San Francisco, which once packed 68 crowded bus lines into its lean streets, stands to lose most of them as the pandemic sinks its transit budget and steers riders into cars.
Up to 40 of the bus lines that San Francisco cut at the beginning of the pandemic are not coming back unless the city finds a new revenue source, transportation chief Jeffrey Tumlin said this week. Just about every aspect of San Francisco’s transportation future looks grim.
Elbow-to-elbow transit has long been a feature of life in San Francisco. Yet the daily bustle ended with COVID-19, which closed schools and businesses, moved offices into homes and lured more people into cars.
And the huge blow to Muni, which is on life support, has implications for the environment, the livability of San Francisco and the ability of the city to bounce back economically post-pandemic.
“The cuts that we’re making are terribly painful,” Tumlin said during a board meeting Tuesday, his voice breaking slightly as the four directors solemnly nodded.
Faced with galling projections of $568 million in revenue losses over four years, along with a $46 million increase in pension contributions, the board took a hard look this week at the budget it approved in April.
In the ensuing two months, the world changed for the San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency. Officials agreed to cancel a planned Clipper fare increase under pressure from two city supervisors — a decision that by itself stripped $20 million in anticipated revenue. And cases of COVID-19 surged again, tamping down hopes that the normal commute would resume any time soon.
“By fiscal year 2023, we will have a problem that we cannot overcome without cutting service,” Jonathan Rewers, senior manager of budget, financial planning and analysis, said at Tuesday’s meeting. “It will just come to that. We have cut everything to the bare bone.”
The board voted Tuesday to pass the amended budget, despite misgivings that it would not include a fare increase. As a result of that change, the agency had to eliminate free Muni for youth.
Muni’s backlog in infrastructure maintenance — equipment that still needs to be repaired and replaced — has ballooned to $110 million, and Rewers said it will cost $472 million annually just to keep a “status quo” state of good repair. Studies of transit systems around the globe show that, at best, 80% of riders will eventually return, with the rest lost to telecommuting, cars or bicycles amid heightened fears of COVID-19 infection.
That’s the optimistic projection, Rewers said. He presented a worst-case scenario in which social distancing rules severely limit the number of people Muni can carry on each vehicle. In that case, he said, the agency might limp along with fewer than 150,000 riders each weekday, or one-fifth of its pre-pandemic haul.
Tumlin noted that Muni won’t succeed if everyone has to maintain 6 feet of separation, which strains capacity and is hard to enforce. Officials have no desire to dispatch police officers to pull riders — many of whom are essential workers — off buses, Tumlin said. For mass transit to survive, U.S. cities should follow models in Europe and Asia, where agencies have strict cleaning regimens, and all riders wear masks.
Many people view automobiles as protective armor against a deadly virus — a mentality that led to car parades for birthdays, graduations and protests — and it will likely persist in the coming years. Traffic data show that even in a period of remote work, bottlenecks at the Bay Bridge and SoMa are already getting choked during rush hour.
Cat Carter, head of the grassroots advocacy group San Francisco Transit Riders, is still adjusting to that strange reality. Before shelter-in-place orders clamped down, she rode transit up to four times a day. But after her office shut down March 7, Carter mostly stayed home and gingerly avoided public spaces. She hasn’t stepped on a bus since that day.
Still, she vehemently defends Muni against perceptions that it’s dirty or unsafe.
“People assume it’s gonna be a Petri dish,” Carter said, pointing to all the extra cleanings, the Plexiglass barriers for operators, backdoor boarding and other precautions — like allowing workers to take time off if they felt sick or had a sick family member. Muni and other transit systems also require riders to wear masks.
It may take “public theater” to lure people back to Muni, Tumlin said, noting that his staff is “literally looking at cleaning products that smell like bleach.”
“Having our buses smell like cleaning products is pure theater, but may actually be necessary” to comfort the public, he said.
Carter and other transit enthusiasts have some hope for the future. In August, Muni plans to reopen its subway along with a few bus lines. The agency has gradually built bus service back up from a low of 17 in April to 23 now. Next month officials will restore a few more. Though city transportation planners are still picking the routes, they know it will fall short of the 68 lines San Francisco had in February, spokeswoman Erica Kato said. The Central Subway is still on track to open at the end of 2021.
It may take a shift in cultural attitudes to resurrect the shared daily ritual of commuting. In the meantime, officials in San Francisco will struggle to maintain even a skeletal service.
For the next two years, Tumlin said, “we are draining reserves and living on our credit cards.”
Rachel Swan is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: rswan@sfchronicle.com Twitter: @rachelswan
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Muni expects to lose the majority of its bus lines permanently as financial devastation mounts - San Francisco Chronicle
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