Bureaucracy. Gotta Love It.

My daughter went to go get a student MTA Bus Pass today, to use for summer school. She brought with her the most recent student ID she had: from her 8th grade class, from which she just graduated. The MTA rejected the application: she didn’t have proof she was going to high school. What do they think a 13-yo is doing?

She’s going back tomorrow with her summer school schedule and her acceptance letter for the Performing Arts Magnet at VNHS… plus the school is faxing us something. Hopefully that will work.

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Just A Map

Maps. They are something I have loved since I was a small boy, collecting them from local gas stations. I have a number of maps up on my walls at work, from a Machiavelli game map, to a Caltrans state highway map, to an original Pacific Electric map, to a PE map overlain on the current freeway system, to the original LA Metro Rail plan, to a fantasy Metro Rail Plan.

I mention this all because the New York Times yesterday had a fascinating article on the New York City Subway map, and how it is being redrawn to return to the abstract style it had pre-1979, analagous to the current style of the London Underground map. New York has a complex system, with 378 subway, bus and train lines, including Manhattan Island, which has 17 separate lines running up and down midtown alone. Lines also run local, then express, then back to local along their route, and once was three separate and competing subway systems that were poorly coordinated to work as a whole system.

The new map is pretty, although I have no idea how well it would serve its customers. Locals it would likely serve fine, but they don’t need the map. Tourists would likely be confused, but it does work in London.

As for Los Angeles. We have so few lines no one gets confused, except to wonder what light rail is :-).

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Learning from History

Today’s lunchtime perusal of the LA Times brings an interesting article about a transportation forum recently held at the Peterson Automobile Museum. The forum, which discussed the proposed “Subway to the Sea”, was focused on how to fund the project. Everyone showed support for a subway, including representatives of Santa Monica, West Hollywood and Beverly Hills. Everyone also agreed it would take bundles of money that have yet to materialize. L.A. Councilman Tom LaBonge said he favored a parcel tax on L.A. County residents and said he thought that most people would pay $52 per year to fund transit projects across the county.

Yet there is another proposal out there. L.A. Councilman Jack Weiss last week asked the city to study whether a public-private partnership could be used. The idea would be to allow a private firm to build and run the subway, with government oversight. Weiss believes that “Private capital markets are enormous, and maybe there’s a way to tap them”.

Me thinks that the honorable Mr. Weiss doesn’t know his history.

Many people have heard of the famous Los Angeles “Red Car” system. It was made popular by movies such as “Who Framed Roger Rabbit?”, and there is a popular theory that what killed the “World’s Greatest Electrica Railway System” with “1000 miles of standard trolley lines” was a conspiracy of GM, Firestone Tire, and Standard Oil. Of course, this theory isn’t true for Los Angeles. So what killed the Red Cars (and its system system, the Los Angeles “Yellow Cars” Railway)? The simple answer is: a public-private partnership.

Any road network is inherently subsidized. The users of the road, both public transportation and private vehicles, pay for its upkeep through taxes, and thus tend not to realize the costs. This isn’t true for a rail network, where the railroad companies must pay for the right of way, must pay for construction of the rail lines, must pay for upkeep and maintenance on those lines, and must pay for the vehicles and infrastructure on those lines. Even if government was to acquire the right of way, over the long term, the other costs are sizable and are only recouped via revenue. But revenue is tricky: the PUC typically places caps on what can be charged, and there is only so much that can be charged before people stop using the transit.

That’s the real factor that killed the Red and Yellow Cars. The Pacific Electric (and LARy) for years applied for fees that would allow them to recoup costs and improve infrastructure. They were repeatedly denied fare increases by the PUC, which demanded service improvements. So, the PE and LARy bought busses, which ran on streets (paid for via taxes) vs. private right of way. The busses also gave them flexibility in routing as the city grew and transportation needs changed. It is what could kill a private subway, and it is what led to the creation of the first MTA — private “public” transportation wasn’t profitable.

Yes, there is the chance that a private subway could succeed. But to do so, the stars would need to really align. First, gas prices would have to rise sufficiently to offset the fares (remembering that as gas prices go up, the cost of the electricity for the lines also tends to go up). Secondly, there would need to be sufficient additional income, likely realized by the sale of advertising space to bombard the captive audience: seat ads, station ads, video screens in stations, etc. (such advertising wasn’t pervasive in the PE era). Thirdly, the lax MTA fare enforcement would have to be strengthened.

