It still amazes me, even after everything is said and done, and I know it's water under the bridge...less than 17% of the voting public was able to get MAPS 3 passed. Less than 17 people out 100. Just friggin amazing!
No and No. Not trying to imply anything, simply that we are pleased that this is happening so quickly and subsequently we are trying to get the word out.
The official governmental input process through these meetings and "Let's Talk Transit" website will now take the lead in hosting streetcar meetings and official information gathering.
However, I do know that a good slate of our Committee, Board of Advisers, and Volunteers will be directly involved in helping the process move along.
Rick Cain and Michael Scroggins of COTPA just attended our last Committee/Board meeting and there is sufficient direct involvement and communication. We have all official communications such as e-mails proofed by COTPA for accuracy before they go out regarding the streetcar.
There will be an interesting expansion of MTP's goal's and mission in the near future as the success of the streetcar campaign is handed off to the official governmental input process to plan and design the system.
The people who bother to vote make decisions for those who don't. By deciding not to vote you essentially give the voters all the power to determine what will happen. To me, that is a decision too and one must live with the consequences of one's decisions.
I will see if the bus analyst for MTP, Walter Jacques, will comment here. He plugged all the bus routes into an expanded grid system that was quite impressive. If you look at the 2005 Fixed Guideway Study it calls for a greatly expanded bus system.
Also, there is a council workshop focusing more on buses coming up.
I'd like to know how many riders are taking the "Sooner Express" back and forth to Norman, or how many are riding on the Edmond Express, and how many good folks are riding the MT out to Midwest City and back.
Reports & Studies | METRO Transit Providing Central Oklahoma Transportation & Bus Service Options
RC are you suggesting that public transportation is not needed in OKC?
I rode the #38, from 10th and Meridian, east down 10th to downtown last year and it was standing room only. Working people going to work, at about 7:45 a.m.. I counted 28 people on the bus.
Drive by 23rd and Classen and look at the people standing in front of Walgreens waiting for a bus. Always a dozen or more. The non-choice users of transit are out there and they ride/need the bus daily.
Kerry, that sounds good in theory but you know it would never work. You're suggesting that everyone in OKC that lives more than 5 miles from downtown should just move if they can't drive where they need to go. That would cause major economic hardships on a large part of our population to just benefit a few if transit was limited to a few miles of downtown. You seem to keep thinking that we're going to be like New York or Chicago and that will never happen.
I agree to an extent and if I am mis-reading this, please correct. But it seems to me that if someone is paying the same taxes (if on the fringe or at dead center) they should expect the same level of City services. If the City doesn't want to/doesn't have the resources needed to supply that, they need to stop accepting the tax $$$ too (guess that means de-annexing as some others have suggested). Don't mis-read this to mean that a less densely populated area should expect the same number of bus pick ups in a day (instead of 20 pickups, there may just be 2). But the point is, that the service option is still there (and the bolded part of your post seems to be in agreement).
And have often wondered the same thing that you mentioned in the last line. If something is that important to you (mountains, oceans, urban canyons, particular retail etc etc etc, then by all means, move someplace that has whatever you are needing/wanting).
Larry, to someone living in the fringe of the city - water/sewer, electricity/utilities, and police/fire are MUCH more important to them than transit.
to someone living in the inner city, transit is most important to them.
Why?
it's very simple. people who live and work in the fringe of a city are few and far between (less, if any density). So, they care most about utilities to make their area urbanized and accessible. You who live in the fringe pay your taxes for this.
people who live in the inner city are more concentrated and utilities have been there forever and police/fire is well established and quite reliable. And since the inner city is more dense, not the same amount of money would need to be spent on those services. However, there is money left over - and as such, should go to the needs of inner city people, who would most likely use transit.
Now, dont get me wrong, Im not saying that OKC shouldn't implement bus service to denser fringe areas but I think it is short sighted to sit in the fringe and complain about 'paying for inner city services' when far more people who live in the inner city have paid for fringe utilities and 'urbanized' amenities.
In other words, everybody needs to pay something - it's just people's needs differ the closer you live to your neighbours, shoppes, jobs.
I hope this little argument can forever put to rest the suburbanite theory of 'why do I have to pay for services I will never use....' You pay, because you need to pay for what you do use. In fact, suburbanites and fringe should pay more, but they dont because the inner city steps in and OKC's inner city has stepped in too long without seeing benefits of what they need (such as later/expanded bus routes and other forms of transit).
Oklahoma City, the RENAISSANCE CITY!
On the same note, I would love to see OKC implement commuter bus routes with park n rides in the fringe. The bus routes would run primarily to downtown, but there should also be connector routes that go from park n ride to park n ride/suburb transit center.
1) The park n rides should be in rural/suburban areas where 'local' people could drive to or where there are a collection of industries. Key suburban/rural park n rides IMO should be at NW EX and just past County Line, Quail Springs somewhere, S. Edmond and Broadway, I-35 and Memorial area, NE 23rd in the Choctaw area, TAFB, North Norman, SW of WRWA/towards Chickasaw, I-40/Morgan Road area, OU/Purcell area.
Notice that all of these areas are more or less rural and would be 'hubs' that rural and suburban people could drive to, park their cars, and hop on an express commuter bus. Some of the locations are also in the midst of industrial and office parks where 'local' shuttle busses could route workers to them to those places. Again, the park n ride Commuter Routes would be point to point (to downtown and to other park n rides and transit centers). There would be NO STOPS inbetween anchors.
