Current:Home > NewsWhat if public transit was like Uber? A small city ended its bus service to find out -Ascend Wealth Education
What if public transit was like Uber? A small city ended its bus service to find out
View
Date:2025-04-14 05:26:36
When a small city abruptly parked all its buses to launch a publicly subsidized van service offering $1.50 trips anywhere in town, only one of its bus drivers — a big-city transplant — went along for the ride.
Milton Barnes used to oversee packed subway stations in Washington, D.C., a far cry from the sparsely filled buses he drove after moving to Wilson, North Carolina, to care for his elderly parents. Although transit ridership plummeted almost everywhere due to the pandemic, it has been surging in Wilson since its September 2020 switch from a fixed-route system to an on-demand one powered by a smartphone app.
“All day long I’m picking up people and dropping them off,” Barnes, 59, the only driver to work under both systems, said while driving his van on a typically busy morning. “When you’ve got door-to-door, corner-to-corner service, it’s going to be more popular.”
Long wait times made the bus route almost unusable for David Bunn, even when his car broke down and he couldn’t afford to replace it. Instead, Bunn, who has two broken discs in his back, would take a 5-mile (8-kilometer) roundtrip walk to pick up groceries. Then he spotted one of the public vans and dialed the phone number posted in a rear window.
“I don’t have to walk everywhere I want to go now,” said Bunn, 64. “They come pick me up, they’re respectful, and they’re very professional. It’s a great asset to Wilson and a great service to me.”
The city of less than 50,000 people is frequently cited as a model for how less-populated areas can capitalize on transit in the same way as bustling metropolises.
Wilson landed federal and state infrastructure grants to support the shared, public rides residents summon — usually within 15 minutes — through a service operating like Uber and Lyft, but at a fraction of the cost to riders. Trips are now $2.50, a dollar more than they were at launch, and Bunn quips, “you can’t drive a Pinto for that.”
Other communities in North Carolina and elsewhere took notice and have tapped into available public funding to start programs of their own, heightening Wilson’s competition for continuing grant money.
These smaller-scale, tech-based solutions to public transportation problems, known broadly as microtransit, have emerged as a great equalizer in the battle for infrastructure dollars that has traditionally pit the bus, train and subway needs of urban areas against the road construction projects sought by rural communities.
“We don’t view transit as something only for big cities,” U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg told The Associated Press. “We want people to benefit wherever they live, including in less-dense, rural areas. The point of transit is not to have a bus. The point of transit is getting people where they need to be.”
Ryan Brumfield, director of the North Carolina’s Department of Transportation integrated mobility division, said Wilson’s transition to microtransit came largely by necessity. Officials seeking to lower Wilson’s sluggish unemployment rate first had to address the fact that in some pockets of the 23-square-mile (59-square-kilometer) city, as many as 3 in 10 residents lacked access to a car to get to work.
“That combination of a lot of people needing a service and it happens to be fairly dense makes on-demand a perfect fit,” Brumfield said.
More than half the rides are for residents using the vans to “maintain or get employment,” said Rodger Lentz, Wilson’s assistant city manager who pushed for the switch.
But need and convenience weren’t the only reasons behind the city’s 300% spike in public transit ridership. Image was a factor, too.
“In small, southern towns, the perception of public transportation is that it’s for the low-income,” said Gronna Jones, Wilson’s transportation manager. “There’s a stigma attached to riding the bus. Going to microtransit and nontraditional vehicles removed that stigma.”
Wilson partnered with New York-based Via, one of the nation’s top microtransit companies, to create the software and launch the on-demand public van service known as RIDE.
Via started operations seven years earlier with what was then a consumer service offering shared van rides in parts of Manhattan’s Upper East Side where the New York City subway didn’t go. But founder and CEO Daniel Ramot said he always considered Via a public transit company, not a private competitor to Uber, though it took a while for cities to buy in.
“We literally could not get a meeting,” Ramot said. “They said it was the dumbest idea they’d ever heard, that it was never going to work, that public transit was buses and trains.”
The first city to sign a public contract with Via was the Texas capital of Austin, where certain corridors were adequately served by city buses but others were considered transit deserts. Since then, Via has expanded operations to fill the transportation gaps in a broad range of communities in the U.S. and beyond.
On the Blackfeet Reservation in rural Montana, residents can use its app to order door-to-door rides. At one of the nation’s busiest airports, Chicago’s O’Hare, overnight FedEx cargo workers now use it to get home.
“Every movement is individual,” said Melinda Metzger, executive director at PACE, a bus system in the Chicago area that teamed with Via this summer for the O’Hare pickup service. “People are going different directions, and the biggest thing is patterns have changed. We have to understand and adjust to them.”
Although the pandemic drastically altered the nation’s transportation needs, it also helped illustrate one of microtransit’s greatest assets: the ability to be nimble. Subway systems and even major bus lines lack flexibility to instantly change service as demand changes, but microtransit is designed exactly for such fluctuations, if it’s tailored specifically to each community.
“This is not the music man, where you just bring it from town to town,” said Alvaro Villagran, director of federal programs at the Shared-Use Mobility Center, which helps grant recipients with microtransit projects. “There are opportunities and challenges at the local level that need to be considered.”
Still, the biggest challenge of all is largely universal: cost.
While the Biden administration has prioritized mass transit and microtransit projects, providing grants through the $1 trillion infrastructure law enacted in 2021, there is soaring demand for a limited amount of money.
Even Wilson won’t be able to operate under its microtransit pilot program forever without finding new ways to pay for it, said Kai Monast, associate director of the Institute for Transportation Research and Education at North Carolina State University.
Monast predicts that although Wilson will remain committed to microtransit, the community eventually will return in part to a fixed-route system, adjusted heavily from the data gathered through years of on-demand van rides. But he trusts the city’s creativity to make it more efficient.
“It could be that they’ll find an answer that has never existed before,” Monast said.
___
McMurray reported from Chicago.
veryGood! (37)
Related
- Realtor group picks top 10 housing hot spots for 2025: Did your city make the list?
- Keystone Oil Pipeline Spills 210,000 Gallons as Nebraska Weighs XL Decision
- Is gray hair reversible? A new study digs into the root cause of aging scalps
- In House Bill, Clean Energy on the GOP Chopping Block 13 Times
- 'Vanderpump Rules' star DJ James Kennedy arrested on domestic violence charges
- Diversity in medicine can save lives. Here's why there aren't more doctors of color
- As conservative states target trans rights, a Florida teen flees for a better life
- Blast off this August with 'Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3' exclusively on Disney+
- IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
- They're trying to cure nodding syndrome. First they need to zero in on the cause
Ranking
- Gen. Mark Milley's security detail and security clearance revoked, Pentagon says
- Ex-NYPD sergeant convicted of acting as Chinese agent
- Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sanchez Are Engaged
- Would Joseph Baena Want to Act With Dad Arnold Schwarzenegger? He Says…
- Average rate on 30
- Missing Titanic sub has less than 40 hours of breathable air left as U.S. Coast Guard search continues
- America has a loneliness epidemic. Here are 6 steps to address it
- Q&A With SolarCity’s Chief: There Is No Cost to Solar Energy, Only Savings
Recommendation
NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
Assault suspect who allegedly wrote So I raped you on Facebook still on the run 2 years after charges were filed
As conservative states target trans rights, a Florida teen flees for a better life
Cause of Keystone Pipeline Spill Worries South Dakota Officials as Oil Flow Restarts
'Kraven the Hunter' spoilers! Let's dig into that twisty ending, supervillain reveal
Missing sub passenger knew risks of deep ocean exploration: If something goes wrong, you are not coming back
Clean Power Startups Aim to Break Monopoly of U.S. Utility Giants
The Year Ahead in Clean Energy: No Big Laws, but a Little Bipartisanship