HCT Group
HCT Group is a social enterprise providing transport services and community services in Bristol, Guernsey, Jersey, London, and Yorkshire. It was founded in 1982 as Hackney Community Transport in the London Borough of Hackney to provide transport services for local voluntary organisations, charities, and community groups. HCT Group is registered as a company limited by guarantee. The company is also a registered charity.
Founded in 1982, the HCT Group has a fleet of 500 vehicles and a turnover of £43.7m and employs over 700 people. In June 2011 it reinvested 37% of annual profits into local community services, its best performance to date. Its chief executive, Dai Powell, joined the social enterprise as a bus cleaner.
London
CT Plus was founded as a wholly owned trading arm of HCT in 2001, and became a community interest company in 2007. The company competes for contracts in the marketplace, and its profits are used by HCT to support community transport or other objectives such as training for the long-term unemployed. In August 2019 the CT Plus brand in London was dropped with operations brought under the HCT Group banner; the brand is still used in Yorkshire.History
In 2001, CT Plus began operating a Transport for London contracted service, route 153. In 2003, it began operating routes 388 and 394.Public services in London
Ash Grove (HK)
was CT Plus' first London garage, and is shared with Arriva London. This garage operates 10 routes, including route 26 and route 394.Walthamstow Avenue (AW)
In November 2016, CT Plus opened a second garage in Walthamstow. As of March 2019, Walthamstow Avenue operates routes 20, 385, 397, W11, W12, W16, and W19.Other London services
- Special Educational Needs Transport and coach and bus hire, in Waltham Forest
- Social services transport, in Kensington & Chelsea
- Day Centre & Special Educational Needs Transport, in Lambeth
- Special Educational Needs Transport, in Southwark
- Impact Group, purchased from Tower Transit in August 2018
Fleet
Outside London
HCT also operates a number of community and mainstream bus services outside London.West Yorkshire
CT Plus operates from depots in Wakefield and Leeds, with a fleet of around 110 vehicles. The services in Yorkshire consist mostly of West Yorkshire Metro tendered services: AccessBus, a demand responsive transport service providing local transport for those unable to use regular transport, and school buses, including some 'My bus' yellow school bus contracts. A few public routes are operated, around Wakefield, Huddersfield, Pontefract, and South Elmsall. In addition, some private contracts are operated, including two shuttle services for the NHS.Elsewhere
- Powells Bus, South Yorkshire, acquired July 2018
- Routes 505, 506, 511, and 512, branded Bristol Community Transport, under contract to Bristol City Council, from 2017. Since January 2019 Bristol Community Transport operate route m1 of Bristol Metrobus, using 21 biogas-powered buses.
- Guernsey public bus services, branded as buses.gg
- Jersey public bus services, branded as LibertyBus
- Derbyshire Community Transport
Former operations
- Manchester Community Transport
- Park and ride bus service in Hull, 2010 to 2014
Community transport services
- accessible minibuses for community and voluntary groups
- 'Capital Call' - a door-to-door service provided by private hire vehicles for users with mobility difficulties
- 'ScootAbility' - a mobility scooter home delivery service
- 'PlusBus' - a bus service for those who have difficulty accessing mainstream transport
- 'Door 2 Door' - a transport service provided by volunteers for Hackney residents
- 'Integrated Transport Solutions' - a transport contract management service
- 'YourCar' - a door-to-door service for registered users with mobility difficulties in the London Boroughs of Lambeth and Southwark
Education and training
Social enterprise and transport
The British government has promoted the delivery of public services by not for profit organisations. British prime minister David Cameron has stated that he wants more social enterprises running public services as part of his "Big Society".Charitable legal website Get Legal described HCT's corporate structure as allowing HCT Group to "separate the risks associated with its business in different limited liability vehicles. The social mission of each of those vehicles is protected which sends a clear message to the public that the organisation is a social enterprise.
HCT says it aims to "demonstrate and promote the social enterprise business model as a highly effective and socially responsible mechanism", and that it maintains environmental, health and safety, and social policies, and regularly measures its performance against these. Profit is seen by company CEO Dai Powell as enabling its social goals: "You have to be an enterprise first, because if you don't make a profit, you can't fulfil that social mission." HCT's commercial services allowed it to invest 18 per cent of its annual profits into non-commercial community transport in 2007/08. Its mission was to increase this to 30 per cent in the subsequent five years.
