Saturday 20th June 2026

Blog reader Mark contacted me last week sharing his frustration at the lack of information and marketing about a new bus route introduced 12 weeks ago, at the end of March, between Hartlepool and the villages of Elwick and Dalton Piercy.

Route 51 is funded by Tees Valley Combined Authority and operated by Stagecoach. It comprises an hourly Monday to Saturday timetable taking one bus with an 11 hour operating day between 07:00 and 19:00.

It’s one of two routes introduced by the Authority as part replacements for the withdrawal, after six years, of the Stagecoach operated TeesFlex DRT service which was deemed to be no longer affordable.

The 51 is joined by new (also Stagecoach operated) route X85 linking Redmarshall, Whitton, Stillington, and Bishopton to Stockton town centre and also an extension of Arriva’s route 10 linking Great Burdon, Sadberge, Little Stainton, Bishopton, Redmarshall, Carlton, Stillington, and Great Stainton thereby covering much of the area previously served by TeesFlex.
Mark got in touch to explain how route 51 restores a long lost timetabled bus service to the two villages of Elwick and Dalton Piercy as well as western suburbs of Hartlepool which “have not seen a [scheduled] bus in decades, ever since the days of Hartlepool Corporation ran its service 16 which survived post privatisation until being swallowed up by Stagecoach in the 1990s”.

Unsurprisingly the new service has been welcomed by the very few people who’ve found out about it and begun using it which is despite, what Mark describes as, “the promotion of this valuable new link by Tees Valley is appalling”, adding “it’s designed to fail” not least as reports suggest it’s only being funded initially until July.

Local media reports covered the launch which no doubt helped raise some awareness but the issues Mark has found incomprehensible were no, or even worse, misleading information at many of the bus stops served by the new route, not least those declaring “No Public Services” when the new route clearly does.

The most glaring example of this is right outside Hartlepool railway station itself where the terminal point used by buses on the 51 states unhelpfully “No Public Services” on the bus stop flag, as I found when I visited the town last Friday to take a ride on this newly restored timetabled route. Despite what the bus stop flag proclaims, at least the timetable case below does show a departure listing for route 51 and an isolated journey on route 7.

I took a ride on the 14:05 from the underused Hartlepool Interchange (four bus stops alongside the station with a massive shelter … for just the hourly 59, now joined by the hourly 51, with an odd journey on the 7 and a smattering of National Express departures)…

… as I wanted to see how many bus stops we’d pass declaring no buses stop there despite the route now being in its twelfth week, as well as wondering how many passengers would travel.
The bus arrived from its previous stop at Tesco Extra, a mile to the south of the Interchange, at 14:03 with one passenger alighting and no-one else on board.

Soon after leaving the Interchange we picked up two passengers by the nearby large Morrisons supermarket and one more in Victoria Road in the town centre then wended our way through the western suburbs of Ward Jackson Park and West Park where one of the three passengers alighted and, sure enough, all the bus stops on this exclusive section of route only served by the 51 were declaring “No Public Services” as well as either sporting an empty timetable case…

… or no timetable case at all.

It’s not very reassuring for prospective passengers.
Leaving Hartlepool’s western suburbs and passing through some lovely surrounding countryside…

… at least the bus stops have lost the proclamation ‘no services’ stop there, but still don’t give much confidence a bus calls by…

… although at least the stop at the Green in Elwick had a timetable case but I couldn’t see if it contained an up to date timetable. Hopefully it did, but when Mark visited that location he found “the bus stop timetable is woefully in a bad condition and hopelessly out of date. Again no mention of a regular headway service 51 now runs into Hartlepool. So how does this encourage usage when it is kept a ‘best kept secret’ from the public.”

It’s where the two passengers still on board alighted.
We then made our way on to the busy A19 for a short stretch south before turning off for on this anti-clockwise loop arrangement to Dalton Piercy and the return to Hartlepool.

