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Originally Posted by bilbao58
Or maybe Houston just has a better bus system:
In 2015, METRO took its outdated bus network down to the studs and designed an entirely new regional transit system that made bus service less complicated and more frequent along the busiest routes. The results made transportation officials in cities across the country take notice.
https://kinder.rice.edu/urbanedge/ho...it-trendsetter
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Quote:
Originally Posted by craigs
I was just going to post this same point. Houston's transit agency let professional transit planners like Jarrett Walker come in, study, and then rebuild its transit network essentially from scratch. That was a really smart move.
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My counter to this is that DART actually followed Houston's lead and underwent a similar reconstruction of its network. But this happened around the same time as COVID and is just starting to be complete. And DART ridership has gone up a lot in the last few years, it is above 80% of the pre-COVID decline which I believe is similar to the LA Metro system. The core part of the Light Rail (Red/Blue central corridor) I think is surpassed its previous declines, not sure.
Something that has transpired is that there is a push by suburban member cities to reduce the funding they send to DART. The same suburban member cities were the ones who demanded DART build the new Silver Line, which is going to add more costs to the budget but probably be just another 5,000 riders/day commuter project. So its' hard for DART to get where they want to be. It's not a matter of mismanagement at all but politics.
Also I can't claim to be an expert on this, but I can look at a map. All sunbelt cities are essentially archipelagos of tiny islands of urban density and employment destinations that benefit from and will actually utilize public transportation when it exists, surrounded by a vast sea of suburban sprawl where nobody would ever set foot on a bus.
In Houston, those "islands" have METRO service, like for example the corner of FM-1960 & I-45 in Spring where you have a bunch of enshittified dangerous 1970s apartment complexes full of people who can't afford a car and across the street is every retail and chain restaurant known to man which all employ a lot of low wage service industry workers, and all those people ride the bus. So because Metro runs a handful of local buses up there since it's inside Harris County, that's a few thousand extra riders for their statistics. Then you have similar pockets in Humble, in Alief, in the far south metro, etc.
In DFW, there's places which are exactly the same in Arlington and Bedford and Euless. The mayors in those cities are very conservative, because outside of those pockets those places are all huge 1980s era single family homes on large lots with mature trees that sell for like $500k. They don't want to contribute to transit and they don't want any buses running in the area.
To me its that simple. Metro has more routes and is a vastly bigger network than either DART or Trinity Metro even combined.