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New state bill aims to integrate Bay Area transit into one 'seamless' system

Original post made on Feb 4, 2020

A newly introduced piece of state legislation seeks to integrate the more than two dozen separate and independent Bay Area transit agencies into one "seamless" system.


Read the full story here Web Link posted Tuesday, February 4, 2020, 1:56 PM

Comments (9)

Posted by PA Resident
a resident of another community
on Feb 4, 2020 at 3:08 pm

I'm not sure why this article is posted here and not on Palo Alto online also.

However, all I will say is "About time"!!!!


Posted by Member
a resident of Cuesta Park
on Feb 4, 2020 at 3:28 pm

I look forward to a massively expensive debacle that costs taxpayers billions, creating worse traffic than ever, leads to massive disappearing of hundreds of millions in a cash grab. Let the new government nightmare begin without oversight or a chance to vote, just shoved down our throats: you pay for it and you’ll like it!

More taxes and less services coming as this project will be proposed at a price in the billions which will be 5% of what it will actually cost and then a time line that will be 5% of what it actually is. I’m sure first we will waste a few billion of even forming the committees and then a few more on 3rd party ‘assessments’ while nothing is actually being done but our taxes will get raised for it!


Posted by resident
a resident of Old Mountain View
on Feb 4, 2020 at 4:52 pm

Agree that this is about time. Poor connectivity between transit agencies and poor transfer policies seriously discourage the use of public transit. This is especially true for people living in cities near the edges of counties (like Menlo Park and Palo Alto) where county-based public transit is really awful.


Posted by Declare Bankruptcy
a resident of Blossom Valley
on Feb 4, 2020 at 6:51 pm

The 27 local transit agencies in the greater Bay Area should declare bankruptcy and not pay pensions or meet other costly promises. The new bureauracy should be bankrolled by the giant corporations demanding the infrastructure. But they won't.


Posted by Lenny Siegel
a resident of Old Mountain View
on Feb 4, 2020 at 8:58 pm

Centralization of transit decision-making could make things worse for Mountain View. San Jose's control over VTA has reduced transit service to Mountain View, with very little service to our centers of employment.


Posted by Juanita
a resident of another community
on Feb 5, 2020 at 12:06 am

Expecting the state to provide efficient transportation is child-like magical thinking. If you want to get around the bay area efficiently, get a car and plan your own schedules and routes.


Posted by BDBD
a resident of Cuesta Park
on Feb 5, 2020 at 10:14 am

I'm all for greater coordination and better transit. I hope the posters above are wrong about this leading to worse service where I live. It seems like a comprehensive map/trip planner with aligned schedules is a good place to start, and maybe one day they'll all use the same Clipper Card (or similar). I was impressed when I visited Chicago that Apple Pay and Google Pay are seamless there, and you automatically get charged the cheapest price - converting to a weekly or monthly pass automatically without you even thinking about it.


Posted by Marlee
a resident of Another Mountain View Neighborhood
on Feb 6, 2020 at 1:11 am

This is something that should've been done long time ago. And an agency that would know how to run the system - not the joke they call VTA.


Posted by about time
a resident of Rex Manor
on Feb 6, 2020 at 4:00 pm

Coordinated schedules are awesome. I was able to get from Stockholm, Sweden to Helsinki, Finland easily via a coordinated schedule. This was a bus, ferry, bus, ferry, bus combination across two different nations.

They had two different governments and currencies.

Coordinated schedules allows people to travel medium/ long distances to jobs WITHOUT requiring a car.

No reason to invent a downside. There isn't one


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