Port Authority of Allegheny County

Not to be confused with Port of Pittsburgh Commission.
Port Authority of Allegheny County

Two 2005 Gillig Advantage buses, which makes up PAT's current fleet, near the campus of the University of Pittsburgh.
Founded March 1, 1964
Headquarters Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Service area Allegheny County and bordering portions of Beaver, Washington, Westmoreland and Armstrong counties
Service type Public Transit
Light Rail
Bus Rapid Transit
Inclined-Plane Railway (Funicular)
Stations 69
Fleet 60 35ft buses
520 40ft buses
126 60ft Articulated buses
Light rail: 83
Funicular: 2
Daily ridership 213,100 (Avg. Q4 2014)
176,900 (bus)
27,700 (light rail)
5,600 (on-demand)
3,000 (incline)[1]
Fuel type Diesel, Diesel-electric Hybrid
Operator Allegheny County Government
Chief executive Ellen McLean [2]
Website Port Authority's official website

Port Authority of Allegheny County (also known as the Port Authority and formerly as Port Authority Transit (PAT) and PATransit) is the second-largest public transit agency in Pennsylvania and the 16th-largest in the United States.[3] The county-owned, state-funded agency is based in Pittsburgh and is overseen by a CEO and a nine-member board of upaid volunteer directors, who are appointed by the county executive and approved by the county council.[4]

The Port Authority's bus, light rail and funicular system covers Allegheny County. On a few of its longer-distance routes, service extends into neighboring counties such as Beaver, Washington, and Westmoreland. These counties have their own transit systems, including several routes that run into downtown Pittsburgh, where riders can make connections with Port Authority service.

History

The Port Authority was created by the Pennsylvania General Assembly in 1956 to allow for creation of port facilities in the Pittsburgh area.[5] Three years later, the legislation was amended to allow the Port Authority to acquire privately owned transit companies that served the area. This included the Pittsburgh Railways Company and 32 independent bus and incline operations.[6]

On April 19, 1963 the Board of Allegheny County Commissioners authorized the acquisition of 32 transit companies, including the Pittsburgh Railways Company, which had provided bus and streetcar service to Pittsburgh since January 1902, and an incline plane company, for about $12 million.[5] On March 1, 1964 Port Authority Transit began service.[7]

Port Authority light rail train, Washington Junction Station, March 2005.

Shortly after the Port Authority began service, 150 GM "Fishbowl" buses were introduced to replace aging ones acquired from its predecessors, a new route numbering convention was introduced, and the fare system was streamlined.[7] Due to urban sprawl, the agency introduced new routes that served new communities.[5] In the following years, additional buses were ordered and several new transit garages opened.[7] Many of the trolley lines acquired from Pittsburgh Railways were abandoned, and turned into bus lines; South Hills lines via Beechview and Overbrook were retained.[8] In the late 1960s and early 1970s, the Port Authority hoped to introduce a modern rapid transit system known as Skybus with rubber-tired vehicles running on rails, but the plan fell through.[9]

In the early 1970s, the Port Authority entered what was dubbed by its fans the "Mod" era, with buses repainted in splashy paint schemes.[10] Several new flyer routes and routes to Oakland's university core were introduced as part of a new general marketing strategy.[10] In 1975 the Port Authority took over the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad commuter rail line to Versailles, which it branded PATrain.[11] These new routes, coupled with the 1973 oil crisis, generated a major increase in ridership.[10] Due to the poor state of the economy at the time, fares increased and there was a brief strike in 1976.[12] In spite of these setbacks, the South Busway opened in 1977 and plans for other capital investments were made.[5]

