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This Week's Metro Bus Service Changes Hit Lots of Bumps - Streetsblog Los Angeles

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Last weekend, Metro made several changes to bus service. Though the changes are generally steps in the right direction, they have not gone smoothly. Transit riders and advocates have aired numerous complaints – primarily about inappropriate fare collection and errors in route changes.

On Sunday, Metro made the following changes: (See Metro’s The Source and service changes brochure for additional detail)

  1. Front door boarding resumed. Since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, Metro riders have been boarding via the back door on buses, paying no fare.
  2. NextGen Bus Study changes implemented. This reorganization increases service on higher frequency lines, mostly in the core of the system. It includes elimination of many Rapid bus lines, which have been consolidated with locals, to run more frequent service on local routes. Several lines were eliminated, either canceled or consolidated. These include: 17, 163, 175, 176, 181, 183, 201, 239, 240, 245, 252, 264, 685, 734, 744, 750, 757, 780, and 788. Several other routes have been modified, including some to serve portions of canceled routes. Next Gen changes also include bus stop consolidation on many lines, and new peak-hour bus lanes partially opened – on Alvarado Street south of the 101 Freeway.
  3. Some cut service was restored. During COVID, Metro cut bus service by twenty percent. As Southern California recovers from the pandemic and more travel resumes, the agency has been gradually adding back service, but a return to pre-COVID service levels was pushed back to September.

In May discussions of Metro’s Fareless Service Initiative, Boardmember Holly Mitchell proposed that Metro not resume collecting bus fares until the details of an expected fareless pilot were worked out. The board approved the Mitchell plan, effectively continuing the non-collection of fares (in place since early 2020) indefinitely.

Unfortunately, bus operators did not get the memo. When front door boarding resumed, drivers started collecting fares again.

Transit advocates urged Metro Operations to follow what the Metro board had already approved.

Yesterday, Metro CEO Stephanie Wiggins responded by issuing a somewhat unclear jargon-laden statement that includes:

We welcome everyone on board our system and appreciate your comments and feedback.

Customers are encouraged to tap their TAP cards when and where they can.

Based on your feedback, we have clarified our instructions to bus operators so that they are clear that we are not quoting fares at this time, consistent with Board direction in May

The statement fails to simply answer the simple question being asked by riders and operators: is Metro collecting bus fare, or not? Why this “not quoting fares” stuff? Payment is encouraged, but is it required? Metro isn’t saying. Who knows?

And apparently yesterday’s clarified instructions to operators didn’t work. Some bus riders tweeted this morning that drivers are still asking for fares.

In addition to the premature fare collection (not the first time Metro Operations has failed to follow board directives recently), there have also been issues with NextGen route changes.

Significant changes in the Silver Lake neighborhood (elimination of route 201, and consolidation of the 180/181/780 to the 180 and a new route 182) resulted in missing stops along Rowena Avenue, plus stops that are no longer in service but have remained – along West Silver Lake Drive.

Some permanently changed bus stops have been labeled as temporary.

That’s a small selection of the publicly-aired complaints. If you’re still spotting errors, best to report them to Metro directly.

Sure, making a lot of changes at once may result in some things falling through the cracks. And Metro communications staff have been busy taking to social media to respond to the errors. But this does not bode well. NextGen’s faulty rollout, at a time when service has been cut has deeply, has undermined rider confidence in what should have been a celebrated upgrade. Metro Operations management’s failure to clearly communicate board-approved fare policy has caused strained relations between board and staff, and between staff and riders. It is also an unwelcome fiscal burden on low-income riders struggling with the pandemic and concomitant job losses.

Sadly, this week’s failures are more signals that Metro continues to fail to prioritize its bus riders.

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