Skip to Content
Streetsblog USA home
Streetsblog USA home
Log In
Streetsblog.net

Cutting Transit Means Cutting Independence

11:00 AM EST on January 15, 2010

Today on the Streetsblog Network, a post from member blog VTA Watch, which covers the Santa Clara Valley Transit Authority in California. The blog's author discusses the impact of upcoming service cuts on the people whose mobility, and ability to participate meaningfully in their communities, depends on public transit. The post also goes on to argue that even people who drive cars benefit from the existence of public transit -- whose ongoing viability is threatened by cutbacks:

3546339961_0517e5c6a1.jpgGood public transit means she can get where she's going. (Photo: Kieran 2009 via Flickr)

Politically, transit riders get left behind. People who drive
automobiles (which most politicians are) typically do not appreciate
the importance of public transportation, especially local bus service,
because they find most transit unattractive to use.…

As unattractive as it may appear to people who have cars, local transit provides independence
for the low income, seniors, the disabled, and teenagers. Although they
cannot travel as fast as those with cars, transit service allows them
independently to access jobs, shopping centers, schools and
hospitals/clinics on their own. Public transportation is generally
safer, less expensive, more dependable and environmentally superior to any other alternatives, including owning unsafe and uninsured
clunkers to get around. Although transit services may appear optional
and less important than other societal priorities, transit serves as a
critical link for many to these other priorities, a means to an end.

The current transit funding crisis is threatening the future success of
transit service. Like most businesses, transit services need time to
grow its ridership base. It is generally unrealistic to expect full
trains and buses on the first day of the new service. With periodic
service reductions (and especially service eliminations), riders who
come to depend on the service have to make important adjustments, and
which may cause them to abandon transit altogether. Even if the service
could be restored in a few years, that same rider may not come back.…

Of course transit also provides independence for
those who drive cars. With high quality transit, car owners can choose
not drive to certain places and free themselves from high parking fees,
and families who might need two or more cars can cut down to just one.
Parents would not have to always drive their kids around, and adult
children would not have to always drive their elderly parents around.

More from around the network: A funny riff from Boston Biker on sharing the road. The Transport Politic on alternative bus networks, like the one just introduced in Baltimore. And Austin on Two Wheels with an update on a proposed bike boulevard in that city.

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Streetsblog USA

Want a Better 15-Minute City? Ask Residents What They Really Want

A new study from Bogotá models how other cities can ask a deeper set of questions about how to put essential needs within walking, biking or transit distance.

March 19, 2024

Tuesday’s Headlines Win the Gold

Two articles detail efforts in Paris and Los Angeles to put on (relatively) climate-friendly Olympic games in 2024 and 2028.

March 19, 2024

Monday’s Headlines Drink Your Milkshake

How does a president end wasteful subsidies for the highly profitable fossil fuel industry? Many have tried, but none have succeeded, including Joe Biden.

March 18, 2024

How — and Why — To Start a Neighborhood E-Bike Library

American advocates are loaning out e-bikes to their neighbors — and creating flocks of new riders.

March 18, 2024

What Urbanists’ Doug Burgum Lovefest Reveals About the ‘Why’ Behind Our Advocacy

I am far less interested in talking about Gov. Doug Burgum's politics than talking about his values, and how those values shape his urbanism, and thus the actual lives of the people he governs.

March 15, 2024
See all posts