During the 1980s, with gas prices falling and population loss from the decline of the steel industry, ridership decreased and the agency lowered fares to attract new riders in the middle of the decade.[5] Many new buses were ordered, and the Martin Luther King Jr. East Busway opened in 1983.[13] Construction of a light rail line that started in downtown south to traverse Beechview, with lines to South Hills Village and Library progressed during the decade.[5] Part of the line was an updated version of the old trolley system. In July 1985, the downtown subway opened, the Beechview line followed in 1987 and the Library line a year later.[13] In 1989, the agency celebrated its twenty-fifth year of existence, and commuter rail to Versailles was discontinued.[14]

The agency was rocked by a four-week strike due to a labor dispute in 1992.[12] The strike, coupled with changing demographic patterns, caused a decrease in ridership.[5] New buses that were compliant with the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 were introduced early in the decade.[5] In 1993, the badly detiorated Overbrook light rail line was shut down, requiring trains to use the Beechview line.[15] Several capital projects, such as the construction of a western busway and light rail extensions were considered.[5] In 1998, the agency rebranded itself as "Ride Gold" with new paint schemes and a new marketing campaign.[16]

In 2000, the West Busway from the Ohio River to Carnegie was opened.[17] Shortly thereafter, new bus routes to outlying communities such as Cranberry were established.[18] In 2003, a short extension of the East Busway was completed.[19] The following year, the Overbrook light rail line was re-opened after a lengthy reconstruction.[15] Construction also started on a light rail extension to Pittsburgh's North Shore near Heinz Field, known as the North Shore Connector. Unfortunately, in spite of the capital projects expansion, the agency was in serious financial trouble by the middle of the decade. In June 2007, the agency went through with a 15 percent service cut in order to cut the deficit.[20] In order to provide a dedicated source of funding, Allegheny County Chief Executive Dan Onorato introduced the controversial 10% Allegheny County Alcoholic Beverage Tax in 2008 to fund the agency.[21] Later that same year, another strike was narrowly averted.[22] The agency is planning a major service overhaul that will begin to go into effect in March 2010.[23]

The Port Authority pays $168,763 annually to Buchanan, Ingersoll & Rooney and $48,750 annually to Greenlee Partners to lobby the Pennsylvania General Assembly.[24]

Funding crises of 2010–12

Between 2007 and 2010, the Port Authority cut its annual expenses by $52 million and raised its revenues by $14 million to help alleviate a statewide transportation funding crisis.[25] The funding crisis only grew worse, however. The state legislature assumed it would receive permission to convert Interstate 80 into a toll road to increase revenues, but the federal government denied the request, leading to a gap in the state transportation budget of $472 million.[26]

On November 24, 2010, the Port Authority's board of directors approved a massive service cut and fare hike to go into effect in March 2011, reducing service hours by approximately 35 percent, including the elimination of 45 routes.[25] The Port Authority's budget from the state is to be substantially reduced for 2011, and as chairperson Joan Ellenbogen noted, the Port Authority is legally required to adopt a balanced budget.[27] Chairperson Guy Mattola stated that "Unfortunately, we are now at the point that all options have been exhausted...It is necessary to move forward with this service reduction plan recognizing the devastating consequences for riders and non-riders alike."[28]

On December 13, 2010, the Southwestern Pennsylvania Commission approved a plan by governor Ed Rendell to allocate $45 million in temporary funding for the Port Authority to help reduce the magnitude of these service cuts.[26] Many details of the emergency funding, including how long the Port Authority must make the $45 million last and exactly how many routes slated to be cut could be saved, were not settled by the end of 2010.

On March 27, 2011, a 15 percent service reduction went into force.[29] Twenty nine routes were removed, thirty seven reduced, and a bus maintenance facility shut down

On September 2, 2012 a 35% reduction is scheduled; fares rose on July 1 to $2.50 in Zone 1.

