Daily Camera (Boulder)

RTD cuts rail service amid big projects

- By Bruce Finley bfinley@denverpost.com

RTD officials have approved cuts in rail service that will mean one train per hour on some key routes starting May 26, far short of the 15-minute frequencie­s that public transporta­tion advocates urge to entice more metro Denver residents out of their cars.

The temporary cuts, combined with other permanent scale-backs in service that the Regional Transporta­tion District’s board approved 14-1 late Tuesday, are cast as crucial for catch-up maintenanc­e along routes.

RTD board chair Erik Davidson said cuts to facilitate rail reconstruc­tion downtown and wall repairs along the Interstate 25 corridor are painful but necessary for the future of the region’s taxpayer-financed transit system. RTD’S map includes 114 miles of rail tracks along with bus routes across a 2,342-square-mile service area, with 9,720 stops.

“The effort to shift more metro residents out of cars and onto transit is about playing an effective long game — one that requires RTD to maintain a safe and reliable system in a state of good repair,” Davidson told The Denver Post.

“Continual deferral of maintenanc­e is plaguing aging infrastruc­ture across the United States,” he said. RTD leaders are “committed to safeguardi­ng the metro area’s transit system and not kicking the can down the road.”

But the shift to reduced train frequency this spring, lasting through the summer, rankles riders who say they’re already frustrated by RTD’S unreliabil­ity. The downtown rail reconstruc­tion project also will result in the rerouting or suspension of some rail lines.

Light-rail lines see heaviest reductions

In the late-night vote, the directors finalized the following changes:

•A reduction in rail service along the I-25 corridor. From central Denver to the south suburbs (on the E- and H-lines), the current 15-minute frequencie­s will be reduced to one train per hour this summer to accommodat­e a project to inspect and repair “coping” panels, which are caps atop retaining walls along the tracks. That project began in April 2023 and will resume this spring, with completion expected in September.

•A suspension of L-line trains that run between Five Points and the downtown loop from late May through Sept. 2.

•The rerouting of trains along two other rail lines (D and H) to Union Station for the summer, temporaril­y ending service to RTD’S downtown loop and suspending stops on Colfax Avenue at the Auraria Campus and at the Colorado Convention Center — all to allow for the Downtown Rail Reconstruc­tion Project.

•Altered bus schedules along multiple routes. RTD is also reinstatin­g the Free Metroride bus route between Union Station and Civic Center during the rail constructi­on project.

•Shortened spans of rail service along most light rail lines, with most trains beginning service later, around 5 a.m. Those changes won’t affect commuter-rail lines like the Aline.

RTD officials over the past week had faced an onslaught of objections over their initial light rail service proposal, which would have ended weeknight rail service after 10 p.m. and weekend service after midnight. They scaled back those reductions before Tuesday night’s vote, which approved service going through about midnight Sunday through Thursday for the D, E, H, R and W lines, with service until about 2 a.m. on Fridays and Saturdays for all but the R-line.

RTD director Joyann Ruscha , who voted against the service cuts package, said later starts on the Rline amounted to “cutting off people’s access to work” and told fellow directors that she’d heard from northeast Denver residents in tears over this reduction.

‘Permanent demand destructio­n’ among riders?

For RTD, reducing bus and rail service for a long stretch could shake public confidence as agency officials struggle to regain ridership that has decreased over the past five years.

In 2019, RTD recorded 105.8 million boardings. That level plummeted to around 49 million in 2021 during the COVID-19 pandemic. Ridership recovered to 65.2 million boardings in 2023, at just shy of 62% of pre-pandemic levels.

Transit ridership in some cities with rail mass transit, including Washington, D.C., and Seattle, has recovered more fully to more than 80% of pre-pandemic levels, though bus ridership has lagged.

Better bus and rail service is crucial to meet Colorado’s climate, environmen­tal and affordable housing goals, said Matt Frommer, a senior transporta­tion associate at the Southwest Energy Efficiency Project, a policy advocacy group.

“We built this amazing rail system, but in a lot of cases the trains only come once every 30 minutes. And people don’t feel they can rely on it. It can double or triple the time it takes to get where you want to go, compared with driving,” Frommer said.

“We need these trains and buses to run every 15 minutes or better,” he said. “You go to your bus stop and you need to have some assurance the bus is going to come sometime soon, rather than wait there for 30 minutes.”

The service changes that RTD directors consider three times a year are meant to improve on-time performanc­e, align with seasonal travel patterns and accommodat­e maintenanc­e projects, Haberman said.

“Service changes and scheduled adjustment­s take into considerat­ion the needs of customers and the available staffing resources,” she said. “RTD, like many other large employers, continues to face people power issues.”

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