2) Transit centers could be located at most major suburb downtowns and smaller ones could be located at key central city destinations (malls, key employment centres, tourist destinations). These should be located at libraries/city halls/community centers in El Reno, Yukon, Piedmont, Edmond downtown, Guthrie downtown, Penn Square, Baptist Hospital/NW Espressway, MWC Center, Crossroads Mall, Moore downtown, Norman downtown, WRWA, OU campus, Shawnee downtown, Chickasaw downtown. These routes would be Express but would have more stops near their terminus than the park n ride commuter routes. These routes would be express to downtown but would also stop at 'local' commuter park n rides.
Also notice that these Transit Centers are more urbanized than the park n ride commuter routes, even though some are located outside of the park n rides. These routes would be Express in the boundary between their location and central OKC, but would have stops near their terminal transit center, any park n ride nearby, and once you get into the inner city/downtown area.
3) The inner city would more or less continue the current routing with modifications that better fit inner city needs and destinations. This would be run just like other major cities (ie, until at least 10pm on every route), and would have night owl service for key routes where the demand is warranted.
If OKC's bus system was this hybrid (downtown hub + commuter point-to-point), I believe it could not only attract new ridership but would also better serve the entire community with limited resources. You would have a 3 tier'd system that would funnel passengers efficiently where they need to go. Rural users would pay a penalty for their lack of density (by having to drive to their nearest park n ride) but would still be offered excellent service options. Suburban and inner suburban areas would be rewarded and densified by getting 'transit center' status and their own 'local' bus routes as feeders. And downtown would be the main hub of it all, with the inner city retaining and building even better access that they desparately need.
Once funds are available and/or transit usage demonstrated demand, commuter rail would be established in the corridors we all know (Purcell/Norman to downtown to Guthrie, TAFB to downtown to El Reno). Once the inner suburban area really densifies, light rail could be built connecting those areas to downtown. But the busses would PROVE this all would work and get OKC on board with using transit regardless of where they live.
Anybody think this plan could work in OKC?
Oklahoma City, the RENAISSANCE CITY!
I
i
Oklahoma City, the RENAISSANCE CITY!
Please don't misunderstand, if a person's situation has changed and they are suddenly in need of services that they weren't before, that is an entirely different thing. What I am talking about, is finding out what you want/need BEFORE moving anywhere. If you need bus service, find a place to live that is on the route and has times that fit into your schedule. Don't just presume that because it is an apartment complex that a bus stop is nearby. Ask. Find out where the nearest bus stop is. Or even better find out what the bus routes are and then pick out possible options from the route. Someone said that the nearest bus stop is 8 miles from their complex!
I did exactly this when my former employer relocated to Houston and they wanted me to go with them. They just wanted me to go out in a weekend and sign a lease someplace. But due to my work schedule (and Houston's horrific traffic etc) I needed a place that was within a 10 minute commute from the office. In order to find a place within my commute time and a comparable apartment to where I lived, it was going to cost me double in rent alone.
What you described sounds a lot like what the Mayor often mentioned leading up to the MAPS 3 announcement (a comprehensive Mass Transit plan). Even the City’s MAPS 3 Survey, Mass Transit COMBINED got the highest number of suggestions by something like an 8 to 1 margin. We even had a cost for the comprehensive plan and while it was high, it was doable under a MAPS type sales tax. Then, MAPS 3 is announced and we only get the Downtown streetcars as a starting point. The Mayor often pointed to that MAPS 3 Survey for justification for the projects picked, yet we don’t know how many people wanted Streetcars. It may have been the highest but it may have been the lowest. We just don’t know since the City lumped it all together.
The costs to do it all now will be much cheaper than later. Take the streetcars as an example. The ones under MAPS 3 are costing 8 times more than what was originally proposed with MAPS (and don’t even go out to the Fairgrounds or the Meridian hotel corridor). The comprehensive plan was going to cost $394M. What will the cost be under this phased in approach? Granted, the City hopes to have federal monies but they hoped that would be the case with MAPS and when federal funding didn't come through, we ended up with the rubber tired trolleys.
Oklahoma City’s mass transit overhaul comes with a big price (Oklahoman, 11/5/08)
Metro Transit spent 18 months studying public transportation options, which included public forums.
The resulting plan included better bus service, commuter rail, a modern streetcar for the downtown area and bus rapid transit, which is a hybrid between bus and rail.
Total price tag: $394 million to build...
I guess I'm just SOL? I live 16.51 miles from the Transit Center. I occupy an apartment well within the city limits, but I can't get a bus, unless I want to walk about 4 miles to a crime infested area (Lyrewood).
But hey, I can move north to Edmond or south down to MidWest City or even Norman because then I could catch an OKC Metro Bus.
I think when you live in a city, if you are making housing choices, you should make them based on what kind of transit you need. If you really need bus transit, you pick a place to live based on existing transit options. It doesn't mean you can't work to improve those options, however. But I think one should never assume mass transit will come just because one wants it to.
When my daughters moved to Chicago every apartment was evaluated carefully based on access to mass transit. I always did the same when I lived in Denver.
Denver had excellent bus services. I was out by the old Lowry AFB and could get downtown anytime. Not sure what it's like now, or if they have streetcars. But then again, Denver is a whole different class of city.
See, Jeff. It's these type of statements that lend little credibility to your organization. Walter Jacques isn't a "bus analyst". You know what he does for a living. Just because you gave this title to him as part of the MTP boys club and he draws a few routes on a map, doesn't mean he is an analyst for anyone.
There are currently 50 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 50 guests)
Bookmarks