The Port Authority brand

Although Port Authority is part of the local fans' folklore, its off-beat imaging is more notorious. Throughout the 1960s and early 1970s the bus fleet was very recognizable with its fleet of air-conditioned GM "Fishbowls" (from their 1964, 1965, 1966, 1967 and 1971 orders) sporting a white top with small red strip.[7] Other noticeable features included side destination signs placed near the exit door and an unusual seating arrangement with one side facing forward and the other lining up to match the seating placed on the wheel well.[7] PAT would continue ordering buses in that specification until 1995 when they ordered buses with both seating sides facing front except when on wheel wells. The side destination signs were moved immediately to the left of the front door starting with the 1998 Neoplan AN-460 (articulated bus) order. This continued with the Neoplan Metroliner order but skipped the Neoplan AN-440LF order in 1999. The 2003 order of Gillig Advantage low-floors and all subsequent orders have conformed with the side sign next to front door configuration. It is worth noting that the 1980 GM's RTS buses acquired were specified with the current side sign configuration.

By 1972 it entered what was dubbed by fans the "Mod" era, as buses were given flashy new paint schemes. Buses were painted with color at the front and rear, slanted to line up with the windows, and a large white portion in between.[10]

In the 1980s, the classic 1960s white and red strip look was updated with a larger red strip accompanied by a black strip painted around the window area, while a white background covered most of the bus exterior.[13] This color scheme was in existence for roughly 20 years on the Flxible and NovaBus 'classics' series, although these buses were later repainted and refurbished into the uniform color livery up until their retirements.

In 1998 Port Authority rebranded itself as "Ride Gold" to coincide with its 35th anniversary.[16] Today, some of Port Authority's bus fleet is in various colors with a splatter of gold "G"s adorning the exterior.

More recently, Port Authority's buses have included various transportation-related words and phrases repeated across the exterior, such as the words "move", "go" "ride" or "connect", combinations of "rockin'" and "rollin'", "ziggin'" and "zaggin'", or "here" and "there".[30] Newer articulated buses feature Burma-Shave-style poetry such as "Parking got you down / Don't make Faces / Hop on the bus / There's plenty of spaces", "This big shiny bus / Is really no riddle / But it sure is odd / How it bends in the middle", "Getting to work / Is no trouble / When you ride / The daily double", "There's the church / There's the steeple / And here's the bus / With all the people", and "If you're tired of all the traffic / And could use an assist / Hop aboard a bus / With a bit of a twist".

On September 21, 2006, the Port Authority announced that it was retiring the "Ride Gold" campaign and that the bus and light rail fleet will follow the standard design and uniform colors of its Gillig bus fleet.[16] The reason was the system's decision to return to a back-to-basics approach and to save costs on wholesale repainting and refurbishing. Even its updated website has dropped the gold "G" and is now going with the simple "PORT AUTHORITY" fonts, which will now be used on the entire fleet. This includes the aforementioned poetry on their more recent articulated buses. Some buses and light rail vehicles have been repainted with the standard "Port Authority" font.

Fare structure

Port Authority uses a fare structure based on four main zones (1, 1A, and 2). The downtown area is an unnumbered Free Fare Zone, established in 1985 to encourage transit use in downtown and reduce stop "dwell" times (the amount of time a transit vehicle must remain stopped for passengers to board or alight). All rides within the downtown zone are free, at all times on the light rail system (called the "T") and until 7 p.m. on buses, seven days a week.[31] Originally the free-fare zone applied only until 7 p.m. on both buses and light rail, but it was expanded to 24 hours on the latter in 1989.

Zone 1 is the zone closest to downtown Pittsburgh, and Zone 2 comprises the outer half of Allegheny County and all stops outside of Allegheny County. A few routes cross briefly into neighboring counties.

When passing from one zone to another, the fare increases. The 1A zone is an exception, a "transition zone" from Zone 1 to Zone 2, and if traveling from Zone 1 to 1A or from 2 to 1A, one pays no increase in fare. See this fare structure table for specific zone boundaries and definitions.