It’s a tightly timed hour’s circuit with not much scope for recovery if running late. As we passed through Hartlepool’s western suburbs again it was school turning out time and one child boarded for a few stops with two more passengers boarding in the town centre to travel to the station.
We passed through the car park of the large Tesco Extra at 15:00, four minutes down, where Mark also notes “it’s another missed opportunity – no bus stop pole or any indication a bus service option is available to shoppers – never mind when it runs or where it goes…why is Tees Valley keeping the service 51 a mystery?”

On timekeeping, thankfully the 10 minutes allowance from Tesco to reach the Interchange is at last a generous amount of time as we arrived back there at 15:05, the departure time for the next journey. So we just made it in an hour.
Mark took up the lack of information and misleading bus stop messages with Stagecoach with his letter being passed to the Depot Manager in Hartlepool who replied “it is up to Tees Valley Council to put the promotion & infrastructure right”. Mark had copied his letter to Tees Valley Combined Authority but there was no reply forthcoming. He also wrote to Hartlepool’s MP but as Mark lives in Sunderland, rather than the constituency, the MP was unable to respond to the points raised.
As Mark frustratingly and rightly observed in his letter to Stagecoach and Tees Valley…..
“Its a well meaning and well thought through link bus service . This is now running and established. Yet, it has to be backed up with the infrastructure and publicity/ timetable information en route. Otherwise its just a ‘ghost’ bus known to a select few or those bold enough to ignore the lack or misleading information provided at the bus stop. At present this service is designed to fail and without action will. Proof on Saturday was: we were the only passengers on board what would have been otherwise an empty bus . Please address this issue urgently as the current situation is not providing a ‘service’ or helping to increase demand or passenger awareness of a good link bus service which has the potential to grow and bring benefits to the travelling public. Await your reply with interest as to what action you propose to take and when?”

It’ll be interesting to see if Tees Valley keep the service going beyond next month which, after all, at just over three months after introduction, even with excellent publicity and promotion, is far too short to get a restored bus service attracting enough regular passengers, not least when TeesFlex was funded for six years!
Roger French
Summer blogging timetable: 06:00 TThSSu

