Do you have difficulties getting a taxi in the evenings or peak times?
Our bus service makes no sense in terms of frequency.
Familiar story. For taxis, morning peak is worst because travelling trip starts and and school starts co-incide and there is a time constraint in getting to the public transport. We have got to the stage we don't even bother to try - I can drive Lisa and the luggage to the station, bring the car home and walk back to the station in 45 minutes. We could do with a cafe at the station on these days.
We do have a bus stop (Monday to Saturday daytime) outside our house with a bus every 30 minutes to Manvers Street, Bath, opposite the railway station there and it works well. Coming home, there is no outbound stop on Manvers Street - the bus drives straight past though most other routes will stop - so it's a short walk to the bus station and irritating to pass the bus as you walk (or run in the hope of connecting). Although the inbound bus is every 30 minutes, the outbound is every 60 as alternate buses do a big one way loop in Melksham and would only get us home just ahead of the next bus. And, yes, these are trunk routes and often overcrowded; we were in Bath yesterday and it was a squeeze even onto the bus that starts on that loop.
Sundays and evenings - we do have a bus service and much improved last year on Sundays. Just not along our street - shorting walk but may as well be Tipperary or Timbuktu for those without mobility and without aids.
Local bus - whole other story. It DOES run most hours on a standard circular route and is well patronised on certain runs (and therein lies a problem - everyone want it at the same time, no-one at many other times) and then it does a few varied runs which are there to provide at least some lifeline to those who have no alternative - very much underutilised. Connections with other buses co-incidental it seems, and it never goes to the station though three of the varied runs call about a five minute walk (with a dangerous road crossing) if you want to use it to access the rail network. The inbound stop has a shelter but no "flag" after a previous stop was damaged and eventually replaced - the bus driver knows, and the incoming passenger needs to know but rarely does.