Whanganui's new bus service begins next month. Photo / NZME
Whanganui's new bus service begins next month. Photo / NZME
Whanganui’s leading public transport advocate says replacing buses with vans means higher costs and less comfort.
Anthonie Tonnon, Whanganui District Council’s representative on Horizons Regional Council’s passenger transport committee, said using smaller vehicles was the most common query from the public.
He said vans were trialled in Whanganui in the1990s.
“Because we didn’t have extra drivers, when the Toyota HiAce appeared at the bus stop with seven people on board and three people were waiting at the stop, the van simply had to keep going,” he said.
Speaking to the district council’s operations and performance committee last month, Tonnon said buses also allowed people to be comfortable with strangers.
He told the Chronicle this week control of public transport passed from city councils to regional councils in 1991.
Before that, Greyhound buses operated in the city.
“The new Manawatū-Wanganui Regional Council [later Horizons] put out a tender to run some public transport in Whanganui and gave it to Wanganui Taxis.
“A taxi-bus service began, running Toyota HiAces, and quite soon there were problems, because you went from a bus with 20 or 30 people on it, to a van that only fitted 10 or 11.”
Tonnon said by the end of the 1990s, it became clear the taxi-bus model was unsustainable and Horizons awarded the contract to Tranzit.
That company started out using smaller buses but quickly moved up, he said.
“There is a reason every large city in New Zealand uses the sized buses we do.
“That’s because it’s the cheapest way to do it.”
Mike Tweed is a multimedia journalist at the Whanganui Chronicle. Since starting in March 2020, he has dabbled in everything from sport to music. At present his focus is local government, primarily Whanganui District Council.