Bus conductor

Traditional British open-platform AEC Routemaster bus in 2005, operated with a conductor
In the post-World War II decades, some countries introduced seated conductors. On this double-decker bus—which operated in Vienna, Austria from the early 1960s—passengers boarded at the rear, passed the conductor and exited through the middle or front doors.

A bus conductor (also referred to as a conductor or clippie) is a person (other than the driver) responsible for collecting fares from bus passengers. Bus conductors may also be responsible for helping passengers to board,[1] keeping the bus route on schedule, attracting potential passengers to the vehicle, and announcing bus stops.[2]

  1. ^ Couto, Maria T.; Tillgren, Per; Söderbäck, Maja (2011-10-13). "Drivers' and conductors' views on the causes and ways of preventing workplace violence in the road passenger transport sector in Maputo City, Mozambique". BMC Public Health. 11 (1): 800. doi:10.1186/1471-2458-11-800. ISSN 1471-2458. PMC 3209656. PMID 21995594.
  2. ^ Obiorah, Kenneth (2021). "Lagos' Bus Stop Names and Their Pronunciation by Danfo Bus Conductors". Jurnal Arbitrer. 8 (2): 180. doi:10.25077/ar.8.2.180-188.2021.

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