South Yorkshire Transport
South Yorkshire Transport (SYT) was a bus operator that provided services around South Yorkshire and outlying areas. The company was formed as an 'arms-length' successor of the South Yorkshire Passenger Transport Executive (SYPTE) in 1986, which was broken up as a result of the deregulation of bus services. South Yorkshire Transport operated buses in and around Doncaster, Rotherham and Sheffield with some services extending to Chesterfield, Leeds and Barnsley.
Founded | 1986 |
---|---|
Defunct | 1998 |
Headquarters | Doncaster |
Service area | South Yorkshire |
Service type | Bus operator |
Depots | 8 |
Fleet |
|
In November 1993 South Yorkshire Transport, now rebranded Mainline, was sold in a management buyout.[1] A 20% stake in the company was divested to FirstBus from the Stagecoach Group in 1995, and eventually in 1998, First purchased Mainline, later rebranding the operation to First South Yorkshire.
History
The South Yorkshire Passenger Transport Executive (SYPTE) was formed in 1974 under the provisions of the Local Government Act 1972, and until 1986, ran a majority of bus services in South Yorkshire. In 1986, bus services were deregulated following the passage of the Transport Act 1985, with local authorities in the United Kingdom required to sell the operations of their passenger transport executives (PTEs) to private companies. South Yorkshire PTE was rebranded to 'South Yorkshire Transport' (stylised as South Yorkshire's Transport) shortly before deregulation, with a large red band and smaller red and brown stripes being applied onto buses in the existing brown and cream livery, as well as new 'SYT' logos replacing the PTE's 'flying duck' logo on all company property.[2][3]: 132
In the months prior to deregulation, fare increases of up to 300% were enacted and staff redundancies across the company were carried out in order to cover running costs commercially. This included the withdrawal or conversion of conductor operated buses to one-person operation by 1986, which saw conductors either trained to become drivers or be made redundant from the company.[3]: 132
On 26 October 1986, deregulation went into effect, and South Yorkshire Transport, now established as an 'arms-length' operator by the local authority, began operations. However, the company was not sold into privatisation immediately following deregulation, causing South Yorkshire to become the first former PTE to be issued an ultimatum to privatise or be broken up by the Department of Transport in 1989.[4] South Yorkshire Transport was eventually sold in a management buyout in November 1993, following the relaxing of another ultimatum which stipulated that operators must be sold by the end of the year to retain the complete proceeds of their sale.[5][1]
Throughout the late-1980s and early-1990s, South Yorkshire Transport faced serious competition from a number of independent operators and group subsidiaries in and around Sheffield. The most notorious of these included Sheffield Omnibus, Andrews and Yorkshire Terrier, which was founded by former SYT employees.[6] Like many post-deregulation operators at the time, South Yorkshire Transport promptly began to operate midibuses in competition with these other independents in 1988, known as the 'Eager Beaver' and 'Little Nipper' services, initially operated using a mixed fleet of new and former Lincoln City Transport Reeve Burgess Beaver-bodied Renault 50 series minibuses.[7][8] 240 of these Reeve Burgess/Dodge midibuses would eventually be acquired for these competing routes between 1987 and 1991 by South Yorkshire Transport.[3]: 138 At its peak in 1992, 13 operators were running competing services in and around Sheffield, with up to 350 buses an hour entering the city centre.[9]
South Yorkshire Transport would eventually go on to acquire the business of some of their competitors, including Sheffield United Tours (SUT) and Sheafline, who subsequently became a merged subsidiary of the company following an aborted attempt three years prior before eventually having their operations absorbed into SYT.[10][11] South Yorkshire's acquisitions, creating an operating area of 1.65% of the United Kingdom, had previously attracted the attention of the Office of Fair Trading and the Monopolies and Mergers Commission, with the company being referred to the House of Lords and the mergers of both SUT and Sheaf Line being ruled as against the public interest at the time.[12]
However, competition between Andrews, Sheffield Omnibus and Yorkshire Terrier would still remain. Yorkshire Terrier and Andrews would eventually be purchased by Yorkshire Traction, who themselves were eventually purchased by the Stagecoach Group to become Stagecoach Yorkshire. Sheffield Omnibus, meanwhile, would compete independently until 1995, managing to purchase fleets of Alexander PS types on Volvo chassis and Alexander-bodied Leyland Olympians on lease before it was merged into the Traction Group with Andrews.[13][14]
South Yorkshire Transport began the process of branding its operations to 'Mainline' in June 1989, adopting a predominantly yellow livery with regional identifiers for its Sheffield, Doncaster and Rotherham divisions initially as route branding.[15][16] These regional identifiers were then dropped in 1992 and the Mainline name was adopted across the company in a £750,000 pre-privatisation publicity drive, with a new red and yellow livery combining the blue and silver elements of the Doncaster and Rotherham liveries being introduced to the bus fleet.[17] On 7 June 1993, prior to South Yorkshire Transport's sale into privatisation, the company was renamed 'Mainline Group Ltd'.[3]: 139
Mainline was eventually sold to the FirstGroup. The Stagecoach Group had purchased a 20% stake in the company in 1995, however the Office of Fair Trading ordered this stake to be divested from the group in January 1996. The 20% stake would be acquired by FirstBus, who would later purchase the entirety of the company for £29.7 million in 1998.[18][19][20] By 2000, a new group livery was introduced and the company was renamed First South Yorkshire, phasing out both the Mainline name and livery.
