The Denver Post

Union Station bus terminal to be for passengers only

- By Jon Murray

New plans to help reduce crime and drug use at Union Station call for installing turnstiles or other equipment at entrances to the undergroun­d bus terminal, converting that waiting area into a paidfare zone as soon as next year.

At least that is the Regional Transporta­tion District’s longterm plan. Its leader this week outlined several changes that will happen sooner in the bus concourse, including covering or disconnect­ing power outlets in walkways, fixing and upgrading lighting, installing smoke detectors in bathrooms and reducing the number of entrances to the terminal.

While the Union Station area of downtown Denver has drawn higher numbers of homeless people, transients and other people in recent months, the bus concourse has become a particular hang-out spot. Union Station’s main building has a larger security presence and more activity, but the concourse below the train platforms has been less busy, because fewer people are riding buses at a time when transit ridership is still down considerab­ly from prepandemi­c levels.

Since late fall, community groups, transit riders and others have complained about visible drug use, drug dealing and violence — as well as victimizat­ion of homeless people — in the bus terminal. One of the latest incidents was a nonfatal shooting in the terminal during the weekend.

Some of the recent challenges have spilled onto RTD’S buses and trains, too, with light-rail operators and passengers reporting more frequent drug use as a concern.

The Denver Police Department and RTD’S small transit police force have increased patrols in the area, making hundreds of

arrests in recent months. Meanwhile, RTD formed a steering committee with city and community leaders to come up with longerterm solutions even as it temporaril­y closed bathrooms and took other immediate steps.

General Manager and CEO Debra Johnson laid out RTD’S new plan to the agency’s board on Tuesday night. She said the effort will require “heavy compassion,” as RTD balances the need for safety against the fact that Union Station is a public space.

“While these changes, along with an increased police and security presence, will have positive ripple effects throughout the transit system, the unwanted activities impacting the agency are a byproduct of complex societal issues that RTD alone cannot solve,” Johnson said.

Johnson detailed several changes planned for the coming months, including more frequent cleaning, lighting repairs, adding new “entry” and “exit” labels on sliding doors to improve pedestrian flow and removing access to the outlets. Prerecorde­d audio announceme­nts about services, fares, safety and other topics will be broadcast regularly.

Other changes will take between six months and a year, she said. Those include upgrades for lights, new signage and installati­on of TVS at the bus concourse’s entrances so that security officers can view live security feeds throughout the facility. A reduction in the number of concourse entrances from seven to three will allow RTD to block off stairways where people tend to congregate.

Creation of the paid-fare zone in the concourse will take the most time, Johnson said, giving no firm time frame. That plan will require new equipment to scan passes at terminal entry points as well as changes to RTD’S tickets and passes and a public education campaign, she said. Costs are still being worked out.

“This means only individual­s who present appropriat­e fare will have access to the bus concourse,” Johnson told board members. “While the creation of a paid-fare area is likely the most impactful change that can be implemente­d to curtail the unwanted activities taking place in and around Denver Union Station, I want to stress that this is a significan­t change to current operations and must be done in a coordinate­d and diligent manner.”

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