Mass transit in the United States

Mass transportation systems in the United States include buses, trolleybuses (or "trackless trolleys"), trams (or "streetcars"), ferries, and a variety of trains, including rapid transit (known as metros, subways, undergrounds, etc.), light rail, and commuter rail. Intercity public transport is dominated by airlines and intercity rail.

Usage

Some North American cities arranged by size along the horizontal axis and public transportation use on the vertical axis. U.S. cities have lower public transit use than similarly sized Canadian and Mexican cities.

The number of miles traveled by vehicles in the United States fell by 3.6% in 2008, while the number of trips taken on mass transit increased by 4.0%. At least part of the drop in urban driving can be explained by the 4% increase in the use of public transportation [1]

About one in every three users of mass transit in the United States and two-thirds of the nation's rail riders live in New York City and its suburbs.[2][3]

Some railroads, such as the Long Island Rail Road in earlier times, maintained a separate fleet of specially configured electric railway cars to provide a rapid transit service on designated routes that was distinct from its regular passenger operations.

Cities

Most medium-sized cities have some form of local public transportation, usually a network of fixed bus routes. Larger cities often have metro rail systems (also known as heavy rail in the U.S.) and/or light rail systems for high-capacity passenger service within the urban area, and commuter rail to serve the surrounding metropolitan area. These include:

Name Area Type
Metropolitan Atlanta Rapid Transit Authority Atlanta Metropolitan Area Bus routes, bus rapid transit, rail track, rapid transit, and streetcar
Maryland Transit Administration Maryland Bus, light rail, heavy rail, commuter rail
Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority Greater Boston Bus, bus rapid transit, light rail, commuter rail, trolleybus, and ferryboat
Niagara Frontier Transportation Authority Erie and Niagara counties, New York Bus, light rail, and rapid transit
New Jersey Transit New Jersey, Manhattan, Rockland and Orange counties, New York, and Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania Commuter rail, light rail, and bus
Lynx Rapid Transit Services Charlotte-Mecklenburg, North Carolina Light rail and streetcar (bus rapid transit planned)
Chicago Transit Authority Chicago Metropolitan Area Bus and rapid transit, including the Chicago 'L'
Metra Chicago Metropolitan Area Commuter rail
RTA Rapid Transit Cuyahoga County, Ohio Rapid transit, light rail, and bus
Dallas Area Rapid Transit Dallas, Texas Bus, light rail, commuter rail, streetcar
Regional Transportation District Denver Metro Area, Colorado Bus and light rail
METRORail Houston, Texas Light rail
Los Angeles County Metro Rail Los Angeles County, California Rapid transit and light rail
Miami-Dade Transit Greater Miami Rapid transit, people mover, bus rapid transit, and transit bus
METRO Minneapolis-Saint Paul metropolitan area Light rail, commuter rail and bus rapid transit
New Orleans Regional Transit Authority City of New Orleans and Orleans Parish, Louisiana Bus, heritage streetcar
Metropolitan Transportation Authority New York City, Long Island, Lower Hudson Valley, and Coastal Connecticut Commuter rail, local and express bus, subway (including the New York City Subway), and bus rapid transit
PATH Newark / Hudson County, New Jersey and Manhattan, New York Rapid transit
Valley Metro Rail Phoenix-Tempe-Mesa, Arizona Light rail
Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority Delaware Valley Commuter rail, interurban, rapid transit, streetcar, transit bus, and trolleybus
Port Authority of Allegheny County Allegheny County and bordering portions of Beaver, Washington, Westmoreland and Armstrong counties Public transit, light rail, bus rapid transit, and inclined-plane railway (funicular)
MAX Light Rail Portland metropolitan area, Oregon Light rail
Sacramento Regional Transit District Sacramento, California Bus and light rail
MetroLink Greater St. Louis Light rail
Utah Transit Authority Wasatch Front, Utah Bus, light rail (including TRAX), commuter rail, and streetcar
San Diego Metropolitan Transit System San Diego County, California Buses, bus rapid transit, light rail, commuter rail, paratransit, and streetcar
Bay Area Rapid Transit San Francisco Bay Area Rapid transit
San Francisco Municipal Railway San Francisco Bus, trolleybus, light rail, streetcar, and cable cars
Santa Clara Valley Transportation Authority San Jose, California Bus and light rail
Sound Transit Puget Sound region, Washington Regional express bus, commuter rail, and light rail
Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority The District of Columbia and parts of Maryland and northern Virginia Rapid transit (Washington Metro), bus (Metrobus), and paratransit (MetroAccess)

Funding

American mass transit is funded by a combination of local, state, and federal agencies. At the federal level, the Federal Transit Administration (FTA) provides financial assistance and technical assistance to state governments and local transit providers. From FY 2005 to FY 2009, the funding scheme for the FTA was regulated by the SAFETEA-LU bill, which appropriated $286.4 billion in guaranteed funding.[4] The FTA awards grants through several programs, such as the New Starts program and Transit Investments for Greenhouse Gas and Energy Reduction (TIGGER) program.

Legislation

On June 26, 2008, the House passed the Saving Energy Through Public Transportation Act (H.R. 6052),[5] which gives grants to mass transit authorities to lower fares for commuters pinched at the pump and expand transit services. The bill also:

Advanced public transportation systems

Advanced public transportation systems (or APTS) is an Intelligent Vehicle Highway Systems, or IVHS, technology that is designed to improve transit services through advanced vehicle operations, communications, customer service, energy efficiency, air pollution reduction and market development.

See also

References

  1. http://apps1.eere.energy.gov/news/news_detail.cfm/news_id=12283
  2. "The MTA Network: Public Transportation for the New York Region". Metropolitan Transportation Authority. Retrieved 2006-05-17.
  3. Pisarski, Alan (October 16, 2006). "Commuting in America III: Commuting Facts" (PDF). Transportation Research Board. Retrieved 2007-03-27.
  4. SAFETEA-LU Implementation, Federal Transit Administration.
  5. http://speaker.gov/issues?id=0031#13

Further reading

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