On the 1st of September Stagecoach
Bus driver James Freeman celebrates his 50-year career in the bus industry and
reflects upon the changes he’s seen in Winchester.
James started his lifelong career in the bus
industry on the 1st of September 1974 at the age of 18 as a
Conductor with Hants & Dorset in Winchester.
In 1978 James was selected for the National
Bus Company’s Senior Management Training Scheme and was sent to South Wales
Transport in Swansea where he passed his PCV driving test in 1979.
In 1984 at the age of 28 James became the
youngest Managing Director in the National Bus Company, at Shamrock and Rambler
Coaches Ltd based in Bournemouth. From
2001 through to 2007 he held a number of Senior Director positions for
Stagecoach, in the Midlands and East of England.
Between 2007 and 2014 James was the CEO of
municipally owned Reading Buses, transforming the business to a leading
employer of choice and one with consistent year-on-year passenger growth. His strong track record in transforming bus businesses
then took him to the West of England, where he held the position of Managing
Director with First between 2014 and 2021.
Following the upheaval of the pandemic, in
2021 James stepped back from his intensive full-time role and returned to his
roots in Winchester. He’s now partially
retired, driving buses around the city for Stagecoach a couple of days each
week.
James has witnessed huge changes in the transport industry and to his
home city since first starting on the buses, but still absolutely loves his
job.
“I enjoy being part of the team. Winchester drivers are
great “wavers” out on the road and it’s very good to be acknowledged in this
way. We work together, which is great.”
“Over the years of my career, I have shared with countless hundreds of new
starters my advice that the best way to have a good day out on the road is to
smile at every boarding passenger and say hello. To my relief, I have found
that this simple approach works every time. After all, if somebody smiles at
you, it really is hard not to smile back!”
“It’s a privilege to be
able to drive around our remarkable city and through the wonderful rolling
Hampshire countryside. The city network is similar in scope to the services
operating in the 1970s and there are still regular connections to Romsey,
Andover, Fareham but the use of buses by people in the surrounding villages,
such as Micheldever, Wonston, Crawley, King’s Somborne and Broughton has
dwindled to almost nothing.”
“Traffic congestion was
bad then and is even worse now – always, then and now, affected by any problems
on the bypass (now the M3, which wasn’t built then).”
“Then, as now, there is
still a tightly knit team of good people delivering services to local people,
though they are generally not proud of what they do – and they should be!”
We’re really proud to help James continue his loyal service
for our local communities in Winchester.
We look forward to waving back for many years to come!