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Mass Transit in New Orleans


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#81 NCB

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Posted 09 July 2008 - 11:02 AM

Here you go, nola:

City launches $42.8M road-repair program
New Orleans CityBusiness

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NEW ORLEANS - The city's Department of Public Works this week kicked off a roughly $42.8 million road- and sidewalk-repair project involving about 17,000 minor-street sites eligible for Federal Emergency Management Agency funding.


 

#82 djp4lsu

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Posted 09 July 2008 - 04:37 PM

View PostNCB, on Jul 9 2008, 11:02 AM, said:

Here you go, nola:

City launches $42.8M road-repair program
New Orleans CityBusiness

Haven't they been saying that this project is going to start since like the beginning of the year?

#83 NCB

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Posted 09 July 2008 - 05:01 PM

View Postdjp4lsu, on Jul 9 2008, 05:37 PM, said:

Haven't they been saying that this project is going to start since like the beginning of the year?

Well they annonuced the project at the beginning of the year, but I believe they set the actual start date as summer '08. It did seem like it took a long while to get this project actually rolling, though.

#84 NCB

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Posted 09 July 2008 - 05:21 PM

New buses ready to roll in New Orleans
Times-Picayune article

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Just in time for an increased demand for public transportation and fuel economy, eight brand spanking new, biodiesel buses will start picking up passengers in New Orleans Thursday.

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The release of the brand new buses comes at a time of increased reliance on the RTA - from April and May of 2007 to April and May of this year, there has been a 53% increase in ridership, RTA spokesperson Rosalind Cook said.


#85 blackcoat

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Posted 30 July 2008 - 03:10 PM

Today, the RTA board or directors announced its selection of Veolia Transportation to manage day-to-day operations of the RTA system.  RTA is aiming to have a 3-year agreement signed within the next month, with an option to extend the contract for an additional 2 years if the RTA is pleased with Veolia's services.  Veolia has expressed their desire to roll out "'rapid  transit' bus routes to Uptown, Algiers and the NASA facility in eastern  New Orleans and smaller buses for less-populated areas".

#86 blackcoat

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Posted 13 October 2008 - 11:15 PM

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.
  ------------------
  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.

#87 Antrell Williams

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Posted 05 December 2010 - 01:04 PM

This thread has been dead for years, is there no further information on mass transit from the CBD to the BR CBD?

#88 xav13r

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Posted 27 January 2011 - 10:07 AM

View PostAntrell Williams, on 05 December 2010 - 01:04 PM, said:

This thread has been dead for years, is there no further information on mass transit from the CBD to the BR CBD?

No word on a BR to NO connection. On the other hand, construction is about to begin on the new Loyola streetcar line and plans for a St. Claude/Rampart line with future extensions to Poland have been green lighted. There's also plans for an Elysian Fields line to run from the river to the lake at UNO.

Posted Image


http://www.nola.com/...html#incart_mce

#89 Ronald120

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Posted 01 April 2012 - 07:58 PM

What is everyone's opinion public transit right outside of New Orleans? I have a little rant I want to let off my chest as it pertains to that subject but I'll await for a few responses before I inject my opinion.

Edited by Ronald120, 01 April 2012 - 07:59 PM.


#90 Antrell Williams

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Posted 01 April 2012 - 09:11 PM

Is Metry the only city with transit?

#91 Ronald120

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Posted 02 April 2012 - 01:41 PM

View PostAntrell Williams, on 01 April 2012 - 09:11 PM, said:

Is Metry the only city with transit?

Wow.....


lol I guess I can't blame you for posing that question as it is indicative of how luckluster transit is outside of N.O.

To answer your question.....no, Jefferson Parish and St. Bernard has transit too.

Edited by Ronald120, 02 April 2012 - 01:41 PM.


#92 Antrell Williams

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Posted 02 April 2012 - 06:56 PM

View PostRonald120, on 02 April 2012 - 01:41 PM, said:

Wow.....


lol I guess I can't blame you for posing that question as it is indicative of how luckluster transit is outside of N.O.

To answer your question.....no, Jefferson Parish and St. Bernard has transit too.
Yep. Blame the state for me not knowing that one.
Any cities on the northshore have bus service? Hammond would be a good candidate.

#93 Ronald120

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Posted 03 April 2012 - 07:21 AM

You would think that one the state's fastest growing parishes with a population of over 233,000 people (St. Tammany) would have some semblance of public transit, but NO it doesn't neither does Hammond which says a lot about the nature of that area....






wait a minute, I stand corrected (well, sort of), here's something from St. Tammany (though I wouldn't consider it mass transit)....

http://www.stpgov.org/gostat.php




...and here's what Tangipahoa Parish (Hammond) has to offer...


http://www.dotd.loui...s.asp?Parish=53


It's a pretty sh*tty situation if you live in one of these areas with no car.


But to give you more insight on why things are the way they (or the attitude contributing to the current state of things), read the comments n this article and this link -- an interesting little eye-opener.

#94 Antrell Williams

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Posted 03 April 2012 - 07:51 AM

goSTAT sounds the a pretty good system. Has anyone ever used it?

The comments don't surprise me, it's the northshore...

#95 Ronald120

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Posted 05 April 2012 - 06:57 AM

View PostAntrell Williams, on 03 April 2012 - 07:51 AM, said:

goSTAT sounds the a pretty good system. Has anyone ever used it?


What about that system sounds "good" to you?


To me, it seems like it's simply old people/handicapped small vans that only them use. Doesn't very efficient to me.


Very few use this system; I think I read somewhere that only 0.06% of the population in St. Tammany uses the system.




Again, I wouldn't consider it mass transit.

#96 Antrell Williams

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Posted 05 April 2012 - 08:27 AM

View PostRonald120, on 05 April 2012 - 06:57 AM, said:

What about that system sounds "good" to you?


To me, it seems like it's simply old people/handicapped small vans that only them use. Doesn't very efficient to me.


Very few use this system; I think I read somewhere that only 0.06% of the population in St. Tammany uses the system.




Again, I wouldn't consider it mass transit.
Well it's a form of transit for a rural parish, which is better than what EBR, Ascension, and Livingston have right now.

#97 Ronald120

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Posted 07 April 2012 - 02:19 AM

How that's better than what EBR has??? I'll be the first to admit to the sh*ttness of EBR's system, but at least EBR has a system, at least it is mass transit. What that goSTAT is is nothing but a glorified, subsidized cab that wouldn't be sustainable if more people used it more frequently. Again, tell me what attribute(s) about that goSTAT that make you think it is better than what EBR has (an actual system of large buses with fixed routes that is actually used by people) or would llicit a response when describing it as "good"?

Now if you want to point to a smaller, sparsely-(sub)urbanized Louisiana parish with some semblance of a public transit system, then Good Earth Transit is, imo, your best example. It serves both Terrebonne and Lafourche Parishes (primarily just Houma and Thibodaux). It isn't comphrensive if you follow the trend of the role (or lack thereof) public transit plays in Louisiana's largest suburban/rural parishes (Jefferson, St. Tammany, EBR, Ascension, Livingston, Tangipahoa, etc.), the fact that area has some organized, vibrant form of public transit serving it at all is a pleasant surprise.

Edited by Ronald120, 07 April 2012 - 02:19 AM.


#98 Antrell Williams

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Posted 07 April 2012 - 02:49 PM

It was basically a joke on CATS. Didn't mean to get you worked up.




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