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All you need to know about new St Andrews-Edinburgh Airport bus

All you need to know about new St Andrews-Edinburgh Airport bus

The Courier30-04-2025

A new bus service is connecting St Andrews with Edinburgh Airport – and we have all you need to know.
The Jet 787 route launches on Monday May 5, with several stops along the way.
It will supplement the existing Jet 747 service from Halbeath, Inverkeithing and Ferrytoll Park and Ride to the airport.
The Courier has taken a look at everything you need to know about the new service.
The Jet 787 service will stop in the following places:
Most journeys from St Andrews to Edinburgh Airport are scheduled to take about one hour and 35 minutes.
It is expected to take the service around 40 minutes to travel from Kinross Park and Ride to the airport and 25 minutes from Halbeath Park and Ride.
The first service will leave St Andrews at 3.10am on Monday May 5, arriving at the airport at 4.31am.
A 1am service from St Andrews will terminate at Halbeath Park and Ride.
Weekday buses to Edinburgh Airport will run at the following times.
Jet 787 services will operate at the following times at weekends:
An adult single from Fife to Edinburgh Airport will cost £10.60.
A Jet period return ticket costs £21.40 and can be used from anywhere along the route.
A Jet duo ticket provides return travel for two adults for £38.
Stagecoach has also introduced a staff discount of 50% for passengers who work at Edinburgh Airport, with a special day return ticket costing airport workers £6.20.
Passengers over the age of 60 or under the age of 22 will be able to use their National Entitlement Card to travel for free.

