Free public transport – not BusConnects

By Kieran Mahon

With the overdue second round of proposed Bus Connects route changes due out in September the emphasis will again come on workers and communities to organise and defend jobs and public transport services. The initial Bus Connects proposals received short shrift in working-class communities across Dublin. It was correctly identified as a fast track to more privatisations, with the re-allocation of existing resources into radial routes, core routes and local feeder routes being little more than an effort to extract profit at the expense of community services.

Working-class opposition

Meetings and protests of hundreds were held in many parts of Dublin. With the victory against water charges still fresh, the Bus Connects project was pushed back. Access for older people, impositions on the physically challenged, linkage between working-class communities, the loss of direct routes to the city centre and potential attacks on “free” travel were all highlighted. Speakers from the National Bus and Rail Union, garnering public support, showed the potential for a successful defence of services, but this inevitably also points to the potential for a more offensive approach. Unions are well placed to lead on this and, given the strong public support, could come out confidently with demands around jobs and public services. They could raise demands for the full re-instatement of Public Sector Obligation funding and increased investment in an expanded, environmentally-friendlier fleet, with no loss of earnings for workers. This could find initial political expression through a significant public demo, including all transport workers, when the plans resurface later this year.

Invest in public transport

Workers must demand the scrapping of Bus Connects, to be replaced with a plan that guarantees keeping transport in public ownership. Against a historically weak government, stopping the cuts to services outlined in Bus Connects is a very winnable battle, with the right approach in workplaces and communities. But workers must go further. Failing to tackle these attacks fully on the industrial front will inevitably open the door to further attacks. Defending public services inevitably poses the question of where wealth exists and who controls it. Re-developing a socialist approach to free public transport, linked to the need for dramatic action on the climate catastrophe, can bring organised and unorganised workers together in a way in which their power becomes clear.

Total
0
Shares
Previous Article

Non-medical support staff vote for strike action

Next Article

New assault on abortion rights in the US

Related Posts
Read More

The truth about Ireland’s super-rich

Albert Einstein once defined insanity as doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results each time. In the last three years successive budgets have resulted in €20 billion being taken out of the Irish economy through austerity and have drastically worsened the present economic crisis.

Budget Dole Cut: Government Cancel’s Christmas

By Helen Redwood

“THERE’S NO way of preparing for Christmas, that bonus is actually Christmas”. This reaction from one single parent spells out what the Scrooge-like scrapping of the Christmas bonus will mean for the 1.3 million people previously eligible.

Minister Lenihan’s “justification” that prices are falling won’t compensate for a time of year when everything goes up – prices, fuel bills, pressure to buy presents, costs of travelling to relatives.