East Bay Times

Make Bay Area transit seamless as a condition of new funding

- By Ian Griffiths Ian Griffiths is policy director of transit advocacy group Seamless Bay Area and a member of California's Transit Transforma­tion Task Force.

Despite our region's longstandi­ng support for public transit, it's frustratin­g that Bay Area transit doesn't work well for more people. Ridership was stagnant prior to the pandemic and is now at about 70% of prepandemi­c levels — one of the weakest recoveries in the nation — creating a financial crisis for Bay Area transit agencies that threaten a future downward spiral of cuts.

The pandemic has forced us to confront two important truths about why more people don't use transit: We don't run enough fast reliable service to attract riders from cars, and transit is too fragmented, run by 27 agencies with little coordinati­on and creating an inconvenie­nt and inefficien­t network.

Fortunatel­y, there is reason for optimism. After years of advocacy, there is finally a serious effort to confront both issues head on. State Sens. Scott Wiener and Aisha Wahab have introduced The Connect Bay Area Act (Senate Bill 1031), which would authorize a regional ballot measure for sustainabl­e transporta­tion funding and introduce governance reforms to integrate fragmented systems. The bill is our best hope for transit transforma­tion.

Bay Area transit funding has historical­ly focused on system expansion while neglecting frequency and reliabilit­y of core services. It would be analogous to a homeowner funding constructi­on of new rooms onto their house while skimping on paying utility bills.

Across much of our region, the most cost-effective way to get more people riding is by running more buses and trains on the routes we already have — arriving every five or 10 minutes, instead of every 30 or 60 minutes.

But running more service requires operations funding — something that past ballot measures haven't provided sufficient­ly. The Connect Bay Area Act, finally, will authorize a new permanent source of operations funding, eliminatin­g forecasted deficits and supporting service enhancemen­ts.

New operations funding alone won't be enough to attract riders — the customer experience of transit must improve, offering a seamless, easyto-use system. Integrated fares, schedules and service have been proven to grow ridership and improve efficiency.

Seamless integratio­n requires that one entity be in charge of leading coordinati­on among 27 agencies. The Connect Bay Area Act empowers The Metropolit­an Transporta­tion Commission, the region's nine-county transporta­tion authority, to act as the regional network manager for Bay Area transit, requiring coordinati­on as a condition of funding.

Changes to MTC's governance are needed for it to succeed and be accountabl­e to riders. MTC's governance is too dominated by locally elected officials and lacks sufficient expertise in transit. The Connect

Bay Area Act offers the opportunit­y to improve this by establishi­ng a dedicated body within MTC of expert appointees to lead regional transit policymaki­ng.

Recent poll results indicate that voters still see public transit as a top priority and are even supportive of a new tax to fund it — as long as that funding delivers a transforme­d system instead of the status quo. They view greater coordinati­on, improved efficiency, enhanced safety and expert oversight as top selling points of a regional measure.

The biggest threat to the exciting transforma­tion of Bay Area transit isn't voters' willingnes­s to fund it — it's a focus on local control among some existing transit agency staff and elected officials at the expense of better system coordinati­on.

It's up to state legislator­s now to determine the future of Bay Area transit as they consider SB 1031.

They must listen to riders, who overwhelmi­ngly support a seamless system even if it involves less local control. Sens. Wiener and Wahab deserve credit for putting riders first. With bold leadership, we can pass legislatio­n and a ballot measure that will create the world-class, seamless transit system that our region deserves.

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