HCT only competes for contracts that have high levels of accessibility and quality in the specification. "HCT sees the provision of high-quality public services as a goal in itself...and actively seeks user input into the design and delivery of all its services." The CEO claims "we don't provide poor services for poor people – the quality has to be there.” HCT recruits volunteers to train people with learning difficulties and physical disabilities to use public transport independently.
West Yorkshire Metro noted that a community transport provider "...spends its surpluses on transport services in the community which are not commissioned from public bodies" but that "commissioning from the sector can however carry risks...organisations can lack capability and professionalism and be over reliant on individuals leading to instability."
HCT Group is no more immune to labour relations problems than any other bus operator. The Socialist Worker'' described HCT as "no friend of workers" and its workers as "some of the lowest paid drivers in London".
HCT Group prefers social enterprises and co-ops as business partners and suppliers; when they raised £500k impact investment from The Phone Co-Op in 2014, their CEO explained with investors as well as suppliers they want to "buy social".
In 2018, HCT Group secured £17.8 million in funding to tackle social isolation, with the help of the investment bank ClearlySo.
History
Hackney Community Transport was established in 1982 when 30 community groups in the London Borough of Hackney formed a pool of six vehicles with a grant from Hackney Borough Council to provide low cost van and minibus hire for local community groups, and a door to door alternative to public transport for people with disabilities. The company's services were staffed by volunteers, but over the next decade a small group of paid staff built up to assist the volunteer workforce.HCT Group received loans from London Rebuilding Society to finance its entry to the bus industry.
In 2004, HCT was contracted by EduAction to deliver 500 local special needs children to school and back each day for London Borough of Waltham Forest from a new depot in Leyton.
In March 2006, HCT expanded outside London to run eight yellow My bus school transport routes in and around Wakefield for West Yorkshire Metro. A further seven runs were added in September and three more in September 2007.
In July 2006, HCT merged with Lambeth & Southwark Community Transport.
On 1 October 2006, HCT began to operate the AccessBus service in Leeds and in 2008, merged with Leeds Alternative Travel.
In March 2009, HCT Group published its first Impact Report.
In February 2010, CT Plus Yorkshire took over the Hull 701 Priory Park & Ride route, with the aim of investing any surplus from its park-and-ride operation to expand a local community transport service and to set up training for long-term unemployed people in Hull. This was withdrawn in 2014, with Stagecoach taking over the service.
In February 2010, HCT Group raised £5 million via a social loan. By 2010 HCT had grown by over a hundredfold since 1993 – from a turnover of £202k to a turnover of £23.3m in 2009/10.
In 2017 and 2018, the group completed a series of acquisitions, purchasing Social Access, Bristol; Manchester Community Transport; CT4TC, a Derbyshire community transport operator since renamed Derbyshire Community Transport; Powells, South Yorkshire; and Impact Group, West London.
Dai Powell, who had been chief executive since 1993, announced in April 2020 that he would retire from the post and be replaced by Lynn McClelland.
Corporate strategy
HCT Group's corporate strategy is to generate profits from providing commercial transport services, then to use these profits to provide community transport services for people unable to use mainstream transport. The two modes, public transport and special need transport, are fully integrated under their model: "the investment in responsive community transport services is made possible by running the commercial activity well." The Financial Times reported in 2010 that turnover had "grown by about 25 per cent a year for the past eight years and is expected to top £20m in the year to March 31, 2010, when profits will be around £1m." HCT's rapid growth is achieved by merging with smaller community transport organisations.HCT Group CEO Dai Powell, in an article explaining the group's strategy, said the business aims to double in size every five or so years for the foreseeable future, seeing scale as "...crucial. The better we do commercially, the more we can do for the communities we serve as a social enterprise", and that the strategy is "maximising the good that we do... to be as bold as a commercial firm, but to the benefit of our communities, not to the owners of capital. It also has the advantage of keeping our social mission absolutely central to our approach." Powell contrasted this approach to that of many third sector organisations "where risk is to be mitigated at worst and eliminated at best. This is simply hopeless for rapid growth." He describes the process as "...so much more rewarding than spending your days "maximising shareholder value", whatever that means."