‘Too much, Magic Bus’

The old saying about buses – you wait and wait and then three come along at once is now sadly redundant. Anyone seeing three in a day, let alone at once, is advised to get an urgent blood test for hallucinogens.
At a time when most councils are doing their utmost to get drivers out of cars and onto public transport, some councils are also making it harder to catch buses.
Just a day after the government agreed to heavily subsidise bus drivers’ wages to help ease the desperate labour shortage, Auckland’s transport wallahs announced a move that managed to be both brute-realist and contrary at the same time. In order to safeguard the bus service’s dependability, they would cancel 12% of scheduled bus trips.
“Tough on buses, tough on the causes of buses” seems a peculiar ethos for these times, and admittedly it takes a bit of getting one’s head around. It helps to think of it in the same vein as the previous government’s claim that surgical waiting-list numbers had dropped, when it had simply purged the lists. The bus swifty is roughly
an inversion of this, and no less maddening. Auckland Transport is stopping putting buses for which it doesn’t have drivers on the bus timetables. Until now, it’s advertised a schedule of routes and times while constantly cancelling a proportion of trips. Now, it’s only scheduling buses it knows will be driven.
That, AT says, will make the bus service “more reliable”. This is rather a heroic characterisation of the fact that it’s simply ceasing the pretence that about 1000 phantom bus trips might magically become real.
Bu hikaye New Zealand Listener dergisinin November 12-18 2022 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,500+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Giriş Yap
Bu hikaye New Zealand Listener dergisinin November 12-18 2022 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,500+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Giriş Yap

Point and press
Photography can have psychological benefits.

I'll be there for you
The problem with using a legion of AI bots to cure loneliness.

Bohemian baritone
Playing destitute artist in Puccini's classic rings true for rising Aussie opera star.

Foreign flair
An increasing presence on our shelves, there are plenty of affordably priced international wines worth trying.

Don't tell me
Political scientist Mark Lilla tries to get to the bottom of why we prefer not to know.

Hokianga rebellion
How the intervention of a great-nephew of Hōne Heke and the advent of the telephone defused the last armed resistance by Māori against the British crown.

Trump appeasement
The UK hopes to mask its powerlessness by massaging the ego of the US President.

Coconut shy
The much-hyped health benefits of coconut products do not extend to Western diets – but you needn't shun them altogether.

Level best
Patience pays dividends for big winners in Ockhams.

Deputy Dave
He suffered years of poor poll results and jibes about his dancing, but Act leader David Seymour is on the cusp of becoming Deputy Prime Minister.