Cumbria Chamber of Commerce is asking Transport Secretary Grant Shapps to set up ‘bus commuter corridors’ to enable job hunters in Barrow, Carlisle and West Cumbria to find work in the Lake District.

It says that frequent, subsidised buses running into the Lakes from early in the morning until late at night would allow those without a car to fill jobs in hospitality and tourism.

Chamber Chief Executive Rob Johnston said: “Unemployment in Cumbria has doubled under lockdown and is set to go higher as the Government’s furlough scheme is withdrawn.

“We need to find ways to help people in the areas with the highest unemployment travel to where the jobs are.

“The Lake District economy relies heavily on EU migrant workers but the Government’s post-Brexit immigration policy will make it impossible for migrants to fill lower-paid roles.

“The obvious solution is for Cumbrians to take these jobs but, as things stand, only car owners can do that because there are no buses at times to suit shift workers.”

In a letter to Mr Shapps, the Chamber points out that Cumbria County Council ended all bus subsidies in 2014. Surviving services in the Lakes are geared to the needs of visitors rather than commuters.

Rob said: “When we asked businesses about transport issues, we heard time and again that the lack of bus services makes it harder to recruit.

“Some large employers lay on transport for staff. We know of a hotel near Ambleside that spends £120,000 a year doing that. But it isn’t an option for smaller establishments. They don’t have the numbers to make running their own transport viable.

“We need bus services at times to suit shift workers and we need the fares to be affordable for people on modest incomes. Cumbria gets a raw deal at the moment because our buses have to pay their way without public subsidy.

“So the four-mile journey from Ambleside to Grasmere costs £4.90 while in London, where buses receive generous taxpayer support, a four-mile journey is only £1.50.”

The Chamber’s letter calls for seed-corn funding to get commuter bus corridors up and running but says that, once established, rising take-up should reduce the need for government support.

Rob added: “We’ve spoken to Stagecoach and they are keen to see this happen. We hope that the Transport Secretary will take our ideas on board because they fit in very well with the Government’s ‘levelling-up’ agenda.

“Commuter bus corridors are a win-win. They offer job opportunities to those who have been made redundant during the pandemic and they help the visitor economy adapt to the Government’s post-Brexit immigration policy.”

Notes to editors

Photo of Rob Johnston attached.

The Government’s post-Brexit immigration policy, which applies from January 1, sets a minimum salary threshold of £25,600 a year for migrants taking jobs in the UK, reduced to £20,480 for those in specified shortage occupations.

Buses in London received a subsidy of £722m from Transport for London in 2019-20. Buses in Cumbria are not subsidised (excluding temporary payments to operators during Covid-19).

The Chamber’s letter to Grant Shapps is here.

For more information call Julian Whittle at Cumbria Chamber of Commerce on 07871 988735.