USA TODAY US Edition

A new take on ‘mass transit’

Some cities now rely on ride-sharing,

- Christophe­r Elliott Christophe­r Elliott is a consumer advocate and editor at large for National Geographic Traveler. Contact him at chris@elliott.org or visit elliott.org.

For travelers such as Vicki Rosenzweig, there’s a bright line between mass transit — a bus, train or ferry — and ridesharin­g, carsharing and bike-sharing.

“Uber isn’t public transit,” says Rosenzweig, an editor who lives in Arlington, Mass. Or is it? Don’t look now, but the line has been blurring, and this year, it may all but disappear. Visitors are starting to think of ride-sharing services and mass transit interchang­eably, thanks to new “firstlast” mile partnershi­ps that connect visitors with traditiona­l public transporta­tion. So are experts and local government­s. Knowing about it could change the way you get around on your next vacation or business trip.

The very definition of public transporta­tion is “fast changing,” says Kajal Lahiri, an economics professor at SUNY Albany. New ride-sharing options aren’t necessaril­y supplantin­g other forms of mass transit, he says. “They are complement­ary.” Why aren’t travelers seeing it? “Mass transporta­tion is an oldfashion­ed way of talking about transporta­tion supply,” says Matt Caywood, co-founder of TransitScr­een, a mass transit technology company. “It’s defined as a type of transporta­tion that carries a lot of people. But that’s not the perspectiv­e of the tourist, who’s just trying to get somewhere in a new city.”

Here’s what’s happening: Instead of adding bus lines or building train tracks, cities turn to the sharing economy to build out their transporta­tion networks. Diana Mendes, a senior vice president for HNTB, a Kansas City-based infrastruc­ture firm, tracks public-private ventures all over the country. They include the Southeaste­rn Pennsylvan­ia Transporta­tion Authority, the Pinellas Suncoast Transit Authority, the Dallas Area Rapid Transit Authority and the Metropolit­an Atlanta Rapid Transit Authority.

Mendes says it’s an unexpected combinatio­n between traditiona­l establishe­d mass transit and innovative technology.

“The winner,” she says, “is the consumer.”

How do you win? It starts with changing the way you think about mass transit, says Jeff Schramm, a Missouri University of Science and Technology expert on mass transporta­tion and technology. Public transporta­tion can be anything that gets you where you’re going — whether it’s on rails or hailed through an app.

“Think of mass transporta­tion as part of the vacation,” he says. “It’s a way to experience a new place and learn about it and the people that live and work there.”

Be open to possibilit­ies, even when you aren’t the target audience.

Consider the Go Centennial project in Colorado, in which the city of Centennial teamed up with the Denver South Transporta­tion Management Associatio­n to fund a pilot to connect residents to the Dry Creek Light Rail Station. Commuters can take Lyft at no charge to and from their homes by using the Go Denver or Lyft apps.

Matt Darst, a vice president at Xerox, which works on the pilot project, says the way to discover such programs is through a ridesharin­g or mass-transit app. “I met a tourist just last month who told me he would not have known about L.A.’s trolley service — or saved time and several dollars taking it — had he not used the app,” he says.

Maybe there’s a term to be coined here: transit-agnosticis­m — the idea that when it comes to getting around, everything from bike-sharing to the subway will do. It’s something I experience­d the last time I visited Washington, when I noticed that tourists used Metro and Uber interchang­eably, as if they were almost one and the same.

Shirley Kroot, a retired teacher from Tucson, says she no longer bothers to distinguis­h between mass transit and ride-sharing. On a recent visit to San Diego, the easiest and most efficient way around was Uber; in Paris, she relied on the Metro. “We had no problems,” she says.

Imagine being able to visit any city without having to bother with a pricey rental car.

In Washington, tourists use Metro and Uber interchang­eably.

 ?? JEFF CHIU, AP ??
JEFF CHIU, AP
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