Tuesday, April 11, 2023

TT #182: Buses that didn't run Good Friday (and the ones that should have)

Along with the usual traffic hold-ups public holidays add another layer of complexity to the bus user's life. This is because buses run to different timetables and in some cases not at all on those days.

Plans in 2006 to introduce standard rules for what buses ran on public holidays were only partly carried through. Hence there remains confusion as to what buses run on public holidays . 

It's so complex that PTV doesn't always have much of an idea themselves or get published information clear and correct

Arrangements for Good Friday are a bit easier to understand than for some other public holidays. 

The general rule is that buses run a Sunday timetable. If a bus route does not run Sundays then it will not run on Good Friday. This rule applies for all but two routes (681 and 682). In these two cases buses run Sundays but not public holidays. 

Hence, unlike most other public holidays where other quirks exist, the main reason for buses not running that you think ought to run are because they don't run on Sunday.

The list

Here's a list of all Melbourne's daytime bus routes that didn't run Good Friday. Beside their numbers is listed a reason for them not running.  


201 No Sunday (or Saturday) service - university shuttle

202 No Sunday (or Saturday) service - university shuttle

236 No Sunday service

237 No Sunday service

271 No Sunday service

273 No Sunday service

281 No Sunday service

284 No Sunday service

285 No Sunday service

301 No Sunday (or Saturday) service - university shuttle

303 No Sunday (or Saturday) service - peak route

309 No Sunday (or Saturday) service - peak route

318 No Sunday (or Saturday) service - peak route

343 No Sunday (or Saturday) service

350 No Sunday (or Saturday) service - university service

389 No Sunday (or Saturday) service

401 No Sunday (or Saturday) service - university shuttle

403 No Sunday (or Saturday) service - university shuttle

404 No Sunday service

407 No Sunday service

414 No Sunday service

415 No Sunday service

417 No Sunday (or Saturday) service - industrial route

431 No Sunday service

468 No Sunday service

490 No Sunday service

503 No Sunday service

506 No Sunday service

509 No Sunday (or Saturday) service - shopper route

511 No Sunday (or Saturday) service - peak route

512 No Sunday service

526 No Sunday service

531 No Sunday (or Saturday) service

536 No Sunday service

538 No Sunday service

542 No Sunday service (half)

546 No Sunday (or Saturday) service

548 No Sunday service

549 No Sunday service

550 No Sunday service

551 No Sunday (or Saturday) service

558 No Sunday service

559 No Sunday service

601 No Sunday (or Saturday) service - university shuttle

609 No Sunday (or Saturday) service

612 No Sunday service

671 No Sunday service

672 No Sunday service

675 No Sunday (or Saturday) service

677 No Sunday service 

680 No Sunday (or Saturday) service

681 Runs Sundays but not public holidays

682 Runs Sundays but not public holidays

686 No Sunday (or Saturday) service

687 No Sunday service

689 No Sunday service

694 No Sunday service (duplicates other routes)

696 No Sunday (or Saturday) service - shopper route

697 No Sunday service

699 No Sunday service

705 No Sunday (or Saturday) service - industrial route

706 No Sunday (or Saturday) service - shopper route

740 No Sunday (or Saturday) service - peak route

745 No Sunday (or Saturday) service

757 No Sunday (or Saturday) service

758 No Sunday (or Saturday) service

766 No Sunday service

768 No Sunday (or Saturday) service - university shuttle

772 No Sunday service

773 No Sunday service

774 No Sunday (or Saturday) service

776 No Sunday service

777 No Sunday (or Saturday) service - shopper route

778 No Sunday (or Saturday) service - industrial route

783 No Sunday (or Saturday) service

786 No Sunday service

787 No Sunday service

795 No Sunday (or Saturday) service

800 No Sunday service

802 No Sunday (or Saturday) service

804 No Sunday service

814 No Sunday service

821 No Sunday (or Saturday) service (to be deleted)

823 No Sunday (or Saturday) service

838 No Sunday service 

840 No Sunday service

842 No Sunday (or Saturday) service - shopper route

844 No Sunday service

857 No Sunday service

885 No Sunday service


FlexiRide Croydon No Sunday service

FlexiRide Lilydale No Sunday service

FlexiRide Mooroolbark No Sunday service

FlexiRide Rowville No Sunday (or Saturday) service

