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Team Tiger!! Rawrrr!! Tiffany Greider Jeff Woods Alaina Pomeroy Shannon Payton Robert Jones Katherine Costello

Team Tiger!! Rawrrr!!

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Team Tiger!! Rawrrr!!. Tiffany Greider Jeff Woods Alaina Pomeroy. Shannon Payton Robert Jones Katherine Costello. Transportation History in 1800s:. 1829: Omnibus service starts in New York. 1832: Horsecar developed in New York. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Team Tiger!! Rawrrr!!

Team Tiger!!Rawrrr!!

Tiffany GreiderJeff Woods

Alaina Pomeroy

Shannon PaytonRobert Jones

Katherine Costello

Page 2: Team Tiger!! Rawrrr!!

Transportation History in 1800s: 1829: Omnibus service starts in New York. 1832: Horsecar developed in New York. 1855: Horsecar becomes more popular than Omnibus in

New York because of recent technology advances. 1872: Horse influenza kills thousands of horses. 1873: First successful cablecar in San Francisco. 1880s: Horsecar carries 188 million passengers per year. 1895: First elevated rail line (El-train) opens in Chicago. 1897: First American subway opens in Boston.

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Transportation History 1900-1950:

1904: New York opens subway. 1905: First Bus line opens in New York. 1917: Last horsecar line closed in New York. 1921: First successful trolleybus line in New York. 1927: First Park and ride 1939: Chicago builds first street with designated bus lane. 1940: Bus ridership exceeds street railway ridership. 1940: San Francisco is last surviving cable car line. 1946: Highest ever public transit ridership at 23.4 billion.

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Transportation History 1950-2000: 1964: First major U.S. Government transportation program. 1971: AMTRAK becomes first government subsidized intercity

passenger railroad. 1972: Public transit hits an all-time low ridership of 6.6 billion. 1973: Rehabilitation Act causes some public transit to be accessible

to disabled. 1983: Public transit “trust fund” created through dedication of one

cent of federal gas tax. 1990: Public transit required to be accessible to disabled. 1990: Buses subject to strict pollution controls under clean air act. 1992: Limitation of tax-free employer-paid car parking benefits and

tripling of tax-free benefit for public transit use. 1995: Portion of federal gas tax devoted to transit increased to 2

cents.

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History of Mass Transit in the United

States1829-2006

Since 1995, transit use has increased by 23 percent -- faster than highway travel.

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SubwaysFirst Subway 3 Stations:Boston - 1897New York - 1904Philadelphia - 1907

468 Subway Stops in NYC503 Subway Stops everywhere else

Cities East of the Mississippi with Subways - 16

Cities West of the Mississippi with Subways - 5

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Buses: 1829-2006

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First Public Bus:New York - 1829Philadelphia - 1831Boston - 1835Buses were started by private companies given full funding by local and state governments

Buses now receive 33% of funding from fares, but 2/3 is still supported by the government

In 2003, 5,692,118,000 trips were taken via buses in the United States.

Page 8: Team Tiger!! Rawrrr!!

A Comparison of Mass Transit Systems Found in the United States

and the European Union

• System Infrastructure

• Cost Structure

• Citizen Participation

(Sorry about the dullness of this slide )

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System Infrastructure• U.S. Intercity transportation: Consumers in the U.S. have two options with respect to

intercity mass transit: the bus and the airplane. • The bus system is underdeveloped and too slow for much of the general population.

A Greyhound one-way trip from Los Angeles to New York costs $194.00 and takes 3 days.

• The air system is extremely inflexible and costs too much for much of the public. A one-way flight from Los Angeles to New York costs over $350.00 and takes 6 hours.

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System Infrastructure cont.

• European Intercity Transportation: The European system can accommodate large volumes because it relies principally upon railways to connect the continent.

• Eurail trains travel up to 186 mph and can stop at train stations in towns of all sizes. They also connect to major European airports to allow international travel. For $30/day, one can travel throughout 18 European countries at very fast speeds.

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System Infrastructure cont.

• U.S. Intracity Mass Transit:

• Most cities have defunct bus systems of limited scale.

• Rail systems are used sparingly and security is a concern.

