How Not to Think about Mass Transit

GRTC_Chesterfield
GRTC bus bound for Chesterfield Plaza. Photo credit: Richmond Times-Dispatch

by James A. Bacon

Michael Paul Williams, a feature columnist for the Richmond Times-Dispatch, takes a dim view of a decision by the Chesterfield County Board of Supervisors to discontinue a subsidized bus route between downtown Richmond and Chesterfield Plaza. “Chesterfield, despite its dramatic demographic shifts and an increasing poverty rate, continues to turn a blind eye to residents who don’t own cars due to choice, age, disability or the inability to afford one,” he writes in his column today.

He indicts Chesterfield’s decision without ever revealing (a) how much it costs to maintain the service, (b) how many passengers used the service, or (c) how much the subsidies amount to per passenger, much less asking (d) how such a sum might be spent more beneficially in other ways.

The prospect of such reasoning taking hold in the Richmond region and driving the expenditure of real money should be terrifying in the extreme to anyone who objects to the squandering of tax dollars on symbolic gestures rather than on remedies that actually work. Walk with me through his column and despair.

Williams writes:

The supervisors gutted the budget of the Route 81 Express, creating the ridership decline they used to justify killing it. What exactly did the board expect from a route that offered one round-trip in the morning and a single one-way trip from downtown Richmond to Chesterfield in the afternoon with no stops in between? The board couldn’t have undermined the bus route more effectively if it had let the air out of the tires.

He has a point. Sort of. True, the route structure was idiotic. From Williams’s account, it sounds like the Chesterfield supervisors were trying to provide mass transit on the cheap and the route was doomed to fail. The obvious solution, however, is to pull the plug on the project before wasting any more money — just what the board did. The alternative is to double up on a bad situation, spending money to beef up the schedule or add interconnecting lines in the hope of creating critical mass. But what would such an arrangement look like, how much money would it cost, and how many people would be likely to ride that route? Just how much money does Williams propose throwing at the problem?He doesn’t say. He just wants more.

Williams brushes close to enlightenment when he quotes Jesse W. Smith, Chesterfield’s transportation director: “The county really doesn’t have the density to support traditional bus service.”

Bingo. The rule of thumb is that people are willing to walk 1/4 mile to avail themselves of mass transit. If 500 people live within a 1/4-mile radius of a bus stop, that represents far fewer potential customers than if, say, 2,500 people live within a 1/4-mile radius.  It also matters how walkable the streetscapes are. Are there sidewalks? If so, are they set away from streets with cars whizzing by at 45 miles per hour? When pedestrians cross the street, do they feel like they’re taking their lives into their hands? Is the walk visually interesting or is the view monotonous and undifferentiated?

Chesterfield is the epitome of the autocentric suburb. Given decades of low-density, hop-scotch, pedestrian-unfriendly development, Chesterfield County has a pattern of land use that is totally hostile to walkability and inappropriate for transit. Trying to implant mass transit in such an environment would be like planing a banana tree in Alaska: It can’t possibly thrive.

Chesterfield fully deserves criticism for its horrendous land use decisions, but that is no reason to compound the error by superimposing an unsuitable mass transit system. If Williams would like to spark a useful discussion, he could start by suggesting which transportation corridors might lend themselves to mixed-use development at higher densities that might one day, given sufficient redevelopment, support a bus line at reasonable cost.

“They’re shooting themselves in the foot,” Williams then quotes my old friend Stewart Schwartz, executive director of the Coalition for Smarter Growth, as saying. Williams summarizes Schwartz as making a point similar to one that I have often made on this blog:

In today’s competitive marketplace for corporations and employees, the suburban office park model of the late 20th Century is fading fast as companies seek to appeal to a millennial workforce that increasingly eschews the automobile and would rather walk, bike or ride mass transit to work. From Charlotte to Phoenix to Denver to Cleveland, “elected officials and business leaders recognize that transit provides a competitive edge,” Schwartz said.

That’s all very true. But it’s also totally irrelevant to Chesterfield. The transit systems he mentions serve areas that have far more people within walking distance of their bus stops than Chesterfield can ever think to have. Buses and Bus Rapid Transit might make sense in Richmond’s urban core (assuming City Council enacts appropriate zoning and invests in walkable streetscapes) but none at all in Chesterfield.