FlexiRide Rosebud No Sunday (or Saturday) service

FlexiRide Melton Operates but with a Sunday start time

List summary

When you add all this up you get 95 bus routes that don't operate Good Friday. These range all the way from tiny once or twice-daily weekday shopper routes to services along major highways like Princes (800), Nepean (823) and Hume (531). 

Reasons for not running and the number of routes can be attributed to the following: 

Peak commuter route (5)

Shopper route (5)

University route (8)

Industrial route (3)

Residential area route with Sunday and Saturday service but not PHs 2 

Residential area route with no Sunday service 52

Residential area route with no Sunday or Saturday service 20

Out of the 95 there's 21 special routes that you would likely never run Good Friday (or Christmas Day). These are weekday only peak, industrial or university routes. The only public holiday exceptions you might make are for university routes as universities tend not to observe state public holidays. 

The remaining 74, highlighted in yellow, are routes that a 7 day roll-out program would consider upgrading to run daily (including all public holidays). This list includes a few duplicative routes like 694 that you would never upgrade and would likely delete. Conversely it includes occasional routes (like 609 in Alphington and 745 on Scoresby Rd) that serve major roads or corridors that should get upgraded to more than the handful of trips currently run. 

A resumption of the 2006 MOTC program would likely involve staged roll-outs so the job could be entirely done in about two years (at a similar pace to that done in the 2006 - 2010 period). 

However unlike the MOTC program there could be a sharper attention to priority when sequencing, with the highest used or highest needs area routes like 281, 284, 404, 414, 503, 506, 536, 538, 546, 559, 612, 675, 774, 800, 802, 804, 814, 844, 885 etc being upgraded first. 681 and 682 in Rowville are also 'quick wins' since they already run 7 days and just need public holidays added. 

Other public holidays

Except for Routes 681 and 682 (which do not run on any public holiday) it is common for bus routes to run a Saturday timetable on public holidays other than Christmas Day and Good Friday. But not always. There remain about 20-odd bus routes that do run Saturdays but do not run on public holidays for which a Saturday timetable would normally apply. 

Because standardisation was never complete this is ripe for data and information errors, and do PTV often make them! More in this thread.

Even where bus routes do run a Saturday timetable there are oddities carried over from when shops closed around noon. Despite Saturday afternoon trading being legalised about 35 years ago many bus timetables have yet to get updates that reflect this. Hence service may shut down or reduce in frequency after about 1pm. This carries through to most public holidays. That includes ANZAC Day where buses may run in the morning when many shops are shut but not run in the afternoon when many open. 

This pattern is most prevalent in low income taken-for-granted historically safe Labor areas like Campbellfield, Reservoir, Springvale and Dandenong which have received very few bus improvements since John Brumby left office. 

More detail on all this here.


The route with more trips when the shops are shut 

Route 695F to Fountain Gate is the only bus route in Melbourne that has more service on Good Friday than any other Friday (or for that matter any other weekday). 

This is because 695F only runs after 4pm on a regular Friday and doesn't run at all on other weekdays. However it runs morning to night on a Sunday (whose timetable it uses on Good Friday). Fountain Gate is closed on Good Friday. Hence the most Friday trips run on the one day that the shops are closed.

This appears to be because 695F was conceived as a Fountain Gate shopper route with service on late night shopping Fridays and weekends only. Network simplification, if attempted in the area, would likely provide for more uniform 7 day services.  


Conclusion

A big deal can be made of bus network reform, with it being the centrepiece of Victoria's Bus Plan launched nearly 2 years ago. 

Even though it already had bus planners on staff, the Department of Transport and Planning has established a separate bus reform team, presumably to go bigger and bolder than before. Reform is desirable but success depends on budget funding and community acceptance. 

