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While Subways Get the Spotlight, Bus Riders’ Frustration Grows as Numbers Dwindle

5 Comments

  • native new yorker
    Posted March 5, 2018 at 9:07 am

    Staten Island of course has no subway connection and never will. The express buses are our ‘subway’. The MTA has been studying the Staten Island express bus network for over two years now. The preliminary report amounted to a defacto reduction in service. It would have eliminated express bus service between roughly Chambers Street and 23rd Street. The MTA, with a straight face, suggests that riders who work in the eliminated portion could transfer to one of their already overcrowded subway lines, after paying the $6.50 express bus fare.

    Elected officials pushed back and the MTA is reconsidering some of their first inane proposals. Increasing the spacing of express bus stops on S.I. makes sense. In some cases the stops are only two blocks apart, Allison Avenue is two blocks from the next Hylan Blvd stop at Tysens Lane.

    Andy Byford met with SI electeds last week and I’m encouraged that he’s taken an interest in my boroughs transportation needs early in his tenure.

    MTA express bus study materials (pdf) –
    https://files.acrobat.com/a/preview/3fe3e728-5387-4471-9a2b-36d8e46502c9

    • native new yorker
      Posted March 5, 2018 at 9:34 am

      The S.I. local bus network is also part of the MTA study. No proposals have been released after two years of study. S.I. does not have a street grid of parallel Avenues and Streets like the other boroughs. That limits where buses can operate. The MTA is supposedly looking at existing employment centers, shopping centers and the colleges and may redesign the local network around those locations. Maybe an Amboy Road / Page Avenue route to Bricktown Center starting at New Dorp Lane but all speculation at this point.

      For example about twenty years ago the MTA made the Dongan Hills SI Railway station wheelchair accessible. The idea being that the S52 bus could be extended from SI Univ Hospital to the station via Seaview Avenue with a return via Richmond Road and Garretson Ave. But Seaview and Garretson are both residential street only about 34′ wide. Residents would fight any extension. Any east-west route across the Island would be hampered by narrow winding two-way streets like Rockland and Travis Avenues.

  • Guest
    Posted March 6, 2018 at 10:15 am

    We need more bus only lanes!

    Enforced, and in some cases physically separated!!!

  • Jen
    Posted March 6, 2018 at 11:53 pm

    As the article notes, bus routes and service/frequency have been cut which does impact on ridership. In Manhattan, not uncommon to see people give up and walk away after waiting 20+ minutes for a bus that never comes.
    Question about data:
    1) Does ridership data accounts for the numerous parades/bicycle events/street fairs etc on weekends which mean streets are closed and essentially no bus service?
    2) How does the data account for young children who are non-paying passengers?

  • Harlem
    Posted March 8, 2018 at 10:59 am

    Bus rider ship is up in Harlem due to fact the subways are not handicap accessible. The real issue is safety at bus stops on FDB. What’s a bus commuter to do when AM Inez Dickens had no idea that this bus went thru her district?

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