No Light Rail in Vancouver!
“Public transit use is up 30 percent since 1995,” says APTA. Yet, as the above chart
shows, APTA is conveniently comparing 2006 with a desperately low point in transit
industry history: 1995 saw fewer riders than any year since 1977. If we compared
2006 with, say, 1990, we’d see only a 15-
The picture is even dimmer if we look at transit trips per urban resident. As shown in the chart below, 2006 was the highest level since all the way back to 2001. At no time before 1993 (at least as far back as records go, which is to 1907) were transit trips per urban resident ever as low as they are in 2006, not even in the dark days of the early 1970s when the transit industry bottomed out.
Less cause for celebration. Click the chart to download a spreadsheet with the actual numbers.
“Light rail had the highest percentage increase among all modes,” APTA adds. This is only because light rail carries so few to begin with: light rail only managed to carry 3.8 percent of all 2006 transit trips. Considering that, over the past decade, more than 13 percent of all transit capital investments have gone into light rail — around $17 billion in 2007 dollars — I would hope that it gained a few riders.
In many cases, however, light-
Speaking of Portland, how did my old home town do? Last week, I pointed out that
Portland transit actually carried fewer trips in the first three quarters of 2006
than in the same period in 2005. According to APTA’s fourth-
Of course, it was those high gas prices and urban growth, not investments in light
rail or any other rail transit, that allowed the transit industry to break the 10-
Considering the high gas prices, no transit agency should have lost riders. Yet some did. Most transit agencies in the San Francisco Bay Area, including Contra Costa Transit, Golden Gate Transit, and San Francisco Muni, lost riders, partly because BART is sucking the life out of other Bay Area transit agencies and partly because the region’s high housing prices are forcing jobs elsewhere.
Davis, California, that paragon of environmentalism, lost 3 percent of its bus riders. Atlanta continued its long history of losing bus riders. Tampa’s vintage trolley lost 4 percent of its riders. Ridership also fell in Toledo, Knoxville, Vancouver Washington, and a number of other smaller cities.
If anything, a careful review of the data would indicate that we should invest less, not more, into public transit. More money for buses, perhaps, especially where capacity shortages may exist. But far less for rail transit.
Over the past decade, two out of three transit capital dollars have gone for rail and less than 30 percent have gone for buses. Yet buses carried 60 percent of all transit riders in 2006, which is virtually unchanged since 2000 and only a little less than in 1990.
Just think of how fast transit might have grown if only half the rail dollars that
were spent in a few corridors had been spent instead on improving bus systems throughout
our urban areas. Transit would have broken the 10-
* I presume most Antiplanner readers understand that “trips” refers to individual transit boardings. If you get on a bus, then transfer to rail, that is two trips even though from your perspective you made only one trip. One way the transit agency can boost trips is to open a rail line and reroute former downtown buses to rail stations. This forces people to transfer and increase trips. This is probably not a significant factor in these national statistics but may be significant in some local areas.
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Trackback • Posted in News commentary, Transportation
More Than 10 Billion Served
Congratulations to the American transit industry for managing to carry more than 10 billion transit trips in 2006, the first year it has done so since 1957.* Naturally, the American Public Transportation Association (APTA) considers this to be proof that we need to funnel even more subsidies into transit.
“This significant ridership milestone is part of a multi-
Rapid growth? Click the chart to download a spreadsheet with the actual numbers, which are from APTA Transit Factbooks.
As I will discuss in detail next Tuesday, subsidies to transit riders are already around 64 cents per passenger mile, while highway subsidies are only 0.4 cents per passenger mile. So, tell me again, why we do need to give transit even more subsidies?
Reprinted from The Antiplanner