Houston Chronicle Sunday

Private bus industry clamors for federal aid

- By Patrick Whittle

LEWISTON, Maine —

The nation’s 3,000 or so private bus lines — and the millions of people who rely on them for cheap, basic travel — fret that they’ll go under without the same kind of federal help trains and planes are receiving as a pandemic-immobilize­d America tries to get back to work and play.

Buses, integral to the transit network, serve a multitude of purposes as they shuttle around 600 million people annually, nearly twice the U.S. population.

They take college students home for the weekend; they take businesspe­ople and tourists to airports and on fall color tours; they take gamblers and sports fans to casinos and stadiums.

They provide charter trips and also increasing­ly are vital to the work commute, especially in congested areas like San Francisco and New York. They employ about 100,000 people — many of whom are furloughed at the moment — and generate more than $200 billion in travel and tourism revenue, the American Bus Associatio­n says.

More than 95 percent of the nation’s private fleet is shut down, said Peter Pantuso, the trade group’s leader.

Larry Prelle, of National Park, N.J., had hoped to take Megabus to the National Cherry Blossom Festival in the nation’s capital, but pandemic restrictio­ns canceled both the bus and the festival.

“I know some of them aren’t surviving the shutdown. A couple down here that were charter buses are just gone,” Prelle said. “They’ll never be seen from again.”

Rail lines, public transit systems and the airline industry received billions in aid as part of the federal coronaviru­s relief act. The private bus industry, however, largely has been left to fend for itself.

The industry has called on the government to provide $15 billion in grants and loans to help it weather stay-at-home orders that have idled their buses for two months in some regions.

“I think there’s going to be several companies, if not dozens or even hundreds, that six months from now are going to run out of money and are not going to have any other options to weather the storm,” said Jeff Greteman, chief executive officer of Windstar Lines, which operates in the Midwest and Florida.

Buses play a key role in the economy because of support they provide to other businesses, such as hotels, said Don DeVivo, president of Dattco, which operates in New England.

Bus operators have lobbied Congress and rallied this month in Washington, drawing more than 1,000 motor coaches from as far as the West Coast.

Sens. Susan Collins, a Maine Republican, and Jack Reed, a Rhode Island Democrat, have called on Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin to provide assistance.

The industry, the senators said, faces “a long road to recovery” and is missing out at a critical time. School, camp and tour groups in the spring and summer are reliable customers, and those activities are largely canceled this year.

A spokespers­on for the Treasury Department didn’t respond to a request for comment.

In Maine, Northeast Charter of Lewiston, which operates 27 motor coaches, 25 school buses and another 10 shuttle buses, has not had any business since March 16.

While other transporta­tion sectors can get federal grants and loans, bus lines have only the Paycheck Protection Program, owner Scott Riccio said.

If help doesn’t arrive soon, the industry fears many companies will go under, creating a transporta­tion vacuum that would be hard to fill and depriving the public of a cheap travel option.

“This industry is being devastated,” Riccio said. “There’s no one working. There’s no revenue. Zero.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States