I AM WRITING to invite Standard readers to back the ‘Love the Bus Pass’ petition which is supported by tens of thousands of people, hundreds of local groups and the National Pensioners’ Convention.

Strictly non-partisan, the campaign aims to get all parties to pledge before the general election that, if elected to power on May 7, they will retain the England concessionary bus pass for older, blind and disabled people as a statutory universal entitlement, free at the point of use.

Last June, with some 42,000 signatures already collected, I wrote to local newspapers throughout England inviting readers’ support.

In three months, 110,000 pen-on-paper signatures were collected – testament both to widespread fears about the future of the bus pass and to the huge influence of the local press in their communities.

That awesome response meant that we were able to deliver our first instalment of 152,347 signatures to 10 Downing Street on September 10.

Many thanks if you and your readers were part of that.

And, if ‘Love the Bus Pass’ is news to you, please make your voice heard and sign up by early March, when we deliver another 100,000 signatures to 10 Downing Street, to make 250,000 all told.

To date, no political party has made a clear and unequivocal commitment to retaining the bus pass in its present form.

In fact, high-ranking coalition politicians began to call for ‘reform’ as early as 2011, starting with Eric Pickles’ protégé, Brandon Lewis – since fast-tracked to ministerial office.

He wrote, in Conservative Home, that the scheme had never been ‘affordable’.

This was something his party hadn’t wished to come out with before the 2010 general election, for fear of ‘alarming’ voters.

Nick Clegg then called for a ban on millionaires joy-riding on buses for free.

This would save next to nothing – millionaires making few, if any, bus trips – but a neat way of destroying the principle of universality and introducing means-testing.

We simply must ensure all politicians understand that they attack the bus pass at their electoral peril.

Readers may request petition forms and information either by e-mail from richardvworrall@yahoo.com; by telephone, giving or leaving name and address at 01922 641084 or 448331; or by writing to 46 Winn House, Walsall, WS2 8NW.

RICHARD WORRALL,

Love the Bus Pass Campaign Co-ordinator,

Walsall, West Midlands