Folks like Mr. Weiss need to remember that California is not used to tolls. As I recall, the Foothill Toll Lanes (i.e., Route 241, 261, 73, and portions of 133) are just starting to break even. The Route 91 Express Lanes weren’t successful, and ended up being purchased by OCTA. I don’t know the profitability of the HOT lanes on I-15 near San Diego, but I think those are more capacity controls than profit based. The Bay Area is primarily used to toll bridges, which are a distinctly different thing.

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Comprehensive Rail Networks for Los Angeles

An entry in the LA Times Bottleneck Blog has an interesting pointer to a website called Get LA Moving (a project of The Transit Coalition). This website proposed a comprehensive rail network for Los Angeles that includes, among other things:

  • The Bronze Line. 53 Miles of Track (47.3 Miles of New Track). The line begins near the Van Nuys Blvd/Foothill Freeway (I-210) intersection and continues south down Van Nuys to Ventura. East down Ventura to Sepulveda. It then continues down the Sepulveda Pass from Sepulveda/Ventura to the UCLA station at Strathmore/Westwood, with a small diversion to the Getty Center tram station. South down Westwood to Pico; and southwest down Pico to the eastern shoulder of the 405 Freeway. Southeasterly down the eastern shoulder of the 405 freeway to Culver; continuing southeasterly down Sepulveda to El Segundo; and south down the western shoulder of Sepulveda from El Segundo to Rosecrans at-grade. East down Rosecrans to the existing Green line tracks; and southeast down the Green Line ROW to Marine/Redondo Beach Ave. Southeast down the Harbor Subdivision ROW to the western shoulder of the 405 Fwy, continuing southeast to Hawthorne Blvd. South down Hawthorne Blvd. to the Harbor Subdivision ROW at 190th. Southeast down the Harbor Subdivision tracks at-grade to Crenshaw; continuing down the Harbor Subdivision to Normandie. South down Normandie to Pacific Coast Highway. East down PCH, continuing after the Los Alamitos Circle down Atherton to Bellflower, veering southeast to the Cal State Long Beach/Long Beach Veterans Hospital terminus at 7th Street/Campus Drive.
  • The Lime Line. 24.2 Miles of Track (19.7 Miles of New Track). The line would extend west from the Glendale Galleria station down Broadway sharing tracks with the Gold line to the Valley Subdivision/Metrolink ROW, which rusn parallel to San Fernando Road. Northwest up the ROW at-grade to the Coast Subdivision/Metrolink ROW; continuing at-grade down the ROW to Sherman Way. West down Sherman Way to Reseda; and north up Reseda Blvd to Nordhoff. West down Norhoff to the Coast Subdivision/Metrolink ROW; and north up the ROW at-grade to the Chatsworth Metrolink station terminus.
  • The Gold Line. 37.2 Miles of Track (33.5 Miles of New Track). The line would extend west from the Old Town Pasadena station down Walnut to the 134 freeway; continuing west to Colorado Blvd. West down Colorado Blvd to Broadway; continuing west down Broadway to the Valley Subdivision/Metrolink ROW parallel to San Fernando Road. Northwest up the ROW at-grade to Olive Street; and southwest down Olive to North Pass Ave. Southwest under Universal Studios to Ventura/Lankershim. West down Ventura to Wilbur; and north up Wilbur to the southern shoulder of the Ventura (101) Freeway to Canoga Ave. North up Canoga Ave to the Burbank Branch/San Fernando Valley Busway ROW near Vanowen to Plummer; continuing north up the Coast Subdivision ROW at-grade to the Chatsworth Metrolink station terminus.

This would make it easy to get to work. Bike to Northridge Fashion Center, and thenk take the Lime Line to the Bronze Line to the Green Line.

I do think the proposal has some problems. It abandons (or makes into a trolley) the current portion of the green line between Imperial/Aviation to Rosecrans. I’d keep that as an alternate terminus for the Green Line — it is important because of the rail maintenance yards. In fact, the one thing many of these fancy plans do is forget the maintenance and storage yards, especially for lines that have different types of equipment or power. That is a significant concern, especially for lines that move from at-grade to elevated to below-grade. For some, you prefer overhead catenary, and for others, third-rail. I do think the proposal is better in its valley coverage than the proposal developed by Numan Parada, although Numan’s map does a better job for the Green Line. It certainly is an improvement over the current approach.

Will we ever see this? Who knows. But the maps are pretty and fun to look at, and one can always dream 🙂

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