Greater Manchester commuters can now dob each other in at the touch of a button, thanks to a new LiveChat feature cunningly disguised as a safety initiative.
In a bold move that combines modern technology with the age-old Mancunian pastime of curtain-twitching, Transport for Greater Manchester has launched an upgraded version of its Bee Network app that lets passengers discreetly report anything from violent crime to someone speaking too loudly on the phone.
Users can now scan a QR code on trams or buses and instantly inform a live police handler about “uncomfortable situations”, which experts say could range from actual criminal behaviour to the presence of teenagers wearing hoodies and listening to grime.
Mayor Andy Burnham, beaming like a man who’s just invented train marshals with tasers, declared the initiative “pioneering,” before noting that the travelling public will now have a “real person” to speak to, a revolutionary concept in public transport, where most human interaction traditionally ends in disappointment or a passive-aggressive tannoy announcement.
“Passengers will feel reassured knowing they can summon the forces of law and order simply by tapping a phone screen,” said Burnham, while unveiling the feature at the ‘Safer Streets, Safer Transport’ summit, an event held indoors where nothing bad ever happens and everyone agrees that more cameras are definitely the answer.
Transport officials insist the new system will “increase visibility” of policing, though critics have pointed out that being watched from 14 angles while a lad eats a Chicken Select on the 192 to Stockport isn’t exactly the dystopian-free future they’d hoped for.
Chief Superintendent Suzanne Downey has been handed the unenviable task of turning buses and trams into Greater Manchester’s “11th policing district”, a concept warmly welcomed by no one except possibly the cast of Line of Duty and a small but vocal pro-curfew faction in Bury.
“The goal,” explained Assistant Chief Constable Chris Sykes, “is to ensure every Metrolink carriage feels like a minor airport interrogation lounge, only with worse lighting and more teenagers vaping.”
TravelSafe Support Officers, equipped with bodycams, high-vis vests and a robust tolerance for being ignored, are already being dispatched across the network. Their training reportedly includes de-escalating public disputes and being filmed for TikTok while trying not to cry.
As part of the Bee Network’s broader efforts to combat antisocial behaviour, users of the app can also access Strut Safe, a volunteer-staffed helpline that offers companionship to nervous travellers, or at least someone to talk to who isn’t loudly explaining cryptocurrency to a stranger.
Pilot schemes are also underway to display the number of available parking spaces at Park and Ride sites, a cutting-edge feature last seen in 2007 at every Sainsbury’s.
Local commuter Wendy Grimshaw told The Rochdale Times: “It’s great. Last week I reported a man for humming Sweet Caroline and within three minutes, someone turned up and confiscated his ukulele. You love to see it.”
TfGM say the rollout is only the beginning, with future plans rumoured to include on-board lie detectors, personality scanners and possibly the long-awaited taser tram conductors.
Reporting from down the M62, we’ll bring you more updates once we’ve successfully reported ourselves for snark.