Williams then quotes former Sen. John Watkins, a Republican who represented Chesterfield County, who “was a lonely voice in the wilderness on the need for mass transit” (and who also was a prime mover behind the Rt. 288 corridor that opened up vast new swaths of the county to autocentric development). When he joined the legislature in the 1980s, Watkins observed, Fairfax County was adamant about not wanting buses, “and how they’re the biggest user of transit dollars in the state.”

Here’s the flaw with that comparison: Fairfax County had a population density of 2,862 inhabitants per square mile in 2014; Chesterfield had a population density of 742. Fairfax had nearly four times the population density! Moreover, there are sections of Fairfax that have far higher density than the average, while population in Chesterfield is smeared uniformly across the landscape. Buses make far more economic sense in Fairfax than Chesterfield.

Yes, Chesterfield has made a mess of itself. Yes, Chesterfield has created a land use pattern that makes life difficult for poor people lacking access to automobiles. But, no, compounding one folly with another is not an answer. Chesterfield needs to develop corridors of high-density, mixed-use development capable of supporting mass transit before adding new bus routes. Only then will the cost-benefit ratios look remotely favorable.


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Comments

21 responses to “How Not to Think about Mass Transit”

  1. Good column. There is a wealth inversion occurring between the cities and the suburbs. One need only drive through DC to see many areas that were once decrepit completely gentrified. I’m not talking about some isolated cases, I’m talking about a considerable percentage of DC. In Chicago the notoriously dangerous Cabrini-Green housing project is gone … replaced by upscale town homes. All of which begs the question – where did the people living in those once challenged neighborhoods go? I assume they moved to the suburbs. In other words, they moved to an area where they are probably further than 1/4 mile from a bus stop.

    So now what? The yuppies moving into the gentrified city centers aren’t going to ride the bus and the people who need bus service to get to and from work live too far from the bus stops!

    As for Sen John Watkins – when did he serve in the Senate? Sometime around the Civil War (oh, sorry Jim, the War of Northern Aggression)? There have been metro buses lumbering through Fairfax County for as long as I can remember. I went to school with kids whose fathers were Metro bus drivers. When was Fairfax County a bus free zone?

  2. TooManyTaxes Avatar
    TooManyTaxes

    Fairfax County DOT has said most of the county is insufficiently dense to support mass transit of any kind, including buses, except, perhaps, buses operated during the AM and PM rush. So how much do you want to spend on a little-used mode of transportation.

    How about Chesterfield County looking at spending a lesser sum subsidizing low-income riders using jitneys? Jitneys have worked successfully in Atlantic City for a long time. The debate need not be big buses versus nothing.

    1. Jitneys and similar vehicles make a lot of sense. When I lived on Kaua’i we investigated having the local government negotiate a fleet lease for 7-passenger vans. Just carrying six passengers, five days a week to and from work for a dollar or two each way, paid for the vehicle lease, insurance, fuel, the driver’s time with money left over. Any passengers any other time was a bonus. This gave families a vehicle at no cost plus extra income. and reduced traffic on the roads (which is what we were trying to do). This was pre-Uber but the idea was the same, but more on a subscription basis, but also did include dispatch rides. We are so stuck on looking to the same old solutions (e.g. big buses running at a loss or no transportation) that we fail to explore many creative options to accomplish the same end at far lower costs.

      1. LarrytheG Avatar
        LarrytheG

        ya’ll need to come up Fredericksburg way on a weekend or evening and visit out commuter parking lots which are chock full of commuter vans.

        however there is one fly in the no-govt-subsidy ointment; most of them are insured by a State insurance pool.

        but I totally agree with TomH.

        But WHERE are the ACTUAL proposals from the folks who are opposed to traditional transit?

        we need – from the folks who say they want a more cost-effective , innovative approach to actually propose specific things with specific operational and financial info.

        seems like , over and over – we get the folks on the right lambasting the liberal tax and spend transit approach (and I AGREE) but the only thing actually forthcoming from the opponents is concepts and framework-type “ideas” – not real proposals that actually provide real solutions with real cost savings.

        their lot in life seems to be to complain and carp about the approaches they don’t like without ever really laying down real alternatives.

        so we end up with this continuing, non-stop whining and complaining.

        geeze! we’ve reached the point where one side just wants to continue the current approach – that old status quo that TMT loves, and the other side just want to oppose..without any real counter proposals. sound familiar?

