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£20m Oyster-style smart card system could be linking Midlands transport as early as 2022

Government funding being sought for smart card to link tram, bus and rail journeys in East and West Midlands

Midlands’ oyster-style’ smart ticketing system ‘essential part of levelling-up agenda’ say MPs

The Government is being urged to pump £20 million into a new contactless travel card which would allow people to travel across the whole of the Midlands by rail, bus and tram.

Supporters say the technology could be up and running in the West Midlands and Nottingham as early as next year – and rolled out across the region by 2024.

Transport body Midlands Connect says it would help get more people back onto public transport post-Covid by improving convenience and, because it would be touch-free, improve safety.

Midlands Connect said more people working from home part of the time post-Covid could make season tickets less effective for many – and a simple, effective smart card system could help fill the gap.

MPs have now joined Midlands Connect in calling on the Government to invest in what they call a Midlands-wide “tap and cap” ticketing system which would allow people to travel seamlessly across the whole region, paying for journeys via one smart device, mobile phone or credit card.

It could even be rolled out to cover electric bike and e-scooter hire.

Midlands Connect said when it surveyed 10,001 people living in the Midlands, 61 per cent said it would make them more likely to leave their cars at home.

Various forms of smart ticketing already exist in Nottingham, with the Robin Hood travel card, and in parts of the West Midlands via Swift, the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s second biggest public transport payment system after the London Oyster card.