This sorry tale reminds me of Barry Doe’s mantra from many years ago:
“Better to fund 99 contracts and publicise them, than fund 100 contracts and tell nobody”.
Surely it’s obvious, even in these days of “it’s all on line”.
LikeLiked by 1 person
While I recognise that Local Authority funding is tight, it is no good them banging on about franchising when they can’t even fulfill their current responsibilities. I have contacted North Yorkshire Council about a still present timetable display on a now unserved stop 3 or 4 times and they have done absolutely nothing. John.
LikeLike
The “original” service did continue into the 2000s under Stagecoach as the 516, subsidised by Hartlepool Borough Council (hence gaining the 5 prefix which implied such things). It was a very lightly used service back then.
It’s interesting to see that the Tees Valley seems to have changed strategy from that of Cleveland and the successor Boroughs with it’s bus stops – they just said All Services on every stop except where only certain services called, in which case the number was shown. I don’t recall them ever altering that to No Services if the stop became unserved.
LikeLike
What do Stagecoach do for their part as they claim in a partnership on the timetable leaflet shown above. The Depot Manager replied, nothing to do with me but the combined authority. Would Stagecoach not want to see this route develop and grow. They could have taken the initiative with both fixing the bus stops with some stickers covering the no public services on the plate and attached a timetable in the case.
We are told by many supporters of the current bus operating environment the commercial companies bring marketing that the public sector can’t do, so why don’t Stagecoach show this capability?
LikeLike
Bus stop poles are the property of the local authority, not a bus company, and from what Roger has illustrated, so are the flags and cases in Tees Valley. So they are not the property of a bus operator to do what they want with – indeed, to do so could technically be regarded as fly posting.
LikeLike
There’s a bus stop pole with Stagecoach flag, timetable case and timetable just around the corner from my house that will next year be celebrating it’s 10th anniversary of not having a bus route. It’s in an immaculate condition. It is also directly opposite the cul-de-sac where our long standing local councillor lives. One who makes a big noise about campaigning about local bus services. Need I say more?!
LikeLike
Still could put some information in the timetable cases then. Anyone would think Stagecoach are only there to collect the contract money!
LikeLike
The Residents of Elwick have had a timetabled service throughout, with Paul’s Travel 65. To my knowledge this has little changed since 2013, apart from withdrawal of the loop through Dalton Piercy in September 2018. Whilst it only operates on Monday, Thursday and Friday (a Saturday service existed briefly in 2014), I imagine the few who require a timetabled service have, as always, adjusted their life pattern around the 65.
This of course does not excuse any of the parties involved not publicising service 51, which, as pointed out, seems deliberately to have been set up to fail lest it look an improvement on DRT.
Terence Uden
LikeLike
I should add that I haven’t actually seen it operate for some time, but assume it still does as have seen no withdrawal notices.
Terence Uden
LikeLike
If the Council can make the effort to put ‘No Public Services’ stickers on bus stops surely it can make the effort to take them off again and while they’re at it, display the correct timetables.
MotCO
LikeLike
This almost seems like a scenario from a 1960s Carry On film. I can see Sid James as the bus operator and Kenneth Williams as the local council leader.
I agree with Green Line 727 that “it’s all on line” but nobody is going to look on line when the council deliberately declares that there is no bus route for which to search.
LikeLike
This is an appalling and sadly too common situation elsewhere in the country. What are these councillors, and council officers actually for if they can’t even manage the basics. I call it incompetence.
Mark could post a link to the new service information on any Hartlepool Facebook pages, plus those for the villages. He could explain in his post why he is doing it, and include contact details for the people who aren’t doing their job. That is what I would do.
Peter Brown
LikeLike
Saying the route operates to 1900 is a bit of a push. Last out of Hartlepool is 1811 effectively. One or Two later journeys might be useful ( noting that publicity dearth needs fixing pronto)
I thought people voted reform because they were unhappy and wanted change, maybe making local bus services better – and indeed backing private enterprise in their supply should be part of the ethos of such a progressive backing britain party.
I like the timetable (online) nice touch of naming timing points in the long honoured tradition of public house names . though Victoria Road (opp Yates) is perhaps a bit C21st generic compared with the rose and crown (or whatever – a Yates could have been a cinema or carpet showroom in a previous trade existence)
Hartlepool had a strong enthusiast following in the RE days (and LHs of Trimdon/TMS) and I nearly saw the new blue stagecoach livery in the plum shade of Hartlepool Corporation
JBC Prestatyn
LikeLike
I think the words “p*ss up” and “brewery” come to mind. Also, the expression “designed to fail” has become so deeply ingrained within the British public transport psyche for several decades, that it has become normalised.
I live in the Hope Valley, which is in the throws of launching a very admirable Swiss-style integrated public transport demonstrator. This builds connecting bus services around the (almost) hourly rail stopping service provided through the Hope Valley by Northern. Superb idea, and one which deserves great success, not least because all eyes of the country will be looking at it closely.
So, you would think that Northern would make an especial effort to get it’s act together to provide a reliable fit for purpose rail service, wouldn’t you? Well apparently not, at least not if it involves spending money, which inevitably it will.
The result will no doubt be that the naysayers who say that “public transport is a waste of money” will be proved right. And everyone will go back to using their cars, which after all, is what everyone, including government and most local authorities, actually want.
Pathetic!
LikeLike
It is very disappointing to see the obvious lack of effort to promote this reintroduced service. However, being realistic I think this route is very unlikely to succeed even if it was properly launched or added to the local Stagecoach map of the area.
Unless it can generate usage from the western suburbs of Hartlepool – without abstracting from existing services – it will fail as there is clearly not going to be enough use from Elwick and Darlton Piercy. The still existing 65 (on BusTimes.org) will meet whatever demand there is.
Just to the north, two routes run through Hart along the A179. Logically one of these could be diverted to serve these villages. What stops this is the road layout of the A19 as it would dangerous for a bus to have to cross this fast road. Once again planners have not thought about the needs of public transport.
Richard Warwick
LikeLike