Winning both is hard as recurrent funding is hard to obtain and radical reform proposals can create 'losers' who are typically more vocal than the larger number who might benefit from a change. 

This is possibly why, of the three major bus reform programs in the 2006-2010 period (a. minimum service standards, b. SmartBus rollout and c. network reviews) only the first two achieved more than half of what they set out to do. 

Network reviews were potentially controversial with the need for consultation drawing out implementation time-lines further. By then the government had run out of money and/or shifted policy focus to fixing (by then) crowded and unreliable trains. Despite most (not all) review recommendations having merit, a far lower proportion of them happened than with the minimum standards or SmartBus.

The lesson from that era is that long reform processes can fall victim to wider political and budgetary circumstances, with initial momentum being lost, not to be recovered for many years. This remains a risk today, with today's challenge being interest rate pressures on borrowings (often major projects conceived when money was cheap).   

Mitigating that risk involves keeping reform going, even if small and cheap when finance is tight. This also means tight targeting to maximise benefits and a willingness to compromise or stage work. Seven day service and standardised public holiday patterns on popular routes in high needs areas is one of the most cost-effective and uncontroversial bus network reforms possible. Picking up on the start made in 2006, it would go a long way to creating a more usesful dependable network with wide benefits. 

See other Timetable Tuesday items here


3 comments:

Malcolm M said...

At least Melbourne has timetables on its bus and tram stops. In Adelaide these have been removed and you need to look it up from the website. Not everyone has a mobile phone to do this. They could have made it simple like a QR code at each stop that would tell you the next service. In London for example (and probably Aus cites as well) one in seven residents don't have a suitable mobile phone, and probably a higher proportion of bus users. Keep up the timetables on stops Melbourne.

Alan said...

I was looking for your thoughts on Melbourne's "peak-only" bus services, in particular, routes 303 and 318 which run 4 trips each way in weekday peaks only. However, this is the only post I can find that mentions them.

I had reason to catch the 303 bus outbound recently a couple of times recently. On a Tuesday evening the bus was around half full, while on Friday evening there were maybe 10 passengers. The bus pulls into Doncaster P&R, but this stop saw only one or two alight. The busiest stop was the one immediately after the bus turns off the freeway at Middleborough Road, Blackburn North! On the Friday I stayed on until the end, and only one other passenger stayed on beyond Mitcham Road.

On a Friday evening recently, I saw an outbound 318 bus go along Hoddle St with only three or four passengers on board. This was a Friday, admittedly, but even with 3 times the passenger load, it would seem to be a lightly-used service.

This made me wonder whether these routes were retained as token services because the political cost of deleting them altogether was too great. Certainly it seems hard to justify running an express bus from the City to Blackburn North which is within easy reach of (and already well served by) rail feeder buses.

Would love to see a full post on your thoughts on these routes and how they came to be!

Peter Parker said...

Thanks Alan. Yes, a full post would be good but for now I offer the following:

There's way fewer peak special routes than there used to be. Especially in the Doncaster area where some of them got rolled into regular services (some SmartBus) in 2010 with further simplifications in 2014. The 303 was deleted but was eventually reinstated after political pressure. And yes middle-class CBD commuters are more politically vocal and influential than the average invalid pensioner or casual worker in Noble Park who has fruitlessly waited 30+ years for their 800 to get 7 day service.

With its large rail network peak buses have played a relatively small role in Melbourne, especially compared to Adelaide and Brisbane who either have weak rail networks and/or a planning culture that favours duplicative rather than connective networks. Networks that have done best after the pandemic are more connective / better service all day. As opposed to peak heavy networks that are only good for white collar CBD commuters (who can very likely work from home).

Special peak services add complexity and present an opportunity cost, especially if they involve inefficient counterpeak empty bus movements. They also mean the regular network is less frequent than desirable in the peaks. However they may still have a role when there are large passenger numbers wanting to go to the city and rail options are poorly developed.