A MAX bus bound for glory.busride.comSalt Lake City, Utah. Pop. 180,651
What would you do if you expected millions of visitors to descend on your city for a couple of weeks? In Salt Lake City’s case, the answer was obvious: make it easier for them to get around. In advance of the 2002 Olympics, the city undertook several upgrades, including building a light rail system known as TRAX. The Utah Transportation Authority also runs a comprehensive bus system—which offers winter service to nearby ski areas—and a new commuter rail called FrontRunner. In fact, the city aims to build seventy miles of rail in seven years; officials are also studying the possibility of adding a downtown streetcar and a bicycle transit center. UTA actually decreased fares this year by dropping a fuel surcharge, but now budget cuts are being leveled at paratransit services, and disabled riders are none too pleased.
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Stephanie Ogburn Posted 7:49 am
15 Jun 2009
are expensive, infrequent, difficult to navigate, uncoordinated and
unwieldy. BART, the train, only takes you to a very limited range of
places. It's not a public transit system - it's a commuter shuttle that
regular people can't even afford. You can't even take bikes on BART in
rush hour - a major minus for using bike/transit to get to work. Buses
in SF and the Bay Area don't run very often to any place that is not a
main commuter locale, and they require exact change (annoying and
difficult.) There's also not a good system of having a card or discount
if you transfer from one transit system to the next or use transit
frequently. This is in direct contrast to MTA in NYC, which
incentivizes frequent users and lets you use the same card for bus and
subway travel. Amtrak in the Bay Area doesn't even run through SF and
it is also extremely expensive and infrequent. It's really, really
difficult to get to a lot of places here and almost always easier and
cheaper to drive. I would not hold SF up as a paragon of good transit
in any way. The only thing BART is good for is shuttling commuters into
the city for high prices.
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rossmoss Posted 12:00 pm
15 Jun 2009
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Emily at Sustainable Business Consulting Posted 2:37 pm
15 Jun 2009
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EdwardPDX Posted 9:58 pm
15 Jun 2009
Portland inaugurated its three MAX light rail lines over 20 years ago,
and has since integrated a street car and suburban commuter line
(WES). The system is set to expand substantially this year, and
frankly puts cities like L.A. to shame. We now build the cars that run
on Phoenix's rails. Most of the cities you list come to Portland first to see how its done. Thanks, Grist for journalism by Wikipedia...
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stinkycheese Posted 5:27 am
16 Jun 2009
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squier13 Posted 6:26 am
16 Jun 2009
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jessimonster Posted 8:46 am
16 Jun 2009
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StLGal Posted 7:43 pm
17 Jun 2009
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jessimonster Posted 12:37 pm
18 Jun 2009
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Design New Haven Posted 7:22 am
19 Jun 2009
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