The system usually uses an "outbound" pay system for daytime transit to and from downtown. Fare is paid when boarding on the "outbound" part of the route. For example, if the bus or light rail vehicle is headed towards downtown, the rider pays when boarding; if the bus or light rail vehicle is headed out of downtown, the rider pays upon exiting.[32] This applies only on buses that serve downtown; on most that do not serve downtown, the rider pays upon entry.[32] During the evening, on buses serving downtown, the method changes on many routes to "pay when boarding" (also known as "pay enter"), due to the possibility of riders trying to avoid paying the fare. In combination with the downtown Free Fare Zone, this fare collection system permits boarding to take place via all doors in downtown (except evenings), greatly reducing loading delays in the part of the system with the heaviest concentration of transit routes and passenger boarding per stop.[33]

However, this system also creates a noticeable problem with people bunching up near the front of the bus during times when customers pay on exit. People are reluctant to move to the rear of the bus for fear they will have difficulty getting out, as only the front door is used as both entry and exit during these times. This issue is exacerbated by overcrowding and drivers who leave the stop too quickly, resulting in much yelling and pushing as people try to get off. This also leads to drivers unnecessarily skipping pickups, as they believe their bus is too full to allow further people to board when it is just crowded in the front.

The Port Authority sells non-discounted single-use tickets, and discounted weekly, monthly and annual passes.[34] Each carries a small discount over earlier time-based passes and is valid for an unlimited number of trips/transfers in the specified zone(s) for that time period. For example, for a zone 1 pass the cost of a weekly is the equivalent of 9.5 one-way trips, a monthly is equivalent to 34 trips, and an annual is equivalent to 377 trips. An annual pass is a 12-month subscription to monthly passes, which can be either mailed or picked up at the Downtown Service Center on Smithfield Street.

Students and staff of several colleges in the area, most notably Carnegie Mellon University and the University of Pittsburgh, ride the bus at a discounted yearly rate:e students pay a fee each semester to the Port Authority.[35]

Port Authority installed new fareboxes on all buses in 2011,[36] and has converted to a smart card fare collection system marketed as the "ConnectCard"[37][38][39] starting in early 2012.[36] The University of Pittsburgh and Carnegie Mellon University use the new farebox system by equipping their ID cards with a chip the farebox can scan and recognize. Because individuals affiliated with the Universities ride for "free," the system serves only to authenticate the validity of the ID card, and no fares are calculated or assessed.

Light rail

The logo for Pittsburgh's subway and light rail system.
Main article: Pittsburgh Light Rail

The Port Authority operates a 26-mile (42 km) light rail system called "The T", from downtown subway to neighborhoods and suburbs south of the city on a surface light rail right-of-way.

The system comprises three lines:

Funiculars

Pittsburgh's mass transit system also includes two unique funiculars (called "inclines" locally) from the top of Mt Washington to its base along the Monongahela River, just across from Downtown Pittsburgh.

Both the Duquesne Incline and the Monongahela Incline have stations along Grandview Avenue atop Mt Washington and in the Station Square area at the base.

The Duquesne Incline is owned by the Port Authority, the Society for the Preservation of the Duquesne Heights Incline operates it as a non-profit organization. It has the original cars and the original stations.

Buses

The Port Authority operates 700 buses, as of April 2014, in Allegheny County, and also service extends slightly into neighboring Beaver, Butler, Washington and Westmoreland counties. Some bus routes operate seven days a week between 4:00 am and 2:00 am, but many routes have more restricted hours, or do not operate on weekends, or on Sundays and holidays.

In May 2001 the fleet installed its first bike racks, with 75 buses installing 2 bike racks on 8 routes on May 17, 2001.[40] In September 2011, the last remaining buses received bike racks.[41]

Bus rapid transit

In December 1977 Port Authority unveiled its first dedicated busway, the 4.3-mile South Busway, which combined bus and light rail routes into an efficient and quicker connection between downtown Pittsburgh and the South Hills area. The Martin Luther King Jr. East Busway, which used express routes to connect downtown with nearby east side communities like Swissvale, Wilkinsburg and Homewood followed in February 1983. On Sunday, September 10, 2000 Port Authority opened its West Busway, which provides service from downtown Pittsburgh to Carnegie. In 2003, the East Busway was expanded by a few miles to Swissvale and Rankin.