Operations
Doncaster
Buses in Doncaster were based at two garages in the borough. The main depot was the former Doncaster Corporation garage on Leicester Avenue, close to Doncaster Racecourse, where a experimental trolleybus had been previously trialled before deregulation.[21] A second, smaller garage was located on Bootham Lane in Dunscroft.
In the 1980s, a new workshop building was erected at the rear of the yard behind the Leicester Avenue garage. In the early 1990s, the main depot building was demolished and the land was sold. This made way for a new Wickes DIY store. The new workshop, yard and a small section of the old garage building, which contained a bus-wash facility, remained.
Rotherham
Buses in Rotherham were based at a large garage on Midland Road, which was also home to the central engineering works of South Yorkshire Transport. In 1992, the Midland Road works were contracted to refurbish 220 of London Buses' AEC Routemasters with new drivelines and interiors.[22] Following the sale of the company to the FirstGroup, the Midland Road works were retained as the Commercial Unit for the repainting and refurbishment of the group's buses.[23] The Midland Road garage and First's Commercial Unit were both closed in 2017,[24] with demolition of the Midland Road site commencing in 2023 following the site's use as an armed police training facility and a COVID-19 mass testing centre.[25]
Sheffield
Buses in Sheffield were initially operated from five garages; East Bank, Greenland Road, Halfway, Herries Road and Leadmill. The latter two were closed by Mainline in 1994, while East Bank garage was closed in 1994 but later reopened in the same year and renamed Olive Grove.[3]: 139 [26]
Ipswich
A newly privatised Mainline had planned to operate services in Ipswich in competition with local operator Ipswich Buses in 1994. Ten Volvo B6s with Plaxton Pointer bodywork were purchased and planned to operate on routes ran by Ipswich Buses to compete for passengers, intended to be based at a Volvo commercial dealership. However, Mainline soon decided not to commence services and pulled out of Ipswich, selling their operations and the ten Volvo B6s to Eastern Counties.[27][28]
Fleet
An initial fleet of over 1,000 buses, including 321 Dennis Dominators, 274 Leyland Atlanteans and 176 Daimler Fleetlines, 170 MCW Metrobuses, as well as some Volvo Ailsas, Leyland Nationals and Leyland-DAB articulated buses were inherited from SYPTE.[29] By the time of First's purchase of the company in 1998, this had been reduced to over 700 buses.[20]
Prior to the acquisition of Mainline by the FirstGroup, the company had amassed a total of 180 Volvo B10M single deckers with Alexander PS type bodywork from 1990 to 1996. These were initially acquired to lower running costs and reduce vandalism, and by 1996, Mainline were the second-largest operator of the type in the United Kingdom, with only the Stagecoach Group operating more nationwide.[30][31] Following comparative trials against a Dennis Dart with Northern Counties Paladin bodywork two years prior, Mainline also purchased 35 Volvo B6s with Plaxton Pointer bodywork, as well as a further 10 for the cancelled Ipswich operation.[3]: 138–139
The company acquired its first low-floor buses in January 1996. These were eleven Wright Crusaders on the Volvo B6LE chassis. All but two of these would be branded with 'easiaccess' branding, with the latter two being branded for Goole town services contracted to Mainline by Humberside County Council.[32]
See also
References
- "South Yorkshire Transport Authority sells off bus company to staff". Local Government Chronicle. London. 18 November 1993. Retrieved 7 September 2016.
- "Tyne and Wear fears". Commercial Motor. Temple Press. 9 November 1985. p. 21. Retrieved 6 October 2021.
