According to the @ONS, before the arrival of coronavirus only 5% of Britons regularly worked from home.
By June 14 last year, 49% had done so in the previous week
Many people's new “commute” involves walking to the spare bedroom
One reason rail and bus travel may never go back to the way it was is that commuters have saved too much money.
A commuter travelling from Reading to London would spend £4,736 on an annual rail season ticket.
Those prices are due to rise by 2.6% from March 1
“Some employers will use this home-office balance now as a differentiator – ‘come and work for us and you can work from home more’'" - Mike Hewitson, head of policy at passenger watchdog Transport Focus
What's your preferred mode of working? 💼
"We have done a lot of analysis on how a bus fills up and everybody on every single attempt does their best not to sit next to somebody until they really have to" - Sam Ryan, chief executive of bus company, Zeelo
Passenger numbers dropped to about 10 to 15% in rail and down to about 20% in bus, according to Katy Taylor, chief strategy and customer officer at Go-Ahead Group, which runs train operators GTR and Southeastern, as well as a number of regional bus companies
More than 57% of UK drivers say having access to a car is more important than before the pandemic, with reluctance to use public transport in the future at its highest level in 18 years, according to research for @TheRAC_UK
.@transportgovuk has pledged to spend £2bn on cycle lanes across the country over the next five years to encourage people to ditch their cars
In September, the @ONS published data revealing that, of those planning to work from home all or part of the time, 12% have considered moving to a different location, with rural or coastal areas the most common
“We could see people making longer journeys to and from their workplace – travelling a greater number of miles but less frequently,” says Bob Powell, customer proposition director at @AvantiWestCoast, which runs the West Coast Main Line
“I wouldn’t be surprised if the railways end up becoming nationalised” - Richard Cresswell, director of London recruitment business @HealthRecruitN
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Boris Johnson starts his address to the Commons by offering condolences to all those who have lost loved ones and says the most important thing we can do is to persevere in our efforts against the virus
He says the bet way to honour their memory is to persevere with the vaccine rollout, with more than 6.8 m people - 13 per cent of the adult population - vaccinated.
Gena Turgel married the British soldier who helped free her from the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp. Now her wedding gown is going on display at the @I_W_M
Matt Hancock has said his thoughts are with "each and every person who has lost a loved one" after the UK's official coronavirus death toll topped 100,000.
"Behind these heart-breaking figures are friends, families and neighbours"
At a Downing Street press conference on Friday, Boris Johnson warned that the mutated virus may increase the Covid death rate by 30%.
However, behind the scenes, there were grumblings from advisers that the data was not yet strong enough to justify such an announcement
Government sources told The Telegraph that Downing Street was "desperate" to get the results out – possibly to prevent a weekend of wild abandon – after new data showed cases were noticeably down and the 'R' rate was now between 0.8 and 1 telegraph.co.uk/politics/2021/…