transit

Episode 8 - Listener feedback on fares, empty buses & Human Transit

The first three listener emails came in, prompting a discussion of fares and pre-payment in more detail. Also, variable loads can make buses appear empty and cause a political problem; so what to do about it? We end with a very informative clip from a talk by Human Transit author Jarrett Walker earlier this year, focusing on the four important questions to consider before attempting to design transit service. In other words, what are we trying to achieve?

I am in Boston this week so stay tuned for some great content including on-street interviews and transit trips when I return.

Somerville, Mass. bike advocate Alex Epstein

A great show today where Alex and I discuss everything from politically-driven street design changes to the effects of car culture on our society. We reclaim some parking spaces along the way, ponder the best way to move sustainable transportation forward, and observe that car-free is the way to be. Check out the fine work of the Somerville Bicycle Committee and their facebook page.If you're in the Boston area, lend your support for the city's first protected bike lane on its busiest cycling route.

We mentioned research by John Pucher and the Victoria Transport Policy Institute on cycling, parking policies, and highlighted efforts to improve the plight of Indian rickshaw operators and a new UBC study showing that bike infrastructure in Vancouver reduced injuries by as much as 90 percent. We also love that Park(ing) Day shows how cars waste urban space. And why cycling is both progressive and conservative.

Next week I have another great show for you while I am visiting Boston to ride buses, trains and my bicycle.

 

Podcast 6 - News, Street Design, Transit Fares, and please forget about bike helmets

Back with a new podcast, catching up on some things in the news this month. I talk about the importance of redesigning streets to improve safety and comfort for people of all abilities, and it doesn't have to be an expensive, long-term project.  Brooklyn's Fourth Avenue speedway was just redesigned using only paint and plastic bollards (more on road diets).  Advocates are targeting the dangerously narrow and inadequate bike and pedestrian path on the Pulaski Bridge for improvements. This bridge shows why conflicts arise between pedestrians and cyclists, because both groups are given inadequate facilities even while motorists dominate the streets.

Bike helmets aren't all they're cracked up to be. A few Swedish engineers are working on an invisible, inflatable bike helmet. I argue that helmets do not prevent crashes, and by pushing helmet use we neglect the things that actually matter for bike safety like safe bicycling advice, driver education and enforcement. Bike Walk Lee showed the power of bikes in social justice by holding a clinic to help homeless people get access to bike repair services. Toronto removes a key north-south bike lane despite it having tripled bike travel on the corridor in just a few short years.

The last piece of bad news is from California, where politicians are releasing emergency oil reserves to try to appease frustrated motorists. But as we know, that is not a solution.

On the transit side, the Worcester Regional Transit Authority, the disproportionately small bus system in New England's second largest city, is buying three all-electric buses. This a big positive development yet it also highlights the problems with the federal transit funding formulas.

Free service on the Silver Line bus between downtown Boston and Logan Airport will continue until January. The absence of on-board (or any) fare collection has surely caused a dramatic reduction in travel times and made things easier for everyone.  In a related development, my favorite transit blog, Human Transit, discredits route-level fare recovery analyses since each route is part of an interconnected urban transportation system.

 

Bus Rapid Transit and Customer Service

Here is episode 5 of the podcast, starting with some thoughts on the value of customer service in transit and the difficulty of providing it. Improved bus service is coming to the 14/15 Jeffrey Corridor in Chicago and the S79 on Hylan Blvd in Staten Island (New York City). Both will reduce travel times but neither can really be considered Bus Rapid Transit. In this show I discuss what BRT really is and how our continued pro-car bias routinely prevents us from implementing high quality bus service.

It's a long show but I think you'll enjoy it.

Episode 3 - transit fares, intercity rail and bus

Observations on transit fares prompted by my recent quick visit to Bethlehem and Easton, Pennsylvania. And why do so few people take Amtrak? Hint: it's not because they don't want to.  Check out this early blog post on improving the entire American rail system in an efficient and cost-effective way. Only a few links this week.  LANTA provides local bus service in and around Allentown, Bethlehem and Easton; Greater Greater Washington wrote last year on Amtrak's declining service levels; and Transit Maps from Cameron Booth.  We heard music from Manudub, Funkysushi, and Broken Social Scene.

 

Transit Scheduling

An overview of the transit agency bus scheduling process. In the news this week, San Francisco tries off-board fare payment, New York plans to restore some services that were eliminated in 2010 due to budget cuts, and the fallacy of traffic projections is exposed.

SF: http://www.theatlanticcities.com/commute/2012/07/experiment-worth-watching-all-door-bus-boarding-san-francisco/2543/ and http://www.humantransit.org/2012/07/in-san-francisco-passengers-will-be-able-to-board-through-any-door-of-any-city-bus-as-they-have-long-been-able-to-do-on-ligh.html

NYC: http://www.streetsblog.org/2012/07/19/mta-partially-restores-transit-service-and-adds-some-new-bus-routes/

MN: http://www.streets.mn/2012/07/23/the-projections-fallacy/

As always, stay tuned to this site for updates every few days. Visit often or subscribe via email or the RSS feed on the right hand side.

Comments? Suggestions?  Email feedback@criticaltransit.com.

Critical Transit Podcast -- Episode 1

Promoting critical thinking about sustainable transportation, now in audio form. Featuring news, information and analysis of transit issues and services, focusing on planning, policy and operations. In this first episode, I discuss the same-old U.S. transportation funding bill and argue that the distinct between "choice riders" and the "transit dependent" is unhelpful. New York welcomes bike sharing, Boston moves forward with a plan to sell naming rights to its subway stations, and Toronto subway riders offer transit user tips.

Show notes and links:

Transportation Authorization Bill (MAP-21): Transportation For America

Atlantic Cities: attracting "choice riders"

Transit Matters: station naming rights

Toronto: TTC Subway Rider Efficiency Guide

Epic Transit Journeys: intercity journeys on local transit