Alternative Media Group

Alternative Media Group RSS feed

City News News Article

Council reluctant to expand free shuttle service

Author:
Staff Writer
Posted:
Friday, 21 November 2008

BY ALEXANDRA BEECH
Council will not increase its funding for the popular Village to Village shuttle bus next year, despite increased passenger numbers which have meant the free service is now stretched to the limit.
Last Friday, passengers were left waiting at Poet’s Corner in Glebe because there were too many people to fit on the buses. South Sydney Community Transport then had to secure an extra bus to carry the remaining commuters.
“My driver’s worst fear [is] that he turns up and he’s already got a full bus and there’s two people waiting to go to the hospital,” said SSCT manager Jane Rogers.
Ms Rogers lobbied council for an extension of the service to five days a week but said it was likely the extra runs would not be sponsored and they would get less money for promotions.
“Last year it was more expensive because it was a lot of my time and a lot of promotion to get it out there’ What I originally asked for was a five day service for the Glebe run and a two day service for the Woolloomooloo,” Ms Rogers said.
The buses currently run on Thursdays and Fridays, providing free travel for the inner city’s transport-disadvantaged residents.
The service has grown in popularity since 2007, with 726 passengers using the Redfern to Glebe run and 882 using the Redfern to Woolloomooloo run last September.
Council spokesman Josh MacKenzie said it was proposed that council fund the program again next year, but an extension of days was unlikely.
“The recommendation to those councillors is to continue funding the service in its current way,” Mr MacKenzie said.
For Village to Village passenger Grace Hiaka the extra days would be welcome, as she is already enjoying the benefits of the bus service.
“I can go to the hospital, I can go to the market and get fresh fruit and vegetables’ it’s a godsend,” Ms Hiaka said.
The service was created to make up for a lack of transport available to less mobile passengers from Woolloomooloo, Potts Point, Glebe, Darlinghurst, Surry Hills and Redfern to the hospital and shops.
The proposal to continue sponsorship of the program will be resolved by council next Monday [to be updated after council meets on Monday].
 

Post a comment

  • Bourke Street bike battle goes to court

    The City of Sydney claimed last week that a class action over the Bourke Road cycleway in Alexandria had collapsed when it was revealed that instead ...
    Read more

    Bourke Street Surry Hills residents opposed the coming cycleway with stencils marking parking spots which would be lost

  • Freudian antics on election day

    Party scrutineers at Sydney polling booths tell some head-scratching stories of what people did with their ballots. On one table alone in the Town Hall, ten papers ...
    Read more

    Polling day at St Canices Church, Kings Cross - too much information or not enough?

  • Artists brew up a plan for CUB site

    The lone structure remaining from Broadway's Carlton and United Breweries may become a blank canvas for four contemporary installation artists. Sydney artists Jennifer Turpin and Michaelie Crawford ...
    Read more

    CUB

  • Yes it is art

    East Sydney photographer and beekeeper George Schwarz composed this image around a litter of stillborn mice found by his partner Charis under some floorboards in an ...
    Read more

    'Mother' by George Schwarz, at the Stills Gallery now

  • But is it art?

    The sight of this unusual barrow being pushed past the NSW Art Gallery was enough for me to interrupt my early morning bike ride to find ...
    Read more

    Tessa Zettel and Karl Khoe with their ‘one-off quality experience’. Inset: a tiny native bee (near a small buckle for scale)

Arts & Entertainment