTP4. Subsequent reviews and refreshes will be undertaken in conjunction with 5 yearly reviews of the joint LTP. Currently both councils have individual BSIPs, but further consideration will be given to a shared BSIP corresponding to the joint LTP area for future updates.
Dorset Council has made an Enhanced Partnership with the local bus operators running public services in the Dorset Council area. The Partnership has enabled closer working between the council and bus companies and other local groups, that prioritise passengers’ interests. The Enhanced Partnership encourages local interest groups and bus users to contribute to developing our aims for the future bus network in Dorset.
The Western Gateway Sub-national Transport Body is working co-operatively beyond local boundaries with a single voice on regional transport issues. All Local Transport Authorities within the Western Gateway area are working together to progress regional bus networks that connect our regional cities, towns and villages. The vision of the Dorset BSIP links with the Western Gateways five priorities set out in the Strategic Transport Plan 2024-2050:
March 2021 | National Bus Strategy published |
October 2021 | BSIP (2021) published |
April 2022 | Enhanced partnership made |
March 2023 | BSIP refresh (2022) published |
December 2023 | Zero Emissions Bus bid (ZEBRA 2) submitted |
June 2024 | BSIP refresh (2024) |
Dorset Council is the Local Transport Authority for the county of Dorset, except for the Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole Council (BCP) area. View an area profile for Dorset Council.
The council area is predominately rural in nature with a population of 379,578 (Census 2021). The population is spread over a large area, resulting in Dorset having one of the lowest population densities in England (152 people/km2).
The main urban areas include Dorchester (county town), Weymouth and Portland. Wimborne, Ferndown and Verwood are further secondary centres in the east on the county and form part of the south east Dorset urban area. The rest of the Dorset Council area consists of market towns and villages. Having limited population between principal settlements and no critical mass to provide a strong customer base creates challenges operating and planning bus services in Dorset.
The population age profile in Dorset is significantly older than the national average. An ageing population presents major challenges with concessionary journeys being higher in Dorset versus the south west regional average, creating an over-reliance on concessionary income to support services.
To create a reliable, efficient, safe and inclusive network that focuses on improving the lives of people and enhancing our local places.
Our aim is to significantly grow the number of people using local buses across Dorset by:
The BSIP and Enhanced Partnership approach has already made some significant progress. This includes:
This section sets out an updated baseline, spotlighting key facts about bus services in Dorset. The analysis compares the current bus offer with the aims and objectives of our bus vision.
Thus, it identifies areas for improvement. A short-term programme of improvements is set out in Section 3, and our longer-term transformation plans are set out in Section 4.
According to the Bus Connectivity Assessment, there were an estimated 5.4 million bus journeys across Dorset in 2022/23. While passenger numbers have steadily grown through 2021/22 and 2022/23, they remain significantly below pre-covid levels (71% compared to 2019/20).
Many people aged 65 and over are still choosing not to travel following the COVID-19 pandemic. The number of concessionary passenger journeys in 2022/23 has recovered to 58% compared to 2019/20.
The local bus network is defined by commercially run town services operating at high frequency and a core network of less frequent daytime rural services that connect market towns and urban areas across Dorset.
The heat maps presented in Figures 2.1 – 2.4* demonstrate the variation in bus service frequencies across various days and times. Each map is a cumulative total of bus frequencies and shows the number of buses per hour in a combined two-way direction. Comparing the maps reveals stark differences in provision during weekday daytimes (0900-1600) and evening and weekend operations.
* The heatmaps have been taken from the 2021 BSIP. The pattern of services has not changed
significantly during this time.
Bus punctuality is below the target of 95% within the on-time window of up to one minute early to five minutes late. In 2023/24, only 78% of scheduled departures were recorded on time*. This is an improvement compared to the baseline in 2018/19 when only 69% were recorded on-time. The heatmaps have been taken from the 2021 BSIP. The pattern of services has not changed significantly during this time.
Traffic flows in Dorset are very seasonal, associated with the popularity of the area as a visitor destination. This can have a significant effect on local bus service punctuality in our urban and coastal areas with increasing traffic levels putting pressure on local bus operators’ ability to run reliably and punctually.
Large scale bus priority is not suitable in much of Dorset, especially in rural areas where traffic congestion and delays on bus routes are not common. Our street layouts often don’t provide the space to allow bus priority infrastructure to be constructed. Dorset will therefore require a targeted approach to bus priority to address the causes of delay and disruption and use a range of measures including bus lanes, bus gates, advanced signal priority, traffic management, road space re-balancing and placemaking interventions.
* Analyse Bus Open Data for 1st April 2023 to 31st March 2024. Based on 3,797,466 departures recorded.
Figure 2.5 presents an overview of the current core bus network. This network provides important connections between our main towns enabling people to access jobs, healthcare, retail, leisure and many other critical services.
In 2023/24 there were 5.83 million bus service kilometres operated(4). Commercially operated services accounted for 77% of this total, while the council supports 22% of the network. Compared to 2019/20, the network has shrunk by 15%, but has now stabilised since the COVID-19 pandemic.
The majority of Dorset council residents can access a town centre by public transport. In March 2023, 75% of residential households were within 30 minutes of a town centre by public transport.
(4) Bus Connectivity Assessment
Category | Number of services | KM's Operated | Passenger journeys |
---|---|---|---|
Commercial services | 38 | 4,502,431 | 4,776,747 |
LTA supported services (tendered and de minimis) services | 18 | 839,467 | 385,089 |
Mixed commercial/ supported services | 8 | 460,614 | 234,069 |
Community transport services (S19/22) | 3 | 28,344 | 14,500 |
Totals | 67 | 5,830,856 | 5,410,405 |
The average age of the Dorset bus fleet is 9.4 years old, according to the Bus Connectivity Assessment, as measured on 31st March 2024 . This has improved in recent years, reducing from an average age of 11 years in 2021. The share of the bus fleet meeting the latest EuroVI low emission standards has increased, now at 62% in March 2024, compared to only 9% in 2021.
There are currently no zero emission buses (ZEBs) in operation across the county. The council is committed to working with local bus operators to pursue government funding and introduce the first zero emission buses in Dorset.
In 2023/24 the council’s spend on public bus services was £2.5 million, excluding grants from the Department for Transport. This is an increase over spending in 2022/23 which was £2.3 million. Most of the spending goes on providing a core network of council supported services, with the rest of the budget going on bus stop infrastructure. Since 2021/22 the council’s public transport budget has increased by approximately 90%.
Surveys have highlighted that the bus network in Dorset is failing to meet the expectations and needs of many people to access education, health services, employment opportunities and other essential services.
There are low levels of satisfaction with bus services in Dorset. The National Highways and Transport Network Survey 2023 survey showed only 48% are satisfied with local bus services overall.
A 2021 BSIP survey highlighted several reasons that stop people using local buses. The main issues identified were:
The engagement activity with the public and local interest groups has provided a clear list of priorities for the BSIP. These are:
Dorset is an area with significant transport challenges that need to be overcome in order to transform public transport. Specific challenges include:
* Source: LG Inform benchmarking tool from the Local Government Association
This section sets out a delivery programme for the current financial year. This is based on the known funding currently available which includes the council’s budgeted spending and known government allocations.
Dorset Council will continue to subsidise core route services that complement the commercial network to ensure that connectivity across the area is maintained. We constantly monitor these routes, making changes where possible to best suit the needs of passengers – current and potential. We have introduced new contract arrangements on our supported services that give us greater control. Dorset council contracts the operation to bus companies to run these routes on our behalf, and we keep the revenue and decide service levels. There has been some success in recent months with the reintroduction of previously withdrawn services.
Since COVID-19, journey patterns have changed – weekend leisure travel has increased and the traditional Monday to Friday commuter market has decreased as more people work from home. As a first step, Dorset Council is looking to re-introduce Saturday services on the core network of supported routes as they are tendered. The first route to include Saturdays (from Blandford to Dorchester), is being trialled. If this is successful, and funding is available, we will roll this out to other routes on our core network.
Dorset Council is working with South Western Railway (SWR) and local transport groups to make improvements at targeted stations in South Dorset, on the Wareham to Weymouth stretch of the line. For bus passengers, these key improvements will include:
The Council, in partnership with Beryl Bike, operates a dockless bikeshare scheme in south east Dorset covering Parley Cross/Ferndown to Wimborne, Upton and Corfe Mullen. Following the success of this scheme, a new bikeshare scheme will launch in Dorchester, Weymouth, and Portland during 2024. Funding has come from CIL and Council capital funding. The funding will provide 30 marked docking bays and 121 electric bikes. There is capacity for expansion of the scheme should further funding be identified. Bikes can be hired by the minute, or day and will provide an essential means of connecting people to the public transport network for onward travel.
We are reviewing the information provided at bus stops in Dorset. Except for Weymouth and Portland, the majority of stops in the council area are maintained by Dorset Council, although some are managed by parish and town councils. We will introduce a programme to regularise Dorset stops and work with bus companies and town and parish councils to provide bus stops that reach a common standard across the whole area.
As a rural authority, Real Time Passenger Information (RTPI), is largely limited to stops in larger towns and communities where there is easy access to the electricity network. In future, new and replacement RTPI will be supplied by self-powered units that do not rely on an electrical supply. The units are cheaper to install and maintain. They can be installed in rural locations and their presence will be invaluable in giving passengers reassurance that the bus is on the way to them.
We will upgrade our publicity offer. Council maintained stops and shelters will have printed timetable information which will include a QR code with a link to live timetable information. Over the last year, Dorset Council has been modifying and reviewing the supported bus network of socially necessary core route (CR) services. This work is nearing completion and as a result, we have an interest in publicising these routes and their journey opportunities – as well as any day-to-day travel information affecting them. In the coming year we intend to pro-actively publicise and promote use of these ‘CR’ routes.
Only 78% of buses currently run on time in Dorset. The council has been awarded £580,000 from the Government’s Green Light Fund to upgrade signal equipment at several junctions. A programme to install signal priority enabled infrastructure at the Weymouth Harbour Junction and a series of improvements at junctions in Dorchester is now underway. The corridor between Portland, Weymouth and Dorchester has a frequent bus service and congestion levels are high. This programme will help to improve bus reliability and reduce delays on these routes.
Following a successful pilot using a group of 15 Young Adults leaving the Dorset Council care system, the council will look to introduce a Dorset Travel Card for use on our Core Route supported bus services. Initially, this will begin with internal use within the council where we have a duty to supply transport. Where there is a suitable Dorset Council supported route, users will be issued with a Dorset Travel Card for their transport requirement. They can also use the card on any CR services at weekends and during school holidays. Any Directorate that supports clients with travel arrangements will also be offered the opportunity to purchase passes. We anticipate that this will offset some of the transport costs. A wider roll out of this new scheme will begin from September 2024.
Wareham is the closest mainline rail station to the Purbeck Peninsular. There is a frequent bus service from Wareham through to Swanage that operates daily. We will work with SWR to add the station to those already offering Plus Bus ticketing for onward travel. This could reduce traffic on the A351 and as a result, lead to a decrease in high carbon emissions along a corridor that passes through protected environments.
The fleet profile in Dorset is improving but currently there are no Zero Emissions buses running in the Dorset Council area. We did not receive funding in either of the ZEBRA funding rounds but we will continue to work with operators to identify suitable routes so that we are ‘ready to go’ should further funding rounds open.
We are keen to encourage operators to provide Tap on Tap Off (TOTO) contactless payments and Audio and Visual announcements across their Dorset fleets. First Wessex and South Somerset has confirmed that they will have TOTO this year and Go South Coast has the capacity but currently it is only available in the Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole Council area. Audio visual announcements are more widely fitted. TOTO and audio visual announcements make travel easier for all passengers, including those with sight and hearing loss.
The council has the ambition to transform bus provision and drive increases in the number of people using local buses across Dorset. This is subject to being able to secure external funding to deliver key proposals. If external funding is secured, we will lift core network daytime frequencies, and increase evening and weekend frequencies. We will enhance rural accessibility and reduce isolation by expanding network coverage and integrating fixed and on-demand services. We will target a 100% zero-emission bus fleet by 2035, modernise infrastructure, prioritise buses to improve reliability, and exploring digital solutions for integrated ticketing and payments. Additionally, we will consider the potential of autonomous vehicles for future transport solutions in Dorset.
The following proposals will be prioritised and delivered according to the amount of external funding we may receive. Should no external funding sources be secured, delivery will concentrate on those improvements that can be introduced within existing funding structures, and through greater partnership working.
The transformation of the core bus network is the foundation of our long-term plans. We are looking to raise standards by increasing Monday to Friday daytime (7am – 7pm) frequencies and providing more evening and weekend services on our town services and core interurban network. This will provide greater opportunities for travel and give the public more confidence that bus services offer a viable alternative to private car use. This will be supported by bus stop infrastructure upgrades and bus priority measures as well as other traffic management interventions at key delay ‘hotspots’ to ensure that these services are attractive, fast and reliable. These upgrades will help to achieve mode shift and increase sustainable low-cost travel opportunities.
Good public transport is essential in rural areas to enable mobility and access to resources that are often not available locally to people without cars. We are seeking to move to a clearly defined hub and spoke network. Our plan includes an ambition to introduce feeder Demand Responsive Transport (DRT) to fill in rural gaps in the current local bus network. These services will focus on supporting greater levels of rural mobility by improving access to the core bus network and other modes of travel. The goal is to enhance accessibility, reduce rural isolation, and offer viable alternatives to private car use within Dorset.
Seed funding is required to provide the uplift to this commercial service to double the frequency Monday to Saturday. Additionally, an hourly Sunday service will be maintained all year round. Beyond the seed funding it is anticipated that the increased frequency will be continued commercially.
Seed funding is required to provide the uplift to this commercial service to double the frequency Monday to Saturday. An hourly Sunday service would further enhance this service. Beyond the seed funding it is anticipated that the increased frequency will be continued commercially.
S106 funding has been secured to improve local bus services and community transport. Developer contributions are expected from 2025 and will provide an uplift on this council supported service to provide three services an hour Monday to Friday. Enhanced weekend services will also increase the attractiveness of the service and ensure Shaftesbury residents can access rail services at the weekend.
Seed funding is required to provide the uplift to core route services to provide a regular minimum of an hourly service all year round across the network. This will improve connectivity, increase the attractiveness of the services and make accessing employment, and other essential activities much easier.
Supporting these bus service upgrades will be a complementary package of corridor infrastructure upgrades, which will see additional real time information screens installed, improved waiting shelters and replacement flags and poles installed at key locations to improve the user experience.
Creating a Saturday inter-urban network will target increased sustainable leisure travel, and this will provide a viable travel choice for employment trips and health appointments. In rural areas of Dorset, such services are not commercially viable and will require ongoing revenue support from the council and other partners to secure these services long-term.
The site has parking for up to 1,000 vehicles and is currently served by a local bus service that stops nearby. Revenue funding would enable the council to contract a frequent limited stop service directly from the site to Weymouth town centre. This would cater for residents and holidaymakers and reduce the number of cars entering the town centre area searching for parking.
Providing direct bus services would greatly improve access to local employment opportunities and sustainable travel options for people living in South East Dorset. The council will work with BCP Council and local bus operators to design new services to improve cross boundary routes and improve access to these key destinations.
We will look to simplify the core network by removing the need to change buses and make longer distance journeys more appealing and easier to make. This will be achieved by merging supported contracts when retendered and specifying vehicle standards to improve comfort and the overall user experience. Blandford and Dorchester will function as hubs providing onward travel opportunities, with new interchange facilities provided at mobility hubs.
The council is developing a pilot proposal to introduce on demand services to provide regular connections from rural villages into the core route network and other local bus routes or rail services. Users will interchange at mobility hubs providing a range of onward travel connections with integrated ticketing. The services will also improve access to tourist and leisure destinations. The council will work with a range of partners to deliver this pilot, including with BCP Council.
Working with Wiltshire Council, we aspire to develop a cross-boundary DRT service covering south west Wiltshire and north east Dorset, focusing around the Warminster, Gillingham and Shaftesbury areas. Initial discussions have taken place with both public and private sector partners, including regionally significant tourism and leisure destinations. The project will encourage partners to play an active role in the design and mobilisation of the scheme.
We aspire to introduce on demand services to provide connections with the X51/53 and CR6. Many rural villages in this area have no access to the bus network and would benefit from the greatly enhanced connectivity that feeder services would provide. The area experiences high levels of seasonal tourism and the new on-demand services would improve access within the Dorset National Landscape and to the World Heritage Jurassic Coast.
Working in partnership with the community and voluntary transport sectors we will develop the role of these services to enable essential journeys and unlock rural communities. The new core route contract model provides opportunities for community transport to feed passengers into hubs along the route. We will also investigate the potential of ‘Total Transport’ pilots.
We will develop a targeted approach to bus priority using a range of measures including bus lanes, bus gates, advanced signal priority, traffic management, road space re-balancing and placemaking interventions.
We will provide bus priority at known delay hotspots along high frequency, high use corridors, and include bus priority in the planning stage of any future highway improvement schemes.
We are currently in the early stages of engagement and planning, exploring traffic management, road space re-balancing and placemaking interventions for market towns, such as Blandford Forum, Bridport, Lyme Regis, Shaftesbury, Wimborne and Sherborne, including examining the potential for traffic reduction measures associated with bus priority. Town centre public realm and traffic management enhancements in Weymouth are also being explored to enhance active travel access to public transport hubs and provide bus priority measures.
Through the Enhanced Partnership the commercial bus companies will be expected to reinvest the savings achieved from greater fleet efficiency and greater ticket revenues into service improvements which may include, but is not limited to, new services, frequency enhancements, improved evening services, improved weekend services, fare caps / cheaper fare offers. These commitments will be set out within the Enhanced Partnership Scheme and enforced through the Enhanced Partnership governance.
The following targeted proposals aim to make buses faster and more reliable, competing with the car, and overall, more attractive:
Our ambition is to transform bus travel between Portland and Weymouth town centre by making bus services more reliable and more attractive as a sustainable mode of transport. The package is focused on encouraging mode shift and increasing bus patronage, through bus priority measures. Benefits will be delivered from shorter journey times, increased reliability, and reductions in traffic entering central areas of Weymouth.
There are significant commuter flows out of the Weymouth area, to Dorchester. However, bus punctuality is affected by traffic congestion, particularly in peak times and summer months. Bus priority measures including junction improvements and signal priority will provide a more reliable and faster bus service between the two towns.
Working in partnership with BCP Council, the DfT funded Transforming Cities Fund programme has delivered a programme of road improvements and bus stop upgrades along the Wimborne to Ferndown corridor. This has improved the standard of stops and upgraded junctions. Work to complete the network will address bus priority at Pennys Hill junction in Ferndown and Parley Cross Roads in West Parley. These schemes are currently in preliminary design.
Design work is underway in Blandford Forum, Bridport, Lyme Regis, Shaftesbury, Wimborne and Sherborne to develop traffic management, associated bus priority and public realm improvements. This could include signal priority, short sections of bus lane and relocation of on-street parking bays.
There is a significant need for bus priority measures on Ferry Road, Studland on the approach to the Sandbanks Ferry. This is a private road in the control of the ferry company. Traffic builds up at this location, particularly during the summer tourist season and bus priority would be greatly beneficial to ensure the reliable running of the Swanage to Bournemouth bus service. A scheme would involve the creation of bus cages as refuge areas, and the relocation of on-street parking.
The council and local bus operators are engaged with the development of the multi operator contactless ticketing project led by West Midlands Combined Authority. We actively support the development of a national back-office system that will support our future ambitions to introduce a multi operator ticketing product that will give users a more seamless travel experience, value for money and greater confidence to use public transport.
Subject to the roll out of a single national IT solution and the availability of external funding, we would seek to implement the scheme in Dorset as soon as viable to do so. The costs of implementation are currently unknown. We would work alongside local authorities across the region to develop a business plan to implement this solution.
The following proposals seek to address public and stakeholder priorities for simple to understand bus fares and tickets that can be used on all buses:
This initiative would support those continuing in full-time education, training, or applying for apprenticeships and those seeking/commencing full-time employment. The ticket will also help to address issues surrounding social isolation amongst younger people living in rural communities by providing an affordable, independent means of mobility. Introduced initially on the council’s supported services, a young person’s bus card will entitle holders to discounted fares.
We will work with all operators through the Enhanced Partnership, to reach agreement on a fare capping arrangement. Initially we will work with operators to agree the mechanisms for a flat fare town zone offering significantly reduced town fares within Weymouth and Portland. We will subsequently explore similar mechanisms for expanding to Dorchester, Bridport, and Gillingham. Without additional revenue funding in place these would need to commercially sustainable schemes.
Starting with our supported routes we will introduce a new family/group ticket offering travel discounts. We will work with all operators through the Enhanced Partnership to agree the mechanisms to introduce it across Dorset.
These proposals seek to address priorities for better information, interchange and waiting facilities. Our desire is to improve bus stop infrastructure on the core network, improving interchange facilities and improving first and last mile links, and providing easy to understand and accurate travel information. Significant marketing and promotional activities will highlight the new travel opportunities created and the transformational achievements being delivered.
Our proposals include:
To make the hub and spoke system work effectively, we will seek to create new mobility hubs, each tailored to network and area needs. These mobility hubs will provide access to a range of travel options and provide purpose-built facilities. A number of potential mobility hub locations are being explored, linked to other proposals set out in this BSIP, including at Weymouth, Dorchester, Blandford, Wareham, Bridport, and Gillingham.
We will work towards introducing a new travel portal to provide a new single source of public transport information. This will allow public transport users to plan journeys in confidence and receive live service updates. There is strong support from the public and stakeholders for an all-Dorset multi-modal travel app. Working in partnership with local bus operators, other transport providers, Traveline South West and technology companies a specification and a business case will be developed.
The council will continue to work with operators and stakeholders to ensure that all marked stops have a bespoke at stop timetable display with a standard ‘Dorset’ display. We will establish a minimum standard for branding that can be put on all buses and publicity. Through the Enhanced Partnership we will explore the development of a Dorset wide travel brand.
The council will work with local bus operators to introduce modern zero emission buses, including battery electric and hydrogen powered. This will help make bus travel an attractive way to travel and protect Dorset’s environment and improve air quality.
The overall aim is to convert 60% of buses across the county to zero emissions by 2030 with all remaining buses running at Euro VI or better and achieve a completely zero emission bus fleet by 2035.
Future zero emission bus roll out will focus on the following corridors or town centre areas:
Through the Enhanced Partnership the council will work with bus operators to prepare and submit funding applications for zero emission buses.
The Enhanced Partnership approach provides the best opportunity to work collaboratively to achieve higher vehicle standards for buses across Dorset. In collaboration, we will agree vehicle standards regarding facilities, comfort, safety, accessibility, ease of use, and technology. Key focus areas will include the roll-out of next stop announcements, CCTV, app-based tracking, exploring the options for bicycle facilities across the network, and enhanced on-board facilities such as USB ports.
The council seeks to make Dorset an exemplar for how flexible on demand services can increase rural accessibility to link up communities and reduce rural isolation. Efforts will continue to increase overall network coverage (routes and hours of operation) with the proposed mix of fixed and on demand feeder services, supported by the development of mobility hubs and Mobility as a Service (MaaS) provision. New community and voluntary sector models will be explored. The ambitious aim is to achieve 100% coverage across Dorset, ensuring that every community has access to the public transport network.
Modernising the bus fleet will be central to our climate change agenda, protecting Dorset’s environment and improving air quality. Whilst achieving greater modal shift will help deliver on these aims, moving to a fully decarbonised local bus fleet will also be important to combat carbon emissions from road transport. The council will continue to work with local bus to introduce modern battery electric and hydrogen fleets.
The council will continue to explore initiatives to increase the use of active travel networks for first and last mile connectivity, including initiatives such as joint ticketing opportunities between bus, cycle hire and any future micro-mobility schemes, and better cycle parking provision at/near key bus interchanges.
The council will explore digital models for delivering effective services and unlocking market knowledge. The Dorset travel portal will be able to provide a platform for integrated ticketing products and facilitate tap-on tap-off contactless payments. By working with other key stakeholders, such services could be expanded to give discounted rates/savings for bus users at key tourist locations and other suitable businesses/attractions across the county, all facilitated via a single platform, to help encourage further bus use and support the local economy.
The council notes recent advances in autonomous vehicle systems. The council will continue to review national and international pilots to determine suitability and potential applications in Dorset if the technology becomes proven to be a cost-effective solution in urban and more sparsely populated rural areas.
This section sets out our targets for improving bus services and how they will be monitored throughout the life of the BSIP and Enhanced Partnership.
The BSIP will be reviewed regularly so that it remains focused on transformation and meeting the needs of residents and visitors to Dorset. The BSIP is designed to be a living document and will be republished if the council and partner local bus operators feel that this is necessary. Future reviews and refreshes will be undertaken in conjunction with reviews every 5 years of the joint Local Transport Plan.
Progress will be reported annually using data collected for the DfT Bus Connectivity Assessment. Progress reports will be available on the council’s website on the following page: Bus Service Improvement Plan - Dorset Council. Progress will be reported to the Enhanced Partnership Board, Bus User and Stakeholder Group and to the council’s Place and Resources Scrutiny Committee.
The following indicators will be used to monitor bus network performance across the council area and chart progress.
Long term targets for significant growth will be dependent on funding being available to deliver frequency enhancements and introduce new services, and other currently unfunded elements of the BSIP.
Indicator | Measure | 2023/24 (Baseline) | By 2030 |
Number of people travelling by bus | Number of single trips per annum | 5.4 million | +40% |
Core network mileage operated | Distance operated on core bus network | 5.83 million | +25% |
Accessibility by public transport | Proportion of house- holds within 30 minutes of a town by public transport | 75% | +10 |
Bus punctuality | % of buses operating on time (-1 minute to +5 minute window) |
78% | +17% |
Local bus fleet emissions | Percentage of bus fleet zero emissions standard or higher | 0% | +60% |
Customer satisfaction | Percentage satisfied with bus services |
48% | +10% |
A strategic document setting out a vision and plan for enhancing bus services in a specific area.
A ‘CR’ prefix on a bus service number used on some bus routes in Dorset indicates that the ser- vice is entirely subsidised by Dorset Council and forms part of our ‘core route network’.
Flexible services that provide shared transport to users in a defined area. Routes can have a combination of flexible or timetabled journeys based on demand.
An agreement between a local authority and the bus operators in its area, to deliver a joined-up network of bus services.
The LTA administers registered bus services that run in their area. In England (outside the metro- politan areas and London), it is either the Unitary Authority or the County Council for that area.
An LTP sets out transport strategy and outlines a programme of measures to be delivered over the short, medium and long term. It covers all types of transport including public transport, active travel, private motor vehicles, roads and freight.
This national strategy sets out the vision and opportunity to deliver better bus services for passengers across England, through ambitious and far-reaching reform of how services are planned and delivered.
Provides information about public transport services in ‘real time’. This allows passengers to see which services are due to arrive at stops and what time they are expected.
Passengers tap on and off a bus using a smart card, contactless bank card or smart phone and the best value fare is calculated in the background. A price limit per day can be set.
A journey planner for travel using public transport across the South West of England and beyond.
One of seven sub-national transport bodies aiming to transform strategic transport links across their respective areas, providing the infrastructure needed to drive economic growth