Web Search powered by YAHOO! SEARCH
03.27.2009 9:00 pm

Missouri has last, clear chance to avert mass transit collapse

  • Email this
  • Print this

Stanley Coffey is on the night cleaning crew at the Bank of America branch on Broadway and Chestnut Street downtown.

Each evening, he boards the No. 30 Soulard bus at Kingshighway to head to work. The bus takes him east on Arsenal Street, then north on Broadway, stopping right in front of his building.

Starting Monday, the bus will carry Mr. Coffey only as far as Chouteau Street. Henceforth, in fair weather or foul, he’ll have to walk nearly a mile before and after his shift.

Still, under Metro’s impending service cuts, Mr. Coffey can count himself lucky. At 58, he’s physically able to slog his way to and from work. He can keep his job. Thousands of St. Louisans who depend on public transit — directly and indirectly — are out of luck.

Starting Monday, St. Louis’ mass transit system will reduce service radically. The service area for this multibillion-dollar regional asset will shrink by two thirds, literally overnight.

The Metro transit agency faces an operating deficit of $45 million this year, which is expected to reach $50 million next year. Nearly one in every four of its 2,300 employees will be laid off in the coming weeks. Many highly skilled and productive employees already are being poached by transit systems in other regions.

Service will end at 2,300 of the 9,000 bus stops and shelters on Missouri’s side of the system; service in Illinois, which is fully funded, won’t be affected. A bus fleet of 320 will shrink to about 140. MetroLink light rail riders will see one-third fewer trains during rush hour. Call-A-Ride service for the disabled will be slashed.

Most city and inner-ring suburban service will be cut 25 percent to 75 percent. Most of St. Louis County outside the Interstate 270 loop will receive no service. Limited service to the Chesterfield Valley was salvaged through the end of the year as a result of a last-minute deal between Metro and far-sighted municipal leaders and local businesses.

This is historic in a very bad way. No other metropolitan public transit system has ever been whacked as deep and as fast.

What’s been the community’s response? Compared to the weeping and gnashing of teeth that preceded temporary closings of U.S. Highway 40/Interstate 64 for reconstruction, there’s been hardly a whisper. That may change as the pain radiates out.

Nearly 40,000 residents of the region use public transportation to commute to work. That’s in addition to the students, the elderly and disabled — and their families and caretakers — who depend on the system.

As they are displaced, the community’s social fabric may weaken in ways that can’t be fully predicted.
There’s long been a perception that Metro’s collapse won’t affect middle-class and more affluent residents who never ride public transportation. That perception is misguided.

Local health providers rely heavily on workers who commute to and from work via public transit. Limited bus schedules suddenly become a factor in the region’s quality of care.

The same holds for home health workers. Children of elderly parents who rely on in-home help had better have a back up plans.

Metro’s critics cluck that the system has caused its own problems — by extending the MetroLink light rail line without nailing down operating funds, and then foolishly engaging in a costly lawsuit with its contractors.

The criticisms are fair, but go only so far. They did not cause this crisis. This reckoning has been inevitable since the system’s inception — in part because state and regional political leadership always has put highways and roads first, treating public transit as a neglected step-child, allowed to lurch along from one temporary, last-minute fix to another.

This time, no last-minute solution has emerged.

A book called Mapping Decline has created a considerable amount of buzz among serious students of public policy in St. Louis.

University of Iowa history professor Colin Gordon took a map of St. Louis and superimposed layer upon layer of municipal boundaries, zoning ordinances, housing restrictions and redevelopment projects as they accumulated and as the region sprawled over the last 100 years.

Many of these official actions were designed to enforce racial segregation or to protect economic prerogatives and prevent economic mobility and diversity. These changes show up graphically on Mr. Gordon’s maps, as do census data revealing massive white flight. Wide swaths of once-stable communities and neighborhoods have become virtual ghost towns or repositories of grinding poverty.

The final maps reveal a mosaic of foolish choices and bitter consequences.

Metro’s map of service cuts — should the cuts be allowed to stand — would take its place among the most egregious of St. Louis’ historic blunders.

Vibrant mass transit offers one of the few means of reversing these mistakes by connecting people to jobs, education, retail hubs and other opportunities.

And this crisis still can be reversed. With imagination and leadership, the system could emerge with renewed resilience.

Since late 2007, Robert J. Baer, the retired CEO of UniGroup, has served as Metro’s “temporary” president.

In those 16 months, he has restored confidence in the agency’s management and worked doggedly to bridge the budget gap.

St. Louis County voters narrowly defeated a half-cent transit tax in November. It would have put the system on a sound financial footing.

Mr. Baer hopes to take another run at a ballot initiative in April 2010 — and meanwhile find $35 million to quickly restore routes pending the vote.

Local taxpayers have done all the heavy lifting in support of mass transit. Missouri state government, meanwhile, under both Democratic and Republican rule, has failed profoundly to do its fair share. Metro gets less state support — a paltry $1.4 million a year — than any other metro transit system in the nation.

Now’s the time for Missouri to turn that around. It’s the last clear chance.

17 comments

Comments are closed.