• Urban sprawl prevents the design of any efficient subway system

• Urban sprawl and the lack of any competent mass transit system forces the consumer to embrace the abomination shown at right

Because everyone needs a gas-guzzling urban assault vehicle!

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System Infrastructure cont.

• U.S. Intracity Mass Transit

• In some cities, specifically those found in the Northeastern U.S., viable mass transit systems do exist and are widely used.

• New York City features the only effective subway in the U.S., and mass transit moves 5.7 million passengers per day.

• random fact: Although the subways run 24/7, NYC Transit saves 240 million kilowatt-hours of electricity each year by modulating the acceleration rate of the 5,800-car fleet.

Page 13: Team Tiger!! Rawrrr!!

System Infrastructure cont.• London: the typical European

city

• They have cool busses

• So like, when you’re riding the bus, you can, like, you can listen to your Apple iPod!

• Everyday, 30 million journeys are taken in Greater London:

– 6.3 million by bus– 3 million by the Tube– 1.4 million by rail– Total: 10.7 million passengers

per day in the Greater London area. This number is almost equal to the number of Londoners who use cars or motorcycles for transit.

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Cost Structure

• In the United States, the cost structure of mass transit is determined by a combination of public and private interests.

• Because the U.S. has no functional public intercity mass transit, private bus companies and airlines determine these costs.

• A private company has no incentive to lower prices below the maximum that they believe they can extract from the consumer.

• This is bad when balanced with the fact that mass transit should functionally work for the people.

Page 15: Team Tiger!! Rawrrr!!

Cost Structure• The New York MTA is the model for a cost-effective mass transit system

with minimal government subsidization.

• The public can purchase an unlimited pass for the New York mass transit system for $72/mo.

• It is important to make mass transit systems financially independent because they provide a valuable service because they can drain heavily on government resources

Page 16: Team Tiger!! Rawrrr!!

Cost Structure cont.

• European Cost Structure

• A one way trip in London costs less than 2 pounds ($3.50 USD) and can take you anywhere in the huge city

• To the best of our knowledge, the London Mass Transit system operates as a private corporation and is entirely financially independent, unlike the New York system, which has about a 25% subsidization.

This young man likes the Tube!

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Citizen Participation

• Older cities, such as those found in Western Europe, tend to rely more heavily upon public transportation. In this graph, mass transit accommodates roughly 20% of the Western European population.

• Newer cities, such as those found in the U.S. and Australia, rely mostly upon private motor vehicles for transportation. Only about 5% use mass transit.

• Lesser developed cities tend to rely on walking/cycling.

Page 18: Team Tiger!! Rawrrr!!

Citizen Participation cont.

• New York City: With a population of around 8 million people, roughly 5.7 million rely upon mass transit per day.

• Around 72% of New York City’s population uses mass transit.

• Portland, OR: The population of Portland is around 500,000; roughly 260,000 people make use of public transportation every day.

• This is just over 50% of Portland’s population. 70% of the population that uses mass transit do so by choice.

Page 19: Team Tiger!! Rawrrr!!

Citizen Participation cont.• Not only does mass transit provide

the population with alternative modes of transportation, it provides jobs as well.

• The Portland TriMet system employs over 2600 people.

• However, because many of the U.S. transit systems tend to be governmentally operated, wages are fixed with little room for growth.

• In London, TfL provides its employees (both current and past) with free transit passes to promote the use of mass transit. Around 27,000 of these passes have been provided.

A nice little employee of the Portland TriMet! He’s having fun driving.

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A Visionary but Technically Realistic Transportation

FUTURE…

Some issues to think about:

• Transportation Finance

• Land Use - Planning and Policy

• Types of public transportation

• Energy Independence

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Transportation Finance

• American Association of State Highway and Transportation Official (AASHTO) estimate that “$5.3 trillion will be needed during the first quarter of the 21st century to provide the nation with the kind of highway and public transit systems it needs to support a growing economy.” Projected to meet less than 2/3’s of these needs. *

• How do we meet these needs… *2010 and Beyond: A Vision of America’s Transportation Future. The Hudson Institute July 1, 2005

https://blackboard.uