Over a week ago, the RTA board approved
Veolia Transportation to take over management of the local transit system for the next 90 days, with an option to extend the temporary contract an addition 90 days. This time will be used to negotiate a longer management contract (current proposal: 10 years) while sorting out issues with an underfunded pension system, union contracts, and arrangements with vendors. The T-P reported in June that the
RTA has financial troubles aside from the pension shortfalls, including a 70% reduction in its customer base, $200 million in debt, and an end to the post-Katrina aid from the federal government.
The Veolia management team started on the job today (Monday). New schedules for the system were issued on the 12th, and I am kicking myself for not having the old ones handy in anticipation of the takeover to see what changed >_< . Anyway, Veolia's stated short term goals for the RTA system are:
* "Easy Bus" service. Instead of a normal fixed-route line, customers make a reservation in advance on a 15-seat "Easy Bus", which then picks up/drops off every passenger at their door. Software aboard the vehicle maps the route for the driver on demand. 10 such buses are to service Gentilly and other sparsely populated neighborhoods.
* Complete replacement of old bus fleet (!!!)
* Improved streetcar service (more frequency ?)
* New signs (I can't find the citation though, but I definitely read this *somewhere*)
* "Infrastructure Improvements". Several articles have mentioned Bus Rapid Transit (BRT), but this sounds like an exploratory plan for some time in the future.
On a related note, the first of
fourteen new transit shelters debuted on Canal Street. Each shelter is decorated by a local artist, and all fourteen are slated for completion before the opening of
Prospect 1 on November 1st.
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Recently, New Orleans City Business had a 3-part series on transit in the region, though I haven't found part 1:
* Part 2:
N.O. Developers See Need for Upgraded Transit System
* Part 3:
Money is Main Roadblock for Expanding Area Transit
There is a separate
examination of the flaws in RTA service, though it does not explicitly state that it is part one of the three-part series.