- Western Scottish
Western Scottish Omnibuses Ltd, in
Scotland , was a bus operating subsidiary of the Scottish Transport Group formed in June1985 from Western SMT Company Ltd and operated until1997 , when it became Western Buses Ltd. This successor company is now a part ofStagecoach West Scotland .Operation
From its head office in Nursery Avenue,
Kilmarnock , Western Scottish covered an operating area bounded byArdrossan in thenorth ,Glasgow to theeast , theFirth of Clyde to thewest andCarlisle to thesouth .Western was the largest operator in south west Scotland and was responsible for local bus services in the towns of Kilmarnock,
Ayr ,Cumnock ,Girvan ,Stranraer andDumfries as well as rural services, interurban connections and cross-border journeys into north westEngland . Depots were located in those towns, as well as Annan, Ardrossan, Carlisle (shared withCumberland Motor Services ) and Whithorn. Vehicles were also 'outstationed' atKirkcudbright ,Lockerbie ,Penpont andSanquhar . The company would eventually establish bases inBrodick ,Isle of Arran andDunoon ,Argyll also.Western Scottish also provided coaches for
Scottish Citylink work, mainly from the south west ofScotland to Glasgow, Edinburgh,London and the south.Though the northern portion of the former Western SMT's operating area, covering
Inverclyde ,Renfrewshire and theIsle of Bute , was ceded to a new company,Clydeside Scottish , in June 1985 (in order to prepare the Scottish Bus Group for deregulation in1986 and eventualprivatisation ), Clydeside Scottish was remerged with Western in May1989 . Depots atLargs ,Greenock , Paisley,Johnstone ,Inchinnan , Rothesay andThornliebank on the south side of Glasgow were added on the merger of the two companies.History
Though its predecessor company Western SMT had a much longer and more distinguished history, Western Scottish was a relatively short lived legal creation. The traditional, smart
red and creamlivery the vehicles wore gave way to a more blandblack , white and two-tone grey scheme shortly after the company was created. This livery was short lived, however, and a black, white and red scheme took over within a couple of years. Due to the length of time taken to repaint the fleet, for a number of years vehicles appeared in three distinct liveries.Western suffered from heavy
competition after deregulation, particularly around Kilmarnock and Ayr, which, as the heavier populated areas of its operating area, provided the firm with the bulk of its income. Keenan of Ayr, Carrick Coaches, Shuttle Buses and various smaller operators appeared, challenging and weakening the dominant operator.In May 1989, Clydeside Scottish was remerged with Western, still under the legal name of Western Scottish Omnibuses Ltd. The aim of the merger was to strengthen the two weakened giants and thus make the company a more attractive proposition for potential buyers on the run up to privatisation. Clydeside Scottish had existed for less than five years, and Western's operating region now covered the same geographical area the former Western SMT did. Though the former Clydeside Scottish operation continued to trade simply as 'Clydeside', the vehicles were given the Western black, white and red livery.
During this time, however, extremely heavy and sustained competition from a multitude of smaller operators in Greenock and Paisley continued to financially weaken the company.
Western Scottish was purchased by its management and employee in June
1991 for £1m, with an immediate onward sale of the Clydeside operations and their depots to their management and employees as Clydeside 2000 plc (withLuton & District Buses taking a 24% stake), ending an extremely short lived and unhappy merger. The depot at Largs was closed, and Rothesay depot remained with Western Scottish. The Ardrossan depot closed shortly afterward.The newly
privatised Western Scottish was successful in securing all the tendered services on the Isle of Arran, putting the future of the small Brodick-based operator Arran Transport in jeopardy and drawing howls of protest and criticism from locals and the local media. However, Arran Transport managed to stay in business by competing against the larger operator on its home island, and also the neighbouring Isle of Bute. In its home town of Kilmarnock, Western faced increasing levels of competition, most notably from [http://www.clydecoast.com Clyde Coast Coaches Ltd] of Ardrossan, and retaliated by offering a free service betweenSaltcoats and Largs, Clyde Coast's traditional route. In 1993, a small operation was established inDunoon , when Western won one tendered local service. Two Dennis Dart vehicles were stationed there until two years later when further routes were won and a depot running around 15 buses was opened there.Stagecoach Holdings took over in July
1994 for £6m, and the 'bus war' with Clyde Coast was soon ended. Trading as Stagecoach Western Scottish, the company adopted the corporate Stagecoach white with red, blue and orange stripes and began expanding. Arran Transport was purchased in October 1994, followed by the much largerA1 Service operation in January 1995 - adding some 80 vehicles and operations innorth Ayrshire from a new depot in Ardrossan. Stagecoach responded fiercely to the competition in Western's operating area, and was banned by theTraffic Commissioner from operating on the Ayr toDalmellington route due to predatory and uncompetitive action against competitor Carrick Coaches for a period of one year. Bizarrely, for the period of this ban, AA Buses, which would later be owned by Stagecoach, registered a new service for the one year period, matching the service that Stagecoach Western was forced to withdraw, and thus compete with Carrick.Stagecoach was also forced to withdraw from a co-operative service run from Ayr to Greenock, with Clyde Coast, Clydeside and AA Buses, after a wave of media criticism. A new operator, Ashton Coaches, had successfully pioneered the 585 Coastliner service from Ayr to Greenock. As this partially competed (though not directly) with services provided by Clyde Coast, Clydeside, AA Buses and Stagecoach Western Scottish, these operators provided two vehicles each, branded 535 Coastlink and using a similar
green and white livery, and operated to the same timetable as the competition. An amicable resolve to the competition would not emerge for a few years.1995 also saw the purchase of the bus operations of Clyde Coast, and in June 1997 the bus operations of [http://www.doddsoftroon.com Dodds of Troon Ltd] (
AA Buses ) of Ayr were purchased, together with the bus operations of Shuttle Buses, adding services aroundKilwinning , Irvine andTroon to the Western operation. At that time, the head office was moved to Sandgate Bus Station inAyr , and the company name changed to Western Buses Ltd in the process.See also
*
Stagecoach West Scotland
*Stagecoach Group External links
* [http://www.stagecoachbus.com/western Stagecoach West Scotland website]
* [http://autos.groups.yahoo.com/group/stagecoachwestscotland/ Stagecoach West Scotland Yahoo Group]
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