Station access trends, BART and Caltrain

Recent customer surveys of BART and Caltrain riders show that walking, bicycling/scootering, and public transportation account for the largest share of station access – 59% for BART, and 71% for Caltrain.  For both brands, the share of walking/biking/transit has increased in recent years – up from 50% since 2018 for BART, and up from 64% […]

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September: Caltrain considers electrified schedule – faster, more frequent service, weekend silence

The schedule for electrified Caltrain service is being planned now.  Electric service is scheduled to go live in September, as construction nears completion and testing is under way. This week, at Caltrain’s Citizens Advisory Committee (September 20, start time 5:40) and Bicycle and Active Transportation Committee (September 21, start time 5:45) will review the proposed

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Transit Month on the Caltrain Corridor: New trains; Tour El Camino bike and bus improvements

This coming weekend and next, come join exciting, fun and informative Transit Month activities on the Caltrain corridor and around the region. Saturday, September 23, tour the new Caltrain electric trains in San Francisco between 10am and 2pm.  The train tour in San Jose this summer drew 4,000 people – so please register if you’d

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BayPass all-agency transit pass pilot advances – but omits opportunities to increase Caltrain ridership

Clipper BayPass – the Bay Area’s successful all-agency transit pass pilot – is taking an important step forward, expanding from the first set of institutional customers – public colleges/universities and affordable housing communities – to employers by the end of this year.   The program’s first phase is showing impressive results – users with the all-agency

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Two events with national and international insights on modernizing Caltrain and Bay Area transit

Key decisions about Bay Area rail and transit service will be made in the coming months. Electrified Caltrain service is expected to come online in 2024.  Caltrain will start planning its electric service next month, and is rolling out out promotions and programs to regrow ridership.   Across the region, plans for a more connected

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Caltrain plans ridership regrowth – lively marketing, single-brand focus

Caltrain is rolling out marketing plans to regrow transit ridership after steep pandemic declines.  The strategies encourage people to take the train for more kinds of trips and for current commute patterns.  Coasters at bars encouraging people to have fun safely with a train as the designated driver. Family and group day passes making excursions more

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State budget helps, doesn’t solve transit fiscal cliff; bridge toll bill advances to prevent cuts

The state budget signed by the governor at the end of June provided helpful funding to avert the fiscal cliff facing major Bay Area transit services. But the funding did not go far enough to prevent cuts and service degradation to agencies with upcoming fiscal cliffs including BART, Caltrain, SFMTA and AC Transit. As summarized

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State budget negotiations on saving transit continue – how you can help

The news on saving California transit last week includes a small amount of progress but not enough to prevent major cuts. Earlier in May, the governor’s updated budget proposal had offered nothing to help save transit. Last week, the Senate Budget Subcommittee on Transportation (proposal) and the Assembly Budget Committee (transit recommendations page 78) approved

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Caltrain advances 2-year budget with steady service, potential partner capital contributions

At its May board meeting, the Caltrain board advanced a 2-year budget with plans to provide steady service, and with the likelihood of partner contributions to the capital budget.   Choices that Caltrain makes within the next two years have the potential to make a significant difference in ridership regrowth and revenue.    Operating budget with steady

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Regional measure polling shows virtuous cycle between transit improvements, voter support

New polling data from the Metropolitan Transportation Commission shows that voters support transit but want improvements – and there’s a virtuous cycle between better transit and voter support. At its workshop in Napa on April 26, the Metropolitan Transportation Commission discussed the new polling about potential ballot measures for public transportation and housing.   Overall, voters

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Caltrain board finance workshop considers fiscal cliff and hints at ways to regrow ridership

On Thursday, April 6, the Caltrain board will consider the budget challenges created by pandemic-induced ridership declines.    Caltrain can fend off an immediate fiscal cliff because of state funding to complete electrification construction.  But with persistently low ridership and depressed fare revenue caused by a decline in white collar commuting – Caltrain’s previous business model

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BART Board workshop focuses on new funding, ridership regrowth

In late February, the BART board held its annual board workshop.  Major themes this year were financial stability and improving customer experience to regrow ridership. The need for a sustainable funding strategy including new funding was front and center given the change in work patterns affecting BART revenue.  BART’s ridership historically has closely tracked downtown

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Tuesday 3/14 and Weds 3/15 – state legislators consider options that could prevent service cuts

This week the state legislature is holding the last two key hearings on transportation funding before the “May Revise” of the governor’s budget proposal. At last week’s budget hearing, there were over 30 public comments supporting funding to prevent transit service cuts and help regrow ridership. Read on for opportunities to take action this week.

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Thursday 3/9 and Wednesday 3/15 – state legislators consider funding to prevent service cuts

This week and next, the California state legislature will start to consider whether to step in to address the fiscal cliff that risks steep service cuts and a spiral of decline for transit in the Bay Area and the state.  Transit agencies including Caltrain, BART, SFMTA and AC Transit face steep budget shortfalls soon as

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Sacramento legislators examine transit crisis and transformation as fiscal cliff comes into sharper focus

The state legislature in Sacramento is looking into the challenges facing public transportation as the fiscal cliff facing agencies comes into sharper focus. On Monday, February 27, a Joint Assembly/Senate Transportation Committee hearing will cover the impending public transportation fiscal cliff that is impacting 72% of transit agencies in California, and opportunities to regrow ridership

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Caltrain board discusses short-term ridership regrowth strategies

On Thursday, February 2, the Caltrain board will discuss short-term opportunities to regrow transit ridership.  Caltrain is looking at single agency strategies that it can fully control. These strategies will be helpful,  but this narrow focus on short-term independent actions underestimates the depth of the challenge Caltrain is confronting.  The railroad is struggling to break

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New funds for Caltrain to complete electrification, defer fiscal cliff 

On January 31, the State of California announced that it is awarding $367 million to Caltrain to finish its electrification project, which is scheduled to be completed in Fall 2024. The funding for Caltrain complements $43 million in federal funding, adding up to the full $410 million gap needed to complete electrification, which will enable

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Newsom’s proposed budget undermines transit and climate goals

Governor Newsom’s proposed budget grapples with a projected $22.5 billion state budget deficit by slashing funding for public transportation capital projects  (and other climate investments) while ignoring the fiscal cliff facing transit agency operating budgets, creating risks of service cuts. In California’s multi-step budget process, the governor’s proposal is only the first salvo in a

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