On July 22, 2011, the Port Authority approved spending at least $1 million, including $837,993 in federal funding and $209,498 in county money, to study developing a rapid bus line from Downtown to the Oakland section.

Bus rapid transit or BRT provides bus service that is intended to resemble light rail, with higher frequency of service, fewer stops and, in several cities, pre-ticketing options or buses that look like trains or trolleys. The mode has had mixed success depending on jurisdiction, with some transportation planners citing a service-dilution pattern that they call Bus rapid transit creep.

The study should take up to 18 months to be completed and will use no money from the Port Authority's operating budget.[42]

Bus fleet

Active

Order Year Builder Model Fleet/(Qty.) Engine/Transmission Fuel Propulsion
<<< 35 Feet >>>
2003 Gillig Phantom 1501-1560
(60)
  • Detroit Diesel Series 50
  • Allison B400R
Diesel
<<< 40 Feet >>>
2003 Gillig Advantage 5201-5365
(165)
  • Detroit Diesel Series 50
  • Allison B400R
Diesel
2005 Gillig Advantage 5371-5376
(6)
Diesel-electric Hybrid
2004 Gillig Advantage 5401-5460
(60)
Diesel
2006 Gillig Advantage 5501-5587, 5589-5590
(89)
Diesel
2006 Gillig Advantage 5588
(1)
Diesel
2009 Gillig Advantage 5600-5679
(80)
  • Cummins ISL
  • Voith D863.4
Diesel
2009 Gillig Advantage 5701-5720
(20)
  • Cummins ISB
  • Allison EP-40 HybriDrive
Diesel-electric Hybrid
2010 Gillig Advantage 5721-5722
(2)
  • Cummins ISB
  • Allison EP-40 HybriDrive
Diesel-electric Hybrid
2011 Gillig Advantage 5730-5733
(4)
  • Cummins ISB
  • Allison EP-40 HybriDrive
Diesel-electric Hybrid
2011 Gillig Advantage 5801-5824
(24)
  • Cummins ISL
  • Voith D863.4
Diesel
2012 Gillig Advantage 5901-5945
(45)
  • Cummins ISL
  • Voith D863.4
Diesel
  • Cummins ISL
  • Voith D863.4
2014 Gillig Advantage 6001-6060
(60)
  • Cummins ISL
  • Voith D863.4
Diesel
<<< 60 Feet >>>
2005-2006 Neoplan USA AN460 3101-3125
(25)
  • Detroit Diesel Series 60
  • Allison B500R
Diesel
2011 New Flyer D60LFR 3200-3260
(61)
Diesel
2013 New Flyer D60LFR 3301-3340
(40)
Diesel

Notes:

Future fleet

In 2015, 60 of the oldest 40 ft Gillig Advantage buses will be replaced.

[43]

Order Year Builder Model Fleet/(Qty.) Engine/Transmission Fuel Propulsion
2015 Gillig Advantage 6101-6160
(60)
  • Cummins ISL9
  • Voith D863.4
Diesel

Retired fleet

This list featured buses models that were the most used on PAT routes. The companies listed are in the order that they made their debut in the PAT fleet.

