San Francisco Chronicle

BART workers get bonus despite drop in ridership

- MATIER & ROSS

Virtually all of BART’s 3,600 employees will get a $500 ridership bonus in their August paycheck — even though ridership is down systemwide.

BART employees have long been guaranteed bonuses of up to $1,000 under their labor contract if ridership exceeds expectatio­ns.

This year, ridership is down 3 percent from 2016. Still, the average weekday ridership total of 373,225 in what BART calls the core system — excluding some recent extensions — is 1 percent above what the agency predicted for 2017 in long-range plans that date back several years.

The upshot: Workers will get half the $1,000

bonus they received last year.

“It’s a lump sum payment called for in the contract,” BART spokeswoma­n Alicia Trost said. “And it is based on long-term ridership projection­s, which we’ve exceeded.”

The only people who won’t be getting the bonus are about a dozen executive managers who report directly to BART General Manager Grace Crunican.

Crunican wants the brass to do more to make stations clean, keep homeless people away, cut crime and reduce fare evasion — problems that have brought plenty of unwelcome scrutiny to BART in recent months.

If they make progress, Trost says, they’ll get their $500.

“The idea here is that she is holding her executive managers to task,” she said.

Chalk it up: Antiaborti­on demonstrat­ors upset over the San Francisco Planning Commission’s approval of a Planned Parenthood center on Bush Street used military-like precision in protests the other day in neighborho­ods where four of the commission­ers live.

In each case Tuesday, four vans pulled up to the commission­ers’ homes. About 50 people piled out and, using chalk, scrawled such messages as, “Life is a gift, “Stop Planned Parenthood” and “Stop killing babies” on the street and sidewalk.

Some of the graffiti called out the commission­ers by name.

“I can differ with you on opinions, but you don’t have to come and terrorize my neighborho­od about it — that steps over the line,” said Commission­er Dennis Richards, who was protested along with Commission­ers Rich Hillis, Rodney Fong and Christine Johnson.

Richards’ neighbor Paige Grey said that when she confronted a chalker who was writing, “Dennis Richards kills babies,” on the sidewalk outside her home, the woman “got in my face about her First Amendment rights.”

“Then the main guy said, ‘In the vans — let’s go,’ and they were gone,” Grey said.

“But he did say ‘Goodbye’ and ‘Have a nice day,’ ” she said.

It was all over within about five minutes.

Richards said he was upset that the protesters included teenagers and that “there were gay slurs” among the scrawled messages, including, “This car is gay” and “Richards kills gay babies.”

“They didn’t break any laws,” said Richards, who is gay. “The thing for me is, this could escalate.”

The protest was the work of a group called Survivors of the Abortion Holocaust. “We call it ‘chalk and awe,’ ” said organizer Jeff White.

The participan­ts were part of an antiaborti­on activism boot camp being held at a local church, White said. He declined to say which church.

On Wednesday evening, the protesters returned to Richards’ neighborho­od with a megaphone — and were met by the planning commission­er himself.

“I said, ‘Hey, let’s talk’ — and we did,” Richards said.

White said, “It was an open discussion, and he was very profession­al.” Group members also apologized for the antigay slurs, saying they were the work of a younger teen.

“I appreciate­d that,” Richards said of the apology, “This is what democracy is all about. One of the teens even told me they were bisexual. Wow!”

Buddy-buddy: Arnold Schwarzene­gger was really enjoying himself at the cap-and-trade deal signing out at Treasure Island the other day, even spending a bit of personal time with San Francisco Mayor Ed Lee.

“He was concerned about the impact of the new rules against sanctuary cities on us,” Lee said. “At first I thought it was a bit strange because Arnold is a Republican, but then I remembered that he actually supported sanctuary cities when he was governor.”

The towering Terminator looming over the diminutive Lee looked like an outtake from “Twins,” the buddy movie that starred Schwarzene­gger and Danny DeVito.

At one point, Schwarzene­gger gripped the mayor by the arm.

“Hey, you seemed pretty pumped up,” the former bodybuildi­ng champ said.

“Yeah,” Lee replied, “I’ve been getting in shape for when we do a movie.”

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