- Hellewell, D. Scott (July 1996). South Yorkshire's Transport, 1974-1995. Glossop: Venture Publications. pp. 132–133, 138–139. ISBN 1-898432-33-3. Retrieved 17 October 2021.
- "SYT get ultimatum". Commercial Motor. Temple Press. 9 November 1989. p. 18. Retrieved 6 October 2021.
- Roberts, C. C. (2000). "Employee involvement in UK bus company ownership in the post deregulation era". p. 8. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.737.7181.
- "Ex-SYT busmen set to compete". Commercial Motor. Temple Press. 25 August 1988. p. 18. Retrieved 5 October 2021.
- "SYT uses minis in war with privates". Commercial Motor. Temple Press. 2 March 1989. p. 22. Retrieved 5 October 2021.
- "South Yorks beavers away". Commercial Motor. Temple Press. 24 August 1989. p. 18. Retrieved 5 October 2021.
- Millar, Alan (7 March 1992). "Deregulation means mayhem for steel city". Coach & Bus Week. No. 3. Peterborough: Emap. pp. 26–27.
- "Mainline rationalises subsidiary". Coach & Bus Week. No. 75. Peterborough: Emap. 24 July 1993. p. 8.
- "SYT told to divest". Bus & Coach Buyer. No. 67. Spalding: Glen-Holland Limited. 10 August 1990. p. 1.
- Parker, Jonathan; Majumdar, Adrian (22 September 2016). UK Merger Control. Bloomsbury Publishing. pp. 93–94. ISBN 978-1-5099-0491-4. Retrieved 5 October 2021.
- "Volvo B10Ms form new vehicle intake". Coach & Bus Week. No. 39. Peterborough: Emap. 14 November 1992. p. 8.
- Webb, Mary; Clarke, Jackie (2007). Jane's Urban Transport Systems. Jane's Information Group. p. 395. ISBN 978-0-7106-2816-9. Retrieved 6 October 2021.
- "Double-deckers battle". Commercial Motor. Temple Press. 22 June 1989. p. 18. Retrieved 5 October 2021.
- "Mainline in Doncaster". Commercial Motor. Temple Press. 20 September 1990. p. 18. Retrieved 5 October 2021.
- "SYT rebranding operations in run-up to privatisation". Coach & Bus Week. No. 19. Peterborough: Emap. 27 June 1992. p. 6.
- "FirstBus takes over Stagecoach stake". Coach & Bus Week. No. 201. Peterborough: Emap. 20 January 1996. p. 6.
- "FirstBus gets green light". The Herald. Glasgow. 3 January 1996. Retrieved 6 October 2021.
- "Investment Column: FirstGroup can travel further". The Independent. London. 1 June 1998. Archived from the original on 24 May 2022. Retrieved 6 October 2021.
- "Trolleybus starts day at races". Commercial Motor. Temple Press. 20 July 1985. p. 23. Retrieved 24 October 2023.
- "RM is reborn at last". Coach & Bus Week. No. 3. Peterborough: Emap. 7 March 1992. p. 13.
- Evans, Gareth (23 December 2014). "In the works". Coach & Bus Week. No. 1169. Peterborough: Emap. pp. 24–28. Retrieved 5 October 2021.
- "First proposes to close depot at Rotherham". RouteOne. 18 October 2016. Retrieved 5 October 2021.
- "Former Rotherham bus depot set for demolition". Rotherham News. 16 August 2021. Retrieved 29 August 2023.
- Walsh, David (16 August 2021). "Huge party to mark 60 years of Sheffield bus depot - including chance to drive a bus". Sheffield Star. Retrieved 5 October 2021.
- "Bus wars loom for municipal operators". Coach & Bus Week. No. 128. Peterborough: Emap. 6 August 1994. p. 5.
- "Ipswich Buses Limited". Ipswich Transport Museum. Archived from the original on 2 March 2012. Retrieved 7 October 2021.
- "Bus fleet survey". Commercial Motor. Temple Press. 7 December 1985. Retrieved 27 August 2021.
- "PS-bodied B10Ms preferred". Coach & Bus Week. No. 201. Peterborough: Emap. 20 January 1996. p. 28.
- "Switching to single-decks". Commercial Motor. Temple Press. 17 May 1990. p. 18. Retrieved 8 September 2021.
- "Easiaccess Crusaders". Bus & Coach Buyer. No. 342. Spalding: Glen-Holland Limited. 26 January 1996. p. 23.