When: 24 February 2025, 18:00 - 19:00 Where: Zoom MeetingSpeaker: Greig MacKay, Director for Scotland, Bus Users UKThey work to make public transport inclusive and accessible, promote high standards of transport planning and delivery, raise awareness of the effects of transport poverty on loneliness, isolation and social exclusion and resolve passenger complaints and improve services. They are a charity registered in England and Wales (1178677) and in Scotland (SC049144), an approved Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR) Body for bus and coach passengers, the nominated body for dealing with complaints under the Passenger Rights Regulation, a member of the Sustainable Transport Alliance and a Company Limited by Guarantee (04635458)Greig will tell us more about their Scottish activities, including that during September’s 2024 Catch the Bus Month local councils, regional transport partnerships and local groups all played a key role : Perth and Kinross Council got involved with their offer of free bus travel on the first Saturday of each month; a bus group in Prestonpans decorated a bus stop, raising awareness of local bus services; Lothian Buses held a hugely successful Doors Open Day; Sestrans highlighted CTBM on their RTPI screens; Bus Users met with SPT’s board members at Buchanan Bus Station to celebrate the campaign; and Xplore Dundee ran a number of successful events.Booking for Members-FREEBooking for Non Members - £5.00 inc. VATTo book click here: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/1118931065939?aff=oddtdtcreatorNote: If you are not a current Member of the Chartered Institute of Logistics and Transport, please be aware our membership team may be in touch with you using your email address provided regards membership opportunities. If you do not wish to be contacted please email and let us know at regions@ciltuk.org.ukCompetency:PAS2.3 Access and Inclusion through Transport.Kind regardsCommunities Team
When: 4 March 2025, 18:00 - 19:00Where: Zoom MeetingSpeaker: Daniel Wright, Freelance Transport WriterIt's the large items that usually come to mind when we think of transport heritage, but the likes of Flying Scotsman and the Forth Bridge enjoy plenty of protection. Not so the smaller things such as signs, clocks and weighing machines that give character to railway journeys but can be at risk of removal at the whim of a management set on modernisation. Taking examples from throughout Britain, transport writer and campaigner Daniel Wright makes a plea to save these items whose familiarity he believes attract people to train travel and for which the first need may be to compile a list of what's there. Daniel is a transport planner whose first job after graduating from Aston University was at the newly-created Institute of Logistics and Transport in London, where he worked during 1999 as a Policies Assistant.Booking for Members-FREETo book scroll to the bottom of this page, tick the T & C's box and click Book on event, if you have any difficulties email us at regions@ciltuk.org.uk quoting event code:SR0555 with your Full name, title and company and we will book your place for you.Booking for Non Members - £5.00 inc. VATTo book scroll to the bottom of this page, tick the T & C's box and click Book on event, if you have any difficulties email us at regions@ciltuk.org.uk quoting event code:SR0555 with your Full name, title and company and we will book your place for you.Note: If you are not a current Member of the Chartered Institute of Logistics and Transport, please be aware our membership team may be in touch with you using your email address provided regards membership opportunities. If you do not wish to be contacted please email and let us know at regions@ciltuk.org.ukCompetency:TP1.1 Transport Infrastructure and Network ResilienceKind regardsCommunities Team
When: 27 March 2025, 15:00 - 17:00Where: Panmure House, 4 Lochend Close, Edinburgh EH8 8BL Speakers: Ed Sweeney, Professor of Logistics & Supply Chain Management at Edinburgh Business School, Heriot-Watt UniversityAdam Dixon, Adam Smith Professor of Sustainable Capitalism at Edinburgh Business School, Heriot-Watt University Home of Adam Smith, the ‘Father of Economics’’ between 1778 and 1790, seventeenth-century townhouse Panmure House off Edinburgh’s Canongate was rescued from dereliction by Heriot-Watt University in 2007, and now houses the University’s centre for social and economic debate and research. Professors Ed Sweeney and Adam Dixon will tell us how their stewardship of Smith’s home keeps them true to the spirit that the great man was also the Father of Logistics. The event will comprise a lecture, followed by a Q&A session, and a tour of the house. There will also be networking opportunities before and after the formal proceedings. Booking for Members-FREETo book onto this event please click here. Booking for Non-Members-£5 inc VATTo book onto this event please click here.Note: If you are not a current Member of the Chartered Institute of Logistics and Transport, please be aware our membership team may be in touch with you using your email address provided regards membership opportunities. If you do not wish to be contacted please email and let us know at regions@ciltuk.org.ukCompetencies:SC1.1 Supply Chain Networks, Design and Optimisation.