Labour shadow transport secretary Louise Haigh warned that from the end of July bus services will be slashed in what the opposition party described as 'a betrayal of the promises this government made to improve bus services'.

Ms Haigh accused the Government of slashing its bus transformation funding by almost two-thirds and leaving almost 60% of local communities without any funding to improve bus services.

As Transport Network has previously reported, more than a billion of transformation funding has been diverted to cover COVID subsidies.

With Covid Recovery Funding now set to expire at the end of September, communities are facing a wave of bus service cuts, Labour warned, highlighting South Yorkshire, where a third of services are set to be removed from 24 July. Operators in the North East are also expected be reducing services.

Ms Haigh said: 'Communities and local leaders need certainty in the face of this looming bus crisis, but Ministers are missing in action. Any reduction in services will be devastating for the millions of passengers who depend on buses, and would represent a straightforward betrayal of the promises this government made to communities.

A spokesperson for the Department for Transport described Labour's claims as 'wholly inaccurate' and said it had 'committed to investing £3bn into bus services by 2025, to improve fares, services and infrastructure, and given nearly £2bn since March 2020 to bus operators and local authorities to mitigate the impacts of the pandemic'.

In fact, ministers have previously made clear that cash for COVID support is part of the £3bn rather than being in addition to it.

The spokesperson added: 'To maximise this investment, local authorities need to ensure that services are commercially sustainable and reflect the needs of passengers post-pandemic.'

This article first appeared on Transport Network.