  3. Using an edit-replace to change Chesterfield and busses to Virginia Beach and light rail and Jim can save having to write a new article from scratch.

  4. LarrytheG Avatar
    LarrytheG

    so… how about – if it can’t break even on farebox revenues, it shuts down?

    what I get out of this and many other articles like it – is unsatisfying and vague guilt-tinged discussions about viability and cost without ever really getting to any kind of real metric about cost that is a real bottom line for operating or not.

    why are the folks who essentially make the argument about viability and cost so reluctant to say – ” if you can’t operate on a break-even basis – shut it down”?

    stand for the principles you say you believe in – without apologies.

    it’s SO EASY and feel so wonderful to shout “entitlement loving libtards”, eh?

    but then when we get right down to it – we have 3000 words of beating around the proverbial bush…

    Here’s what I ask – if you don’t like the current approach – and you’re not at the point where you say – “run at break even or shut down” – then for heavens sake – give YOUR PLAN for how it should operate.

    where is that “Bacon’s Bottom Line” at when it comes to transit?

    here’s my big frustration – yes the liberals will say – we have to have it and don’t want to talk about cost – but it’s just as bad on the other side when they say “it’s too costly” and they never get to what is an acceptable cost metric – just non-specific oppositional hand-wringing.

  5. LarrytheG Avatar
    LarrytheG

    re: ” Here’s the flaw with that comparison: Fairfax County had a population density of 2,862 inhabitants per square mile in 2014; Chesterfield had a population density of 742. Fairfax had nearly four times the population density! Moreover, there are sections of Fairfax that have far higher density than the average, while population in Chesterfield is smeared uniformly across the landscape. Buses make far more economic sense in Fairfax than Chesterfield.”

    well.. as usual , looking at these things from 10,000 feet is not very informative.

    what would be , in my view, would me a map of Fairfax and another of Chesterfield with the areas “dense enough” for transit in color.

    what would those maps looks like?

    Second – how about someone saying – for the maps that do have color – what is the “right” cost to operate and how much of that cost is a subsidy.

    then finally , can someone explain the subsidy justified. why is one number not acceptable and another one – lower – apparently acceptable?

    Is ANY transit justified to be subsidized? what is the rationale for it – and what is the acceptable percentage?

    see what I get out of these discussions is subjective concepts and philosophies – not actual metrics and cost data – just whatever each person considers their view of what is “right”.

    you can’t do policy like this but of course we do … and then we end up with these conundrums that basically don’t go to any kind of resolution – just disagreements about what should be or not.

    surely we have some better ways to deal with things that do cost money

  6. Reed Fawell 3rd Avatar
    Reed Fawell 3rd

    How many people today want to, or will, take the bus?

    Its like Al Gore telling folks to hang their wash out on a rope line.

    Any community investing money in buses and telling their citizens they have to take take buses to work or anywhere else is akin to ordering that last Confederate troops over the walls into the Crater. It’s a suicide mission.

    1. That’s what I thought too Reed … until I saw busloads of Facebook and Google developers on their buses going from downtown SanFrancisco (where they live) to Silicon Valley (where they work) and back. Then I saw people from the Eastern Shore in Maryland drive to Easton Airport, park and take a WiFi equipped van to BWI where they either flew somewhere or took Amtrak somewhere. The round trip van cost less than a few days parking at BWI.

      Maybe we’re just not thinking about this the right way.

      1. LarrytheG Avatar
        LarrytheG

        this is more like subsidized commuter rail for high income folks, isn’t it?

        why should any bus that is carrying people who are not poor – be subsidized at all?

        shouldn’t these kinds of buses be full fare sufficient to pay for the bus – no different than what we see for buses and van pools from commuter lots to jobs?

        we keep conflating the issue here..

        Is transit for those who are lower income and cannot afford cars or is it for something else?

        How do you justify a subsidy for those who earn higher income and can afford to pay for the service?

        1. TooManyTaxes Avatar
          TooManyTaxes

          I see the California thing as employers running buses mainly for employees.

