Parents urged to help shape future of school buses
At present, support for school buses varies across West Yorkshire's five local authorities.
The West Yorkshire Combined Authority (WYCA) is running a public consultation until 11 June, with any changes set to come into force from September 2026.
Mayor Tracy Brabin urged parents, schools and students to take part in a bid to develop a "new region-wide travel-to-school strategy that best serves West Yorkshire".
The WYCA has arrangements in place for about 328 buses which carry on average up to 20,000 pupils per day.
This includes 28 services that carry about 1,000 children to primary schools, the majority of which were introduced under the government-backed Mybus scheme.
These costs typically increase year on year, having risen from £15.96m in 2022/23 to £16.50m in 2023/24 and £18.99m in 2024/25.
In February, two school bus services which faced being scrapped as part of Bradford Council's efforts to cut costs were given funding to keep them running well into 2026.
Bradford Council had proposed ending the routes to Bingley Grammar School and St Bede's and St Joseph's Catholic College in September in a bid to save about £500,000 a year.
But following criticism from parents, the council and the WYCA confirmed they would continue to fund the services until "at least the summer of 2026".
School bus services in West Yorkshire were last reviewed by the WYCA Transport Committee in July 2019.
Since then, the WYCA said there had been "significant change", including the impact of Covid-19 on the bus network and the decision taken in March 2024 by Brabin to implement bus franchising across the region.
The programme for the implementation of bus franchising will see the first bus services through this new operating model start at the end of March 2027.
This will include school bus services, and the contracts for delivery of the first phase of services will be issued for operators to bid against in October 2025.
Transport Committee chair Susan Hinchcliffe said: "The region's school bus policy is currently a mix of various agreements with different council areas – the result has been that parts of our region have differing levels of support from the Combined Authority.
"That is why it is important to create a new school bus strategy for the whole of West Yorkshire, which will help us with our plans to create a better-connected region."
Brabin said: "It is vital for us to make sure our children and young people have safe, secure and prompt routes to and from school.
"That is why I am urging as many parents, students and schools as possible to get in touch and take part in the consultation when it starts at the end of April – so we can create a new, region-wide travel to school strategy that best serves West Yorkshire."
Listen to highlights from West Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, catch up with the latest episode of Look North.
Council U-turn on scrapping school bus services
School buses could be swapped for train travel
West Yorkshire Combined Authority
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Business Insider
3 hours ago
- Business Insider
Podobas Global Investments Acquires 5% Stake in Tripla Co., Ltd. (5136.T), Highlighting Its Mission to Become APAC's Leading Travel Tech Platform
Podobas Global Investments, the private investment firm led by international investor Wojciech Podobas, has acquired a 5.08% stake in Tripla Co., Ltd. (5136.T), a fast-growing provider of AI-powered travel and hospitality SaaS solutions listed on the Tokyo Stock Exchange. This investment signals strong belief in Tripla's ability to become a dominant travel tech player across the Asia-Pacific region, supported by its advanced product ecosystem, global-ready team, and strategic positioning in Japan's post-COVID tourism resurgence. Tripla: Positioned to Lead the Future of Hospitality in APAC Tripla operates a robust and growing suite of AI and SaaS products that modernize how hotels and travel providers operate and engage with customers. Among its broad product portfolio, the most important are: Tripla Book: a direct reservation engine that boosts conversion and reduces OTA dependency Tripla Bot: an AI-driven multilingual concierge system that automates guest communication Tripla Connect and Tripla Pay: integrations that optimize guest data, payments, and services With rising inbound tourism, a digital shift in travel, and expanding demand for personalized guest experiences, Tripla is uniquely positioned to become a major backend platform for the hospitality sector across Asia. The company has already shown remarkable execution in Japan, and recent strategic acquisitions have strengthened its offering and expanded its client base, with smooth post-merger integration (PMI) further proving its operational capabilities. Quote from Voytek Podobas 'Tripla is building exactly the kind of platform we look for- scalable, mission-driven, and module-based. With its full-stack travel tech suite and proven ability to execute, I believe Tripla is on track to become a regional leader across APAC in the next decade.' 'The team brings an impressive blend of technical expertise and global business approach. Their vision is bold yet practical, and I'm excited to support them as they expand their footprint in one of the fastest-growing tourism markets in the world.' Ongoing Dialogue with Tripla Management The investment follows direct conversation between Voytek Podobas and Tripla's executive leadership. Discussions focused on the company's strategy, expansion plans, and market positioning in Japan and the wider Asia-Pacific region. Tripla has welcomed the investment from Podobas Global Investments, highlighting a shared vision for sustainable long-term growth and international expansion. 'Tripla is glad to have an international investor. Tripla started its business only in the Japan market in 2015. We changed to the hospitality IT field in 2017 and enjoyed growth. We have started expanding to overseas markets since 2020. The first country was Taiwan. After the COVID-19, we achieved an IPO and expanded the business to Indonesia, Korea, Thailand, Singapore, Philippines, Hong Kong. We need more global presence to seek overseas business. Global investor presence is also important for us to have more business presence in the world.' About Tripla Co., Ltd. (5136.T) Tripla Co., Ltd. is a Tokyo-based SaaS company delivering AI-powered solutions to the travel and hospitality industries. Its suite of services- spanning AI concierge bots, reservation engines, payments, and CRM tools- helps businesses improve conversion, lower operational costs, and enhance guest experience across channels. With Japan's tourism sector accelerating and Tripla expanding beyond domestic markets, the company is poised to serve as a central infrastructure layer for APAC's next generation of travel technology. Podobas Global Investments is a privately held investment firm founded by Wojciech Podobas, specializing in high-conviction equity investments in transformative technology businesses across Japan and Asia. The firm focuses on SaaS, AI, and infrastructure platforms positioned for sustainable, scalable growth. Contact