I live in South County and all I heard about the tax vote was it doesn’t affect us. First and foremost is not about us as individuals it’s about us as a community, city, region. As we can see with times the way they are the only people we can count on are other citizens. The government is so corrupt and in bed with so many big corporations they will be of no help. This tax should have passed whether it helps you or not it does help a lot of people become productive and without public transportation they will be without employment due to no way to get to and from work. What a SHAME!!!

One other thing Mr. Baer had made the comment not in this article but in a different article about the new CEO to be from the area so that person is familiar with the circumstance Metro is in. Also, this person should not make 250K a year. For a CEO that is doing the right thing for the right reason that person should make no less than 250K a year. The person that steps in will have a fight around every corner and the time it will take to get the funding Metro needs will involve work hours none of us would care to work. We (St. Louis) need Public Transportation. Not only do we need the system in place today but it needs to be expanded to cover other parts of the Bi-State area. Thanks for everyone’s time.

— I CARE
11:08 pm March 27th, 2009

Metro’s critics cluck? Come on, guys, can we have one editorial which doesn’t include a childish insult of the opposing position?

.32

— Nick Kasoff
7:48 am March 28th, 2009

Why would the residents of Missouri want to support a transit system when the very area it beneifts voted no on Prop M. Asking outsiders to bail us out or that they actually owe it us is gettting old. For the record I voted Yes on Prop M.

The latest story of interest is King’s CNN on our transit decline and the use of stimulus funds. I wonder if he will point to the fact that we used short term funds to expand on service knowing full well that the day of reckoning was coming. Then the day was cemented in place when a majority voted NO on prop M

Instead, Lets focus on Mo Senate bill that gives the region more options to fund transit through TDD’s. So far we are only allowed to build roads to box stores with TDD’s

— tpekren
8:35 am March 28th, 2009

Could have bought a lot of busses and a lot of diesel fuel to run them on for just a fraction of the millions spent on digging holes in the ground and laying track.

— big John
1:52 pm March 28th, 2009

Metro’s last tax increase FAILED because they were GREEDY !!!The amont they wanted included FUTURE additions.We tax payers just saw what their future expansions costs,law suits,over budget,mismanagement.And these people had the gall to ask for more ?? Stupid,stupid stupid.They should of stuck with what they needed to keep running till they had enough built up to build more.Same as the zoo increase,I’m sure the Lions and tigers and Monkeys and fish can live very happily with what they have now for the nextfew years untill the Zoo can build up the reserves to add on. Looks pretty simple to me.make due with what you have ,till you have cash in hand to do more

— DMP
8:29 pm March 28th, 2009

DMP is right. The way it was explained to me by a Metro official, if they didn’t include expanding the train to the county, the county wouldn’t vote for it, even though expanding it to the county would expand the deficit and result in higher taxes down the road. It is the same way in school district bond issues. They always ask for more than they actually need to fix a problem at one school. If every school doesn’t get some piece of the pie, those parents won’t support it. It seems there’s plenty of money to fix real problems. There’s just too many hogs at the trough.

— jjk
1:04 pm March 29th, 2009

“This is historic in a very bad way. No other metropolitan public transit system has ever been whacked as deep and as fast.” Wonna bet?!

http://www.pbs.org/wnet/blueprintamerica/reports/transit-in-trouble/overview/481/

NYTA is in the same mess.

Besides, you (St. Louis) got your stadium that you had to have on the public dime.

— egoist
7:57 pm March 29th, 2009

What doe not get seen or understood is the numerous disabled folks who are forced to MOVE because their source of transportation has been cut off or else they are shut off from the world because they cannot travel otherwise (not an option). Shame on us for being so shortsighted.

— E Hiott
8:24 am March 30th, 2009

Again, we get it. All those who live in the County are racist, “white flight” traitors. All those who live in the City are victims of those who live in the County. Does this line of crap never end?

My parents moved out to the County in the 1950’s not because they were racists but because they wanted the best for their kids. The best environment, the best schools, the best safety, and so on. I’m sure the “serious” students of public policy, both of them, can understand that even if they would prefer that people stayed in their crime-infested and corrupt inner city so that mass transit would work better somehow. The “mosiac of foolish choices and bitter consequences” lies with those who have refused to get educated, those who belittle education except as a racially dividing tool, and those who continue to think that someone else is going to bail them out because they believe in victimhood over everything else. I’ve got news for you - implying County residents are racists is NOT going to win any votes for anything related to the City. Ever. Here’s a deal - when the City repays the County for their sports stadiums ($20 million a year for decades), then we can talk.

— ru4real
12:57 pm March 30th, 2009

You can be indignant all you want, RU. But there’s no genuine dispute that preserving racial and economic segregation have been principal forces behind St. Louis’ municipal expansion, the evolution of the region’s zoning laws, and patterns of its real estate and economic development.

To this day, large geographic areas of this community refuse to allow construction of affordable housing.

Public transportation provides people — who have no practical alternative to living in economically segregated communities — a connection to jobs, which often are situated elsewhere.

— Eddie Roth
1:41 pm March 30th, 2009

Pages: [1] 2 » Show All