          I’ve been told the Loudoun County commuter buses with nice seats, reliable schedules and WiFi break even – which is amazing for any transit service. I’ve also heard there is great pressure to kill most of the routes when the Silver Line is extended. That makes good sense if the buses are losing money. Not sure when they break even.

          It’s also important to note that many riders on buses to and from more affluent areas are lower income workers going to and from work. Some work in private homes; others are clerks in stores or low-level health care workers.

        2. TooManyTaxes Avatar
          TooManyTaxes

          I forgot to add that, in connection with some rezoning grants, landowners have proffered transit subsidies to reduce SOV traffic and meet TDM goals. These subsidies are often used by lower income workers.

      2. Reed Fawell 3rd Avatar
        Reed Fawell 3rd

        Yes, Don, I can see how that kind of “bus” done right can work well.

  7. LarrytheG Avatar
    LarrytheG

    re: ” In today’s competitive marketplace for corporations and employees, the suburban office park model of the late 20th Century is fading fast as companies seek to appeal to a millennial workforce that increasingly eschews the automobile and would rather walk, bike or ride mass transit to work.”

    that sure doesn’t seem like the original reason transit came to be was it?

    was it ever a service intended to transport middle and upper income workers in an urban area? Maybe it was – way back when but at some point it seems to have been viewed as mobility of last resort for low income workers.

    we seem to get turned around on these things…. Is the Chesterfield issue about Millennials or higher income workers?

  8. LarrytheG Avatar
    LarrytheG

    What might need to be done with transit – is to charge the fares that are needed for the system to pay for itself, let everyone pay full fare but those who are low income – get something like food stamps but instead mobility stamps.

    that way – we get out of this confusing conundrum where one minute we’re talking about the purpose of transit being for low income and then turn right around and talk about it being for millennials and knowledge economy workers who can easily afford the fares.

  9. Larry, I very much agree with you when you ask, “Is transit for those who are lower income and cannot afford cars or is it for something else?” From a land use point of view it’s all about something else — millenials who want walkability and mass transit instead of cars as a lifestyle choice — BUT there’s a critical mass/frequency problem. A commuter-oriented bus system with two long-distance trips a day is NOT what they are looking for. It’s not even something that frequent mass transit alone can fix; you need the density and sidewalks and bicycle rentals and accessible shopping too. In short you need a planned urban atmosphere, not a few buses overlaid on top of dead-end suburban development. The problem for those who need jobs and can’t afford a car of their own is quite different; theirs IS the twice-a-day commute, from residence to workplace and back again. Which is why I don’t see how you can design a mass transit system that does both without running it all day with low ridership much of the time. But I do prefer your approach of “charge the fares that are needed for the system to pay for itself, let everyone pay full fare, but those who are low income – get something like food stamps but instead mobility stamps.”

  10. JOHN BR Avatar

    Since the numbers are presumably so low, why not create a large van type service where people can schedule pickups in a planned manner. Rather than have empty buses rambling the roadways, you would have vans picking up people who actually want to use them and have somewhere to go.
    A service like that would charge fess that make sense (like actually cover costs!) and I bet would grow quickly as long as it provided good service for its customers.

    Good service that people can use will lead to increased users. Of course, that makes too much common sense.

  11. JOHN BR Avatar

    Since the numbers are presumably so low, why not create a large van type service where people can schedule pickups in a planned manner. Rather than have empty buses rambling the roadways, you would have vans picking up people who actually want to use them and have somewhere to go.
    A service like that would charge fees that make sense (like actually cover costs!) and I bet would grow quickly as long as it provided good service for its customers.

    Good service that people can use will lead to increased users. Of course, that makes too much common sense.

  12. LarrytheG Avatar
    LarrytheG

    I would think – once the transit system had the marching orders to pay for itself – it would be up to them to choose the various ways to provide service – as long as they operated on a balanced budget but I do think you’d have to change the leadership/culture to understand the business model was no longer subsidized for “good purposes”.

  13. LarrytheG Avatar
    LarrytheG

    interesting report:

    The rate at which people use public transportation to commute has fallen flat

    http://www.brookings.edu/blogs/the-avenue/posts/2015/09/18-metro-areas-new-census-data-kane-tomer

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