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National Express rescues West Midlands transport group

Listed bus operator will run services which transport isolated and vulnerable people around the region

National Express has bought out the group which operates Ring & Ride West Midlands

A transport charity has been rescued out of administration by National Express.

Birmingham-based Accessible Transport Group has been bought out by West Midlands Accessible Transport, a subsidiary of the listed bus and train operator for an undisclosed sum.

Accessible Transport Group, along with its sister charities Ring & Ride West Midlands and Accessible Transport Group Contract Services, provide accessible transport services for people in the region who experience mobility impairment or social isolation in urban and rural environments.

It also runs daily home-to-school transport for 2,500 children and young people with special educational needs in Birmingham and the Black Country and has 11,000 registered members in total.

Together, the Birmingham-headquartered group is the largest accessible transport provider in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ with more than 700 staff and 600 vehicles from nine depots across the West Midlands.

They were funded in part by Birmingham City Council but also a number of other local authorities and the West Midlands Transport Authority.

Matthew Ingram and Tyrone Courtman, from Duff & Phelps, were appointed joint administrators of the three charities in March but the financial services firm said it could not disclose the reasons behind its appointment.

Duff & Phelps said the insolvency of the group had had immediate and real consequences.