Passengers say buses are too hot
Regular public transport users say that on sunny days it has felt like they are being driven around in mobile cookers.
When route 58 regular Bill Barson, of Netherhall, Leicester, wrote to Arriva to ask why his supermarket shopping was being cooked before he had chance to get it home, he was taken aback by their response.
The heating can only be turned off via a tap under the engine, according to a letter from the firm's customer service department, which added that: "This is not usually done until the warm weather is more settled."
The Mercury experienced the heating still on on a 51A Arriva bus into the city last Thursday.
Three years ago Arriva spent £9.5 million on a new fleet of buses for Leicestershire.
Disgruntled passenger Mr Barson said: "Why buy buses with such a stupid set-up?
"They are trying to get more people to leave their cars at home and use buses, but who wants to go on the bus when they are throwing out heat like a mobile Tandoori oven?
"It's got to the point now where I do not go into town as much because I would rather not be hot and bothered."
When contacted by the Mercury, an Arriva spokesman gave a slightly different story to the customer service department.
Spokesman Keith Myatt said: "Having spoken to engineers at Thurmaston, the buses used on the 58 service have a mechanism in the cab whereby the driver can adjust the heating.
"He would not have to wait for an engineer to make an adjustment.
"There are some older vehicles in the fleet where an engineer is needed to make the adjustment but these are generally not allocated."
However, passengers at St Margaret's Bus Station said that Mr Barson was not the only one feeling hot under the collar.
Pensioner Albert Hargrave uses the Arriva 27 bus to get into Leicester from his home in Ratby.
The 88-year-old said: "You can definitely feel the heating on your legs even when it is a sunny day – it does seem that they are not able to turn it off."
Melanie Ward, 23, of Kibworth regularly uses Arriva's X3 service to travel to work in the city. She said the problem was worse on single-decker buses.
She said: "When they send the coach instead of the bus, it's always baking hot on that." Bus group First admitted that its vehicles had a similar problem. Its double-decker buses are kept warm by a radiator system that sees hot water from the engine pumped through 150ft of copper piping. It can only be turned off by engineers.
Spokesman Leon Daniels said an instruction had now been sent out to switch off the heating on all of its vehicles for summer.
He said: "Unfortunately it is one of those nuisances of technology, which we look forward to technology one day being able to solve."
Passenger Bill Barson with one of the Arriva buses serving Netherhall



















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