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evidently there is a local body to refer to and they were very helpful and pleasant to deal with. the upshot of all this is: school bus passes only provide evidence of age during the week, not weekend (when this journey took place.. I know .... don't ask - if you're at school during the week, presumably you are school age at the weekend as well. Nevertheless, in order to get the child fare you have to have a different type of pass. Or, there is a special kind of pass in this area that enables children under 16, or 18 in full time education to travel for 30p per journey (the usual child rate is 70p). This is a local thing though and may not apply everywhere. Why does this have to be so complicated. The general concensus of opinion from the local passenger transport authority was that the driver was being un-necessarily pedantic. Had she been 15 and looked 19 he may have had more grounds. He absolutely should have given her a ticket, serious offence not to. And on no occasion should a driver ever refuse to carry a child with insufficient money, the name and address should be taken and the matter dealt with by the parents. I know some children may give false details but even so ..... All the details were taken and this was passed officially to the bus company. Apparently they were unsurprised to have yet another complaint about this company - unfortunately no-one else will tender for the routes. I guess they are not big money spinners out in the country and in a generally poorer area. What happened to the days when public transport was a service. We should all move to Italy where it truly is a service both in terms of cost and availability of routes and frequency. No good either saying they can afford it, Italy is a much poorer country than we are, they just have their priorities right in some areas.