Ground-breaking project shows rail’s vital role helping young people combat loneliness | RailBusinessDaily

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An innovative pilot project that engaged 400 young people through grassroots ‘community rail’ activities has shown how rail and public transport can be used to unlock opportunity, boost confidence, and forge social bonds.

‘Engaging Young People with Community Rail’ was coordinated by Community Rail Network and funded by the Department for Transport, to explore ways to reduce loneliness risk among young people, the age group most likely to report feeling lonely. (1)

Three pilots were run, in: Gloucestershire & Bristol, run by Gloucestershire CRP and Severnside CRP; Blackburn with Darwen, run by Community Rail Lancashire; and Newcastle & County Durham, run by youth and family charity Catch22. The project involved collaboration with Dr Miriam Ricci, formerly of the University of the West of England (UWE), Bristol, to ensure the work was evidence-led, engaging and empowering. 

The pilots built on experience across the community rail movement, made up of community-based groups and organisations across Britain, dedicated to engaging and empowering local communities using local railways and stations, and promoting sustainable, inclusive travel.

Each pilot introduced groups of young people, many of whom had social anxiety and mental health issues, to their local rail network via journey planning and rail confidence building, and trips to rural, coastal, heritage and cultural locations. Excursions were combined with creative and social activities such as writing or visual art, working with community partners, and discussions on the opportunities rail can open up and its advantages.

Impacts recorded among the young people, aged 15-24, included:

  • 60% of participants said they now felt more confident to travel by train;
  • 65% of participants said rail travel had allowed them to discover places in their local areas that they didn’t know about;
  • Around 80% of participants were only rare or occasional rail users, and for more than one in ten young people, involvement in the projects was their first ever taste of rail travel;
  • After taking part in the projects, some participants enrolled on courses and started new activities, citing improved levels of confidence and self-esteem.

A final project report summarises data collected through interactive workshops, surveys, and case studies with young people and those working on the project. It shows how engaging young people with rail and public transport can be used to break down mobility barriers, opening up new economic and leisure opportunities via inclusive and sustainable travel, but also how rail can be used as a safe place for social interaction and personal development.

The 400+ young people involved reported a number of benefits in terms of social connectedness, awareness of and ability to use nearby travel options. Participants in all pilots described their experience using words such as “amazing”, “fun” and “fantastic”, and many expressed the desire to repeat the experience.

One participant said: “It was great to get away from home life and to experience new things. It made me realise there’s more out there than we know.”

Another added: “I wanted to join this project because getting back outside post-Covid was extremely difficult. I wanted to push myself out of my comfort zone. I wanted to meet new friends and hopefully push my art skills and meet new people.”

Video credit: Movement (Severnside & Gloucestershire CRPs)

Report author Dr Ricci, now a freelance evaluation consultant, said: “The project engaged with young people, many of whom were from particularly disadvantaged backgrounds, to reduce the risk of loneliness and isolation and to enhance their propensity and effective ability to use rail to travel sustainably to destinations and access life opportunities.

“Through the broad range of delivered initiatives – journey planning workshops, art-based projects, and rail experience days – the project demonstrated that transport, and rail in particular, can be used as a means of accessing destinations and social activities, as a safe place for meaningful social interaction and friendship development, and as a personal development resource, to improve and gain new personal, social, and creative skills.”

Jools Townsend, chief executive of Community Rail Network, said: “Within the community rail movement, we know how independent, confident access to public transport is a crucial enabler for social connections and life opportunities, yet it is often lacking. Our pilot project set out to address this, empowering hundreds of young people, building travel confidence, widening horizons, and ensuring the young people could shape their experiences and make their voices heard.

“We’re excited about building on these experiences with our members and railway and community partners, we hope engaging thousands more young people in the years ahead.”

Making Connections (Community Rail Lancashire)
  1. For a broad overview of all the loneliness research evidence mentioned in the report, see: Ricci M. (2022) Loneliness: What it is, how it affects young people, how it can be tackled, and the role of transport. UWE Bristol. Available at: https://uwe-repository.worktribe.com/output/10889666

Photo credit: Community Rail

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