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Kayla Mounsey in her Bellway home (Image: Gordon Terris/Herald&Times) Bellway advertisements (Image: Gordon Terris/Herald&Times) A general view of Glenrothes (Image: Gordon Terris/Herald&Times) Glenrothes was Scotland's second new town (Image: Gordon Terris/Herald&Times) Glenrothes was designated as one of Scotland's first post-war new towns in 1948, with most of its housing built by the Glenrothes Development Corporation and later managed by Fife Council. From the 1950s through the 1970s, large council estates were built in areas like Auchmuty, Macedonia, Pitteuchar, and Collydean, their curved roads complemented by the clean lines and flat roofs of modernist housing. At the time, renting your house from the council was commonplace. But by the 1980s, the attitude towards council housing shifted. 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Glenrothes is close to Scotland's major cities (Image: Gordon Terris/Herald&Times) He and his landlord have been navigating the Scottish Government's eviction process since. Landlords must go to the First-tier Tribunal to legally evict a tenant, and the whole process can take weeks or months. But councils do not treat someone as 'homeless' until they are formally evicted, leaving vulnerable people like Hume in limbo. 'How long is temporary? Not knowing is worse than anything,' he says. He claims the temporary council flat is costing £623 a fortnight, £1246 per month. "The council's rent policy is reviewed annually, but the costs of temporary accommodation are higher than standard council rents,' says Smith. 'Where households have no choice but to enter temporary accommodation, we'll make arrangements with them to pay what they can afford based on an income and expenditure calculation. We always try to ensure that people aren't negatively financially impacted because of homelessness and charges.' Hume's landlord, who didn't want to be named, says the decision to sell up was not one taken lightly. The stress of making someone homeless is clearly eating her up. 'It's not as stressful as the risk of being homeless, obviously,' she says firmly. I ask her what she thinks has been the biggest contributor to the housing crisis. 'Right to Buy,' she replies quickly, acknowledging that is how she came to own two properties in the area. 'If you look online at what's to rent in Glenrothes for the price, they're like pigsties,' she says. 'It may be, in comparison to the rest of Scotland, a relatively so-called 'cheap place to live', but I would say rents are quite high for the standard of the properties.' 'Glenrothes is by no means a mecca for getting a house,' she adds. Glenrothes (Image: Gordon Terris/Herald&Times) Kayla Mounsey with her dog (Image: Gordon Terris/Herald&Times) 'When the Right to Buy came on the scene, it allowed people who had council homes to buy them at a heavily discounted rate,' explains Dr Kim McKee, a professor of housing and social policy at the University of Stirling. 'But the issue was that we never really replaced these homes. We lost tens of thousands of homes in the social rented sector in Scotland, but we've not replaced them.' Mortgages became more affordable during that period, and home ownership boomed. But in the last 20 years, Dr McKee says, the private rented sector has grown exponentially. 'If you look back 20 years ago, the private rented sector was mostly for students, and perhaps migrants and professionals who had to move around for their jobs. But that's not the case now. 'It's now housing a really wide cross section of society, with one in seven households in the private rented sector, and that's one of the real difficulties. The affordability of rent is very different between social and private, but you also have different housing rights in terms of security of tenure as well. It's very difficult for people.' The three leading contributors to the current housing crisis are fallout from the Right to Buy scheme, a broken allocation system for social housing, and a lack of investment in new council houses. 'In the 1980s, it was pretty common to rent from a social landlord,' Dr McKee explains. 'Big urban centres house a lot of the population, but now it's more difficult to access social housing if you're not coming through the homeless system. If you're applying for a general waiting list, you can wait a very, very long time.' 'It's very difficult for people, they're stuck,' she adds. 'They're languishing on temporary accommodation lists and often the only option they have is to rent privately, which obviously, budget-wise, can be more expensive for them than renting from a social landlord would be.' Those who do not have the means to save for a deposit are shut out of the housing market. Bad credit, precarious work, disability and rising rents can make climbing the property ladder inaccessible to many. Wider shifts in the economy related to the cost of living crisis (rising energy bills, inflation, surging cost of food) have also contributed to the trade-offs young families are making to stretch their budgets. Hence, the uptick in first-time house hunters seeking out communities like Glenrothes. Peter Gulline, 59, moved to Glenrothes aged 13. The Conservative politician was elected councillor of the Glenrothes North, Leslie and Markinch Ward in 2022. He says wherever new housing estates are built, the properties are always 'gobbled up'. A lot of the market is people in Glenrothes moving to another property, he claims. The current strain on services is temporary. 'We just have to get through this hiccup of everything being really, really busy and weather the storm,' he says. The private rental market has also 'gone through the roof', but councillor Gulline does not see that as a 'bad thing'. He does not agree that the Right to Buy scheme has contributed to the housing crisis. 'People say we've lost 40,000 houses because they were sold off,' he says. 'Well, actually, we haven't lost 40,000 houses. We've lost the responsibility of having to maintain 40,000 houses, but they are still houses. 'There is still somebody living in them. They've not been bought, bulldozed and replaced with a car park.' He describes the wait for social housing as a game of snakes and ladders when I ask about the backlog for council homes. 'Everybody thinks there's a list. And the list has got 17,000 people on it,' he says. 'There are actually multiple lists.' He rattles off some of the categories: homelessness, disability, domestic abuse, and prison leavers. 'It's not a list that you just crawl up. It's a list you can move up and get knocked down a couple of pegs if people come along that had more justification.' Marissa MacWhirter in a Glenrothes park (Image: Gordon Terris/Herald&Times) The town is known for its public art (Image: Gordon Terris/Herald&Times) As far as Gulline is concerned, 'Glenrothes is a fantastic town for families.' It's easy to navigate, it has plenty of decent schools, there are lots of parks and green space, and clubs and activities for the young and old. The administrative capital of Fife, the town also boasts the largest shopping centre in the council area (Kingdom Shopping Centre) and decent transport links from the bus station. The number of outdoor artworks dotted around town, the carefully landscaped roundabouts, and the spring flowers blooming from every public space give Glenrothes a wholesome community feeling, even for those just passing through. The town, like many in Scotland, is caught between two narratives. Its affordability gives many the chance to get on the housing ladder and provides young families with a safe, quiet community in which to raise children. But the housing crisis has made the security of home ownership increasingly out of reach for many. Fife Council acknowledges the 'extreme pressure' it's under to meet housing needs in the crisis. The local authority has created the Fife Housing Register, a shared list providing a single access route to available homes, in partnership with local housing associations. "We're actively reducing waiting times for those assessed as statutorily homeless as part of our short-term housing emergency response, though challenges remain, especially for larger families and those with specific health or disability needs,' says the authority's housing access service manager. 'Precise information about housing prospects is difficult to provide. We understand the uncertainty this creates and remain committed to supporting applicants through the process." I ask Hume how he feels about his new temporary accommodation. 'I've got no storage, but it's better than a hostel,' he sighs. Marissa MacWhirter is a columnist and feature writer at The Herald, and the editor of The Glasgow Wrap. The newsletter is curated between 5-7am each morning, bringing the best of local news to your inbox each morning without ads, clickbait, or hyperbole. Oh, and it's free. She can be found on X @marissaamayy1

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