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In the United Kingdom, Passenger Transport Executives {PTEs) are local government bodies which are responsible for public transport within large urban areas. They are accountable to bodies called Passenger Transport Authorities (PTAs) (see below). There are six PTEs in England, one for each of the metropolitan counties
A similar body, Transport for London, exists in Greater London.
HistoryThe PTEs were first established in the late 1960s by the 1968 Transport Act as transport authorities serving large conurbations, by the then transport minister Barbara Castle. Innitially they covered slightly different areas to the ones they cover today. When the six Metropolitan counties and Strathclyde were established in 1974 they took on their present shape. Until the mid 1980s the PTEs operated bus services in their areas, however bus deregulation by the Transport Act of 1986 forced the PTEs to sell their bus fleets to private operators. They were also stripped of their powers to regulate the fares and timetables of private bus operators. Functions
In recent years the PTEs have campaigned to be given more powers to regulate local bus services, as is the case in London (see London Buses) Passenger Transport AuthoritiesThe Passenger Transport Authorities (PTAs) are the bodies which administer the executives, they are made up of councillors representing the areas served by the PTEs. They are resposible for funding the PTEs, and making the policies which the PTEs carry out on their behalf. In the six metropolitan counties, councillors are appointed to the PTAs by the metropolitan boroughs, or in the case of Strathclyde by the twelve unitary authority councils in the area. The Passenger Transport Authorities are "precepting authorities", meaning that they raise funds by imposing a levy on the council tax collected by the local authorities in the areas that they serve. External link
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