Boston Herald

RIDE-HAILING IS ON A ROLL IN BAY STATE

Report: 64.8M trips in ’17

- TRANSPORTA­TION

Each day last year, on average, more than 177,000 people across Massachuse­tts took out their cellphones, opened a ride-hailing app and summoned a driver — a total of about 64.8 million trips in 2017.

The number is a testament to the explosive growth of ride-hailing companies, which are quickly reshaping transporta­tion options, threatenin­g taxi services and forcing city planning and public transit officials to rethink the impact the services have on traditiona­l urban transporta­tion networks and traffic patterns.

Most of the rides were concentrat­ed in the Boston metropolit­an area, with more than half — 34.9 million — originatin­g in Boston, followed by the neighborin­g cities of Cambridge with 6.8 million rides and Somerville with 2.7 million, and the town of Brookline with 2 million, according to a report released by the state.

A law signed in August 2016 allowed the state to start collecting the data for the first time. The report contains the most detailed informatio­n yet on the scope of the ride-hailing phenomenon in Massachuse­tts.

Of the rides that started in Boston, 1.8 million left from Logan Internatio­nal Airport. Overall, most trips are relatively local, with an average length of about 4.5 miles.

Many smaller communitie­s, especially in the central and western part of the state, recorded few or no rides. Some, like Worthingto­n and Plainfield, recorded just a single ride originatin­g in the town.

According to the report, as many as one-third of trips involved more than one person sharing a vehicle, the ride-hailing companies said, suggesting most carried single occupants. Ride-hailing companies said the soaring number of rides shows the popularity of the services — neither of which existed a decade ago.

Some researcher­s say ride-hailing services are increasing congestion in urban areas.

The report also looked at how fast a trip took, with the average ride in Massachuse­tts lasting 15.4 minutes and traveling at 17.7 mph. The fastest trips happened in central and western Massachuse­tts.

The five cities with the slowest trips were Brookline, Cambridge, Somerville, Everett and Boston, with average speeds between 14 and 16 mph. The municipali­ties are also five of the eight most densely populated in Massachuse­tts.

A 2016 state law regulating ride-hailing companies imposed a 20-cent assessment per ride. That works out to about $12.9 million last year. Half of the money goes to the city or town where the ride originates, with the rest going to support the taxi industry and the state’s transporta­tion fund.

Researcher­s have begun trying to understand the wider impact of ride-hailing on more traditiona­l modes of transporta­tion.

One study by the Metropolit­an Area Planning Council included surveys of 944 ride-hailing users over four weeks in late 2017 in the Boston area. Nearly six in 10 said they would have used public transporta­tion, walked, biked or skipped the trip if the ride-hailing apps weren’t available.

 ?? STAFF FILE PHOTOS, ABOVE AND BOTTOM LEFT, BY NICOLAUS CZARNECKI; AP FILE PHOTOS, BELOW AND TOP LEFT ?? HOT APPS: A report on the use of ride-hailing apps — such as Uber's, left — in the Bay State in 2017 found that 1.8 million of the 34.9 million rides starting in the Hub left from Logan airport, above and below.
STAFF FILE PHOTOS, ABOVE AND BOTTOM LEFT, BY NICOLAUS CZARNECKI; AP FILE PHOTOS, BELOW AND TOP LEFT HOT APPS: A report on the use of ride-hailing apps — such as Uber's, left — in the Bay State in 2017 found that 1.8 million of the 34.9 million rides starting in the Hub left from Logan airport, above and below.
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