Numbers Builder Model Delivered Withdrawn
Notes
Pre-PAT (Pittsburgh Railway Co. and others)
200-375 GMC Old Look Series 1952-1959 1980 PRC buses
400-410 1953-1955 Single door buses
425-459 Single door buses
476-495 Single door buses
700-766 Suburban buses
770-790 Suburban buses
800-802 Suburban buses
500-545 TDH-4500 1960-1962 1985 501-520 were PRC fleet; non-air conditioned buses
550-554 Air-conditioned fleet
570-572 Single-door fleet
580-584 Suburban fleet
1950-1951; 1961-1962 TDH-5304 1962 1985 96 in, non-air conditioned fleet
Post-PAT (1964–present)
1000-1049 GMC TDH-4501 1964 1985 Air conditioned fleet; 102 in version
1100-1174 TDH-4519 1966 1985 Air conditioned fleet
1800-1844 Old Look Series 1959 1976 Purchased by PAT in 1965
1910-1924 S8H-5306A 1971 1985 Air conditioned fleet; Suburban and commuter service
1959 TDH-5301 1961 1985 Non-air conditioned; Purchased by PAT in 1964 as a prototype vehicle
1963 TDH-5303 1963 1987 Non-air conditioned Purchased by PAT in 1964; later used as a mobile transit vehicle
1970-1979 S6H-5302 1966 1985 Air conditioned fleet; Suburban and commuter service
1980-1987 S6H-5306A 1970 1985 Air conditioned fleet; Suburban and commuter service
2000-2099 T6H-5303 1964 1986 Air-conditioned fleet
2013 Air-conditioned; this is the only New Look vehicle whose fleet number matched its serial number (the original was destroyed en route to Pittsburgh)
2100-2234 1965 1987 Air-conditioned fleet
2250-2264 1965 1986 Air-conditioned fleet; this was the only buses that had seats on the right facing forward except on wheel wells
2265-2266 1967 1988 Air-conditioned fleet
2300-2399 1966 1989 Air-conditioned fleet
2400-2584 T8H-5307A 1971 1992 Air-conditioned fleet; only New Looks to feature a V8 specification, with modified exhaust vents and pipes in place of rear side window pieces
1200-1249 Flxible 35102-8-1 1975 1993 Air-conditioned fleet
1500-1522 45096-8-1 1977 1991 Air-conditioned fleet
2600-2619 53102-8-1 1975 1990 Air-conditioned fleet; this fleet featured no upper side windows
1260-1299 AM General 35-102 1978 1992 Air-conditioned fleet
2650-2789 40-102 1978 1994 Air-conditioned fleet
3000-3019 60-102 1979 1994 First articulated fleet; Co-Manufactured by MAN
1930-1945 MCI MC-9 Commuter 1980 1993 Carried MCI tag
1400-1454 GMC RTS-II 1980 1995 35 ft./96 in. version. First group to display route signs on right front windows. Refurbished in 1988 to add new vertically opening windows and new air conditioning units.
2800-2870 40 ft./102 in. version
3050-3079 MAN 60-102 1983 1995
3500-3864 Neoplan AN440 1982-1983 1999 Part of the PA regional consortium order of 1,000+ neoplans dubbed "Pennliners"
1600-1644 AN435 1983 2004 35ft. version Part of the PA regional consortium order of 1,000+ neoplans dubbed "Pennliners"
1950-1969 Motor Coach Industries MC-9 Commuter 1984 2000 Carried TMC tag
3900-3959 Neoplan AN440 1986 2003
2000-2119 Orion 05.501 1990 2003
2120-2124 CNG fueled buses all based out of the West Mifflin Garage
3020–3044 Crown-Ikarus/NABI LFW 436 1991 2005 60-foot articulated buses; mostly used on busway and express routes
1650-1687 Orion 05.501 1992 2004 35 ft. version
2200-2289
2290-2299 1993 2005 Last order of Orions, Series 50 Powered
2300-2449 Flxible Flxible Metro 1993 2007 The original order had a Voith 3-speed transmission
2450-59; 2505–15; 2541–50; 2575-84 1994 2008 The option order had an Allison 3-speed transmission
Originally ordered 150, but Flxible ceased operations, thus the fleet number gaps in the 1995 order, 2550 and 2581 were destroyed due to a head on collision on the East Busway during blizzard conditions in 1996
2460-96; 2516–24; 2551–60; 2585-94 1995 2009
501-505 Mid Bus, International Chassis Shuttle Buses 1995 1999
2600-2770 Nova Bus Classic 1996 2011 PAT was the last transit system in the United States to acquire this coach, which featured Detroit Diesel Series 50/Allison B400R engines; 2600 was a replacement for the original after it was involved in an accident prior to delivery
3051-3075 Neoplan Transitliner AN460 1998 2014 3068 was destroyed in a fire and retired early
8510-8589 Mid Bus, International Chassis Shuttle Buses 1998 2005 First "Gold" fleet of buses; dubbed "GoldLink" Mini Buses
5001-5160 Neoplan Transitliner AN440 1999 2013 first low-floor fleet; powered with Detroit Diesel Series 50/Allison 5 Speed; 5019 was destroyed in a fire and scrapped
8590-8599 Mid Bus, International Chassis Shuttle Buses 2002 2011 Retired due budget cuts, 8590-8599 were used mainly on Airport Corridor/Robinson Routes
8601-8670 2003
1901-1940 Neoplan AN435 Metroliner 2000 2015 all are retired as of 03/19/2015.

