Quote:
Originally Posted by Rico Rommheim
What Montreal REALLY needs to do now is to maintain and dramatically improve its current transit service. Especially the buses. I used to hop on the 80, a bus that used to reliably show up every 4-6 minutes. I have stopped taking the bus altogether a few years ago when I ended up waiting 10-15 minutes on a regular basis. Sometimes the bus wouldnt show up at all. I recall waiting for up to 20-30 minutes in the early mornings of deep cold February and freezing my ass off for that bus. I used to get to work late regularly and getting shit for it because my bus just didnt show up.
Its unacceptable. They need to fix this first.
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Regular wait times of 10-15 minutes? Are you saying they reduced the frequencies from 4-6 minutes to 20-30 minutes? Or are the buses getting delayed and bunched up?
4-6 minutes to 20-30 minutes frequency would be a very drastic cut. It is also worse than most routes here in Mississauga, which run every 15-20 minutes, or 7.5-10 minutes average wait time. There might be something out of STM's control that is causing such long wait times, such as road construction or weather.
Higher frequency is probably the most overrated method of attracting ridership. Imagine a 60-minute long bus route, you put two buses on it, that is 60 minute frequency, or an average wait time of 30 minutes. You add two buses, the frequency increases to 30 minutes, the average travel time is reduced by 15 minutes, a huge improvement. But when you add two more buses, the frequency increases to 20 minutes, the average wait time is only reduced by 5 minutes. Add another two buses, the wait time is only reduced by 2.5 minutes.
Diminishing returns and after a certain point the best way to reduce wait time is to increase reliability (e.g. limited stop service, all-door boarding with longer vehicles, ROW, signal priority), but again some things are out of the transit agency's control.