San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)
S.F. housing needs public transit
In an ideal world, San Francisco will fulfill its state mandate to add 82,000 housing units by 2031. It will do so by living up to the city’s “housing element” plan by enacting zoning changes the Planning Department is weighing to allow for more residential density along transit corridors, including in low-slung areas such as the Richmond and Sunset districts, Cow Hollow and the Marina. To get around, new residents in these neighborhoods will take Muni, which has added service in anticipation of a population shift.
In the real world, however, this vision may never happen.
You’ve no doubt seen the stories about how the city’s rezoning plans have ignited yet another contentious fight over housing in San Francisco. But NIMBY pushback isn’t the only roadblock the city faces.
The San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency still hasn’t recovered ridership that plunged during the pandemic. It also faces a fiscal disaster in 2026 when pandemic bailout funding runs out.
Ambitious housing plans that don’t include adequate public transportation for new residents all but ensure the state will fail on its climate pledges and clog cities with even more cars.
To keep this from happening, the Metropolitan Transportation Commission is proposing a tax measure for the November 2026 ballot to raise $1 billion to $2 billion a year for Bay Area transit agencies like Muni. The commission hasn’t identified a funding source for the measure, but options include additional sales, income, parcel or payroll taxes; a vehicle registration surcharge or a regional vehicle miles traveled charge.
If the tax measure doesn’t make it onto the ballot or isn’t passed, budget cuts could eviscerate public transportation agencies in the Bay Area.
“I think you’re looking at draconian cuts across the board, massive layoffs,” Rebecca Long, the Metropolitan Transportation Commission’s director of legislation and public affairs, told the editorial board.
In San Francisco, ridership on Muni is up to 71% of 2019 levels as of December, the agency said. Muni has the highest ridership
of the region’s transit agencies. Even if ridership recovers, it still needs an infusion of funds because fares now only make up 7% of its budget. Muni said it could be forced to make deep cuts in service after 2026 rather than grow and adapt to any new housing that is built in San Francisco during the next decade.
The Municipal Transportation Agency’s $309 million share of $776 million in state and regional bailout money is about a quarter of its budget. Other Muni funding sources, such as parking fees, aren’t much help. Parking revenue hasn’t recovered because fewer tourists are driving in the city, and more people are using Uber and Lyft.
“Our ridership numbers are improving, and our revenue numbers are improving, but not fast enough to close that gap,” Jeffrey Tumlin, the agency’s director of transportation, told the editorial board.
The proposed rezoning in San Francisco’s housing element was designed with future Muni service in mind that would serve
population growth on the west side and other areas.
“The best transportation plan is a good housing plan,” Tumlin said.
Even before the pandemic, Muni had long-term plans for improvements to accommodate residents of additional housing in neighborhoods that haven’t historically had much growth.
The L Taraval Muni Metro rail line is scheduled to restart this year after track improvements are finished, and similar work is planned for the N Judah, two lines that connect the west side to downtown.
But working from home has upended the traditional downtown commute and it might never return. Muni is responding by enhancing service on bus lines where ridership has increased since the pandemic, such as the 14 Mission, 22 Fillmore, 29 Sunset and 49 Van Ness.
Muni has implemented a technology called headway management on busy lines to keep buses properly spaced apart and avoid “bunching,” Tumlin said.
Drivers receive alerts on how far the buses in front and behind them are, allowing them to adjust their speed to maintain spacing and consistent service times.
Other small changes, such as widening the sidewalk at bus stops, can speed up the loading and offloading of passengers. Making the process even just 30 seconds faster at each stop “results in a significant percentage of travel time savings,” Tumlin said.
When asked if Muni can expand its service enhancements after 2026 without new funding, Tumlin was blunt: “No.”
We need a regional tax measure, he insisted.
New taxes are rarely popular, and a recent Metropolitan Transportation Commission poll showed a ballot measure would not pass if voted on today.
“Voters are not going to support transit improvements throughout the region unless we can demonstrate that we are making effective use of our limited resources,” Tumlin said. “And we’re doing that by demonstrating
that Muni can be so much more efficient and reliable than it was five years ago.”
The advocacy group San Francisco Transit Riders supports a tax measure and also said there needs to be more public funding dedicated to transportation, especially if thousands of units of new housing are built in the city.
“Ideally, on the state level, we would get some funding tied to transportation and housing,” said Dylan Fabris, the group’s community and policy manager. “But in the absence of that, there needs to be some leadership locally as well to approve a budget that adequately funds Muni.”
San Francisco, and the state, need to properly fund public transportation and prioritize it on par with housing. Anyone who’s been stuck in San Francisco traffic or stranded underground in a delayed Muni train can attest to that need.