Share

Did You Know?

Bus riders account for more than 20 percent of people using Lake Shore Drive every day while taking up a fraction of the space that cars do.

Advocates call for city action to reverse bus ridership declines

For immediate release

November 6, 2017

Media Contact: 

Ted Villaire
Active Transportation Alliance
Communications Director 
O: (312) 216-0484
C: (312) 563-1118
ted@activetrans.org

 

 

Advocates call for city action to reverse bus ridership declines
New report outlines why fewer Chicagoans are riding the bus and what can be done about it

Chicago, Ill: November 6, 2017 — A new report from the Active Transportation Alliance called Back on the Bus analyzes the recent drop in Chicago bus ridership and outlines low-cost ways to improve service and increase bus ridership. 

“A healthy and growing bus system is critical to building a more sustainable transportation network in Chicago,” says Ron Burke, executive director of the Active Transportation Alliance. “Back on the Bus identifies ways that city officials can improve bus service and reverse the trend of Chicagoans abandoning public transit for less efficient transportation options.”

While CTA rail ridership has generally grown over the last several years, bus ridership has declined rapidly. From 2015 to 2016, bus ridership in Chicago fell by more than 15 million rides (5.8 percent), continuing a recent trend of fewer Chicagoans riding the bus. Since 2012, bus ridership has declined in Chicago by more than 17 percent, and it’s dropped by more than 21 percent since pre-recession levels in 2008. 

Fewer Chicagoans riding the bus means more driving and more cars on our already congested streets. The city’s hub-and-spoke rail system continues to be a good option for people who live and work along the lines and in the Loop, but many neighborhoods lack access to it. 

Lower quality bus service has major equity impacts. A disproportionate number of bus riders live in low-income communities or work in places that lack access to the rail transit system. Substandard bus service hurts these Chicagoans the most while discouraging higher-income residents otherwise inclined to ride transit from riding the bus more frequently.

Without more investment in bus service, Chicago risks more people abandoning transit for transportation options that are more expensive and less efficient, healthy, and green.  

The report advocates for long overdue bus service upgrades that will improve the speed and reliability of bus service and help retain and attract riders, including:

 

  • Dedicated bus lanes: Give crowded buses priority on more city streets with dedicated bus lanes;
  • Traffic signal improvements: Move buses more smoothly through busy intersections by changing signal timing or using technology that gives buses an extended green light; and
  • Faster boarding: Make it easier for riders to pay their fare before boarding and allow riders to enter the bus through the front and rear doors by tapping their transit card.

 

Chicago trails its peer cities in implementation of each of these improvements. For example, the city has only 4.1 miles of dedicated bus lanes, far less than San Francisco (27 miles), Seattle (34.8 miles), Los Angeles (35.4 miles), Miami (39.8 miles), and New York City (82.8 miles).

In addition to potential service upgrades, the report includes recommendations for policies that support bus ridership growth, such as creating effective ways to fairly enforce bus-only lanes and reforming regulation of ride-hailing providers like Uber and Lyft. 

A recent UC Davis study surveyed transportation users in seven major cities — including Chicago — and found that ride-hailing may be pulling riders away from public transit, buses in particular. This shift, of course, leads to increased driving and traffic congestion. 

The recommendations in the report are endorsed by a coalition of community based organizations and non-profit experts. Active Trans’ partners in the Back on the Bus Coalition include: Chaddick Institute for Metropolitan Development at DePaul University, Coalition for a Better Chinese American Community, Environmental Law & Policy Center, Greater Auburn Gresham Development Corporation, Illinois PIRG, Metropolitan Planning Council, Midwest High Speed Rail Association, Shared Use Mobility Center, and Six Corners Association. 

Active Trans also consulted experts from the Chicago Transit Authority (CTA), Chicago Department of Transportation (CDOT), and the private sector. CTA, CDOT, and other city agencies do not necessarily endorse all of the specific service upgrades and policy actions proposed in the report.

Moving forward, Active Trans will work with its coalition partners to fight for the bus service improvements outlined in the report. This work is funded by TransitCenter, a national foundation dedicated to urban mobility that’s working with organizations in cities across the country to improve bus service, including the Bus Turnaround Coalition in New York City.

# # #

About the Active Transportation Alliance

The Active Transportation Alliance is a non-profit, member-based advocacy organization that advocates for walking, bicycling, and public transit to create healthy, sustainable and equitable communities. The organization works to build a movement around active transportation, encourage physical activity, increase safety and build a world-class transportation network. The Active Transportation Alliance has more than 20,0000 members and supporters in the Chicago region. For more information about the Active Transportation Alliance, visit www.activetrans.org or call 312.427.3325.