Los Angeles Times
2 days ago
- Los Angeles Times
Leaving Las Vegas! Fewer Californians are visiting Sin City. Here's what the number say
If you spend any time on social media, it's hard to avoid the scorching hot takes about Las Vegas' recent financial struggles. Vegas critics say the exorbitant resort fees are brutal, the ever-increasing parking costs are punishing, the comps are few and far between — and did you notice the buffets are vanishing? In short, Vegas is on a losing streak. After fighting to bounce back from COVID-19 closures, Sin City is facing financial headwinds as fewer people, particularly Californians, are visiting, playing and ultimately spending money. My colleague Terry Castleman dived into some theories, but also, as Terry does well, dug into the numbers to tell the tale of Vegas' sudden crap out. Visits to Las Vegas were down 11.3% in June 2025 versus a year earlier, according to data from the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority. Traffic on Interstate 15 at the California-Nevada border was down 4.3% over the same period, suggesting fewer visitors doing road trips from the Golden State to Vegas casinos. The number of air travelers into Las Vegas overall declined 6.3% over the previous June. In 2024, Californians made up more than a fifth of air travelers into Vegas, with nearly half of those coming from the Los Angeles metro area. A demographic report from the visitors authority estimated that Southern California provided 30% of all visitors to the city in 2024. Add it all up, and Californians could be responsible for a significant portion of the decline in Vegas tourism. Tourism within the U.S. is only part of the picture, though, as experts previously predicted we are also seeing a slump in international tourism to the U.S. The convention and visitors authority estimates that 12% of the city's visitors are international. A report from the World Travel and Tourism Council projected that the U.S. would lose $12.5 billion in international travel spending in 2025. 'While other nations are rolling out the welcome mat, the U.S. government is putting up the 'closed' sign,' Julia Simpson, the council's president, said in a statement. The report cited air-travel booking data from March that showed a 15% to 20% drop in expected travel from major tourism sources, including the United Kingdom, Germany and Canada. Visitors from Canada and Mexico made up more than half of international visitors to Las Vegas in 2024, according to data from the visitors authority. But President Trump's talk of making Canada the 51st state and his decision to hit Canada with tariffs have not endeared him to Canadian travelers. Meanwhile, media overseas have been bombarded with stories of capricious denials and detentions of travelers at U.S. border crossings. Apparently, Mexican and Canadian tourists are not feeling so welcome in the U.S. these days. 'Las Vegas thrives on tourism,' Rep. Steven Horsford wrote last week on X, 'but under the Trump slump, the numbers are tanking.' Horsford, a Democrat, represents Nevada's 4th Congressional District, which includes a portion of Las Vegas. By many metrics — including visitor totals, convention attendance and room occupancy rates — Las Vegas has not fully recovered from the onset of the pandemic. In dollar terms, however, Sin City continues to profit even as visitor numbers drop: Clark County, which includes Vegas, collected $1.16 billion in gambling revenue in June 2025, up 3.5% from a year earlier. So, Vegas' luck has not run out yet. For more, check out the full article here. Jim Rainey, staff writerDiamy Wang, homepage internIzzy Nunes, audience internKevinisha Walker, multiplatform editorAndrew J. Campa, reporterKarim Doumar, head of newsletters How can we make this newsletter more useful? Send comments to essentialcalifornia@ Check our top stories, topics and the latest articles on


NBC News
4 days ago
- NBC News
American adds Budapest, Prague and Buenos Aires flights for summer 2026
American Airlines is reviving some of its pre-pandemic destinations like Prague and Budapest, Hungary, as international travel continues to hold up better than domestic demand. Other additions include its first-ever Dallas Fort Worth International flights to Athens, Greece, and year-round nonstop service between Miami and Milan. American is also extending service for next year's World Cup, from Buenos Aires, Argentina, to Dallas and between Dallas and Zurich, where soccer's governing body, FIFA, is based,. Those flights will run from May 21 to Aug. 4 of next year, a bid for more business travel and sports tourism. Brian Znotins, American's senior vice president of network and schedule planning, told CNBC that the airline saw high numbers of customers from Argentina travel to Doha, Qatar, during the 2022 World Cup and that he expects even more to travel to the 2026 World Cup, which will be played in Canada, the U.S. and Mexico. He also said the airline is expanding its Europe service in a bet that customers would rather connect in a U.S. hub like Dallas or Charlotte, North Carolina. 'We took a fresh look at where the demand hotspots are in Europe and we continue to see strength in Italy and Greece,' Znotins said. 'We continue to see high numbers of travelers connecting in Europe to get to places like Rome and Athens,' so the airline is adding more options from U.S. hubs. With Prague and Budapest service from American's hub at Philadelphia International Airport, he said many customers already fly into one city and out of the other for Danube River cruises and other tours. American's unit revenue for domestic flights in the last quarter fell 6.4% from 2024, while trans-Atlantic revenue rose 5%. Many of American's summer routes were discontinued because of the Covid-19 pandemic, but Znotins said the changes weren't just a return to that period. 'We've redesigned the entire airline based on today's demand environment and not some desire to get back to 2019,' he said. 'Everything has changed.' American will use Boeing 787-8 Dreamliners for all the new flights except for Zurich to Dallas, which will be flown by Boeing 777-200s.