Other services

Port Authority operates more than 60 park-and-ride lots in Allegheny County. It owns 66 transit bridges, 11 highway bridges and four tunnels.[44]

Under the Port Authority-sponsored ACCESS program, a private contractor provides door-to-door service to elderly and disabled passengers throughout the county, seven days a week from 6 a.m. to midnight. Reservations are placed one day in advance. The ACCESS program is noted as one of the first, most innovative and best in the nation.[45]

Between 2001 and 2004 the Port Authority worked with the local community group Ground Zero to create and operate the "Ultra Violet Loop"; known to some as the "party bus", the UV Loop bus was special service operated on Friday and Saturday nights through the early morning, serving city nightlife and university centers.[46] The UV Loop bus was part of special evaluative service supported in part by local foundations & businesses. While it was well regarded in the abstract, it never achieved the ridership and consistent service needed to continue without external support. The "Ultra Violet Loop" name is a play on the Pittsburgh/Allegheny County Belt System.[47]

Future

The Port Authority is currently in the midst of a major service overhaul called the Transit Development Plan in which the fare structure is to be changed, routing and timing are to be altered to make service simpler, and route number conventions will be altered.

In the spring of 2005, several county leaders of the metro area pushed for an overhaul of the Port Authority into a more metropolitan transit agency; plans were drawn up for the Port Authority to absorb the nine counties surrounding the city and more effectively and efficiently manage route systems over the region.[48]

A "loop" connecting Oakland, the universities, the Pittsburgh Technology Center and a new Hazelwood development was proposed in 2007.[49]

Transit Development Plan

The Transit Development Plan (TDP) was approved by the Board of Directors on October 23, 2009, and seeks vast and dramatic improvements in service.[50] Many of the changes are drastic, and virtually every aspect of the system is to be modified in some way.[23] A major rationale behind the service redesign is to better meet demand due to population shifts in the area.[51] The Transit Development Plan is also expected to make service easier to understand, eliminate route variants, consolidate stops, run buses and light rail vehicles on clockface headways, and reduce the number of non-revenue bus and light rail trips.[52][53]

The fare system is to be simplified. The previous system of (not counting the downtown Free Fare Zone) three main zones and two transition zones was simplified into two fare-paying zones with the downtown Free Fare Zone left intact.[53] The 2B transition zone and Zone Three merged into Zone Two on January 1, 2010.[53] Furthermore, the Port Authority plans on introducing smart cards for fare payment in the near future.[54] This plan is proceeding; a pilot plan, testing the smart cards with the new fareboxes used by Port Authority employees was completed successfully. University of Pittsburgh students began using their smart card university IDs August 1, 2011.[55] The Port Authority will begin transitioning customers using its regular fare products to smart cards in early 2012. A slight fare increase was the first change undertaken as a part of the TDP, as the Zone Two fare increased by fifteen cents and transfers increased by quarter on January 1, 2010; however, the Zone One fare remained at $2.[50]

The route system will be radically altered by the TDP. The number of active routes will be reduced from 186 routes to 124 routes; however, transit service levels of will remain the same or increase for the vast majority of riders under the plan.[53][56] Many routes that duplicate service will be consolidated, and system-wide service levels will actually increase by eight percent.[50]

The current numbering conventions are also slated to change dramatically. Light rail lines, bus routes that travel solely on one of the busways, and bus routes that spend part of their route on a busway are to be renumbered according to a color-coded system.[56] Light rail lines via Beechview are to be part of the Red Line, via Overbrook part of the Blue Line, and via Allentown part of the Brown Line. All routes using the East Busway are to get a purple designation, the West Busway a green designation, the South Busway a yellow designation, and the Interstate 279 HOV lane an orange designation.[56] For example, the AV Allegheny Valley Flyer, which spends part of its route on the East Busway, is re-designated the P10 Allegheny Valley (with the P standing for purple).[57] Local bus routes, almost always designated by a number followed by a letter, are to become numbers, but the counterclockwise numbering system is to be retained.[56] For example, the 51C Carrick is to be designated the 51 Carrick.[58]

Another key service change that may be implemented is bus rapid transit through Oakland and several other regions apart from its three current busways.[59] The agency seeks to purchase specialized buses that run on natural gas, have off-vehicle fare collection, and traffic signal priority to reduce travel times.[60] The agency is currently seeking around $80 million of financial aid from the Federal government under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 to help fund the new bus rapid transit system.[59]

Potential capital expansions

Several capital expansions have been proposed from various sources. The construction of a light rail line from Oakland to Pittsburgh International Airport has been proposed by County Executive Dan Onorato and Congressman Mike Doyle, projected to cost about $3.5 billion.[61] Doyle has recently submitted a request to the Federal government to study the feasibility of the project. Studies for a commuter rail line from downtown to Arnold along the right-of-way of the Allegheny Valley Railroad and from downtown to Greensburg along the right-of-way of Norfolk Southern railroad are also underway.[62] According to the feasibility study, it is unclear whether the Port Authority, the Westmoreland County Transit Authority, or an as-yet created independent agency would operate the railway.[63] Congressman Jason Altmire has been a key proponent of the commuter rail project.

Current finances

Since 2007, the Port Authority cut annual expenses by $52 million and raised revenues by $14 million to help alleviate a $472 million gap in the state transportation budget.[25][26] In late 2010, the Port Authority's board approved service cuts of 35% (45 routes) and fare increases.[25][27][28] The Southwestern Pennsylvania Commission approved a plan by Governor Ed Rendell to allocate $45 million for the Authority to help reduce service cuts to only 15% on March 27, 2011.[64][65] Since Governor Tom Corbett's 2012 budget, the Port Authority has renewed plans to cut service by 35% if the state fails to help with a projected $64 million budget deficit.[66][67]

Images

See also

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Port Authority of Allegheny County.

References

  1. http://www.apta.com/resources/statistics/Documents/Ridership/2014-q4-ridership-APTA.pdf
  2. Schmitz, Jon (February 1, 2013). "Port Authority board fires Bland". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
  3. APTA: 20 Largest Bus and Trolleybus Agencies
  4. "Board of Directors". Port Authority of Allegheny County. Retrieved February 1, 2013.
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5 5.6 5.7 5.8 Port Authority History
  6. Onorato, Bland Announce Proposed Port Authority Fare and Service Changes, Request Public Input and Comment -- January 3, 2007. Allegheny County government release.
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 7.4 The Early Years 1964-1972. Antique Motor Coach Association of Pennsylvania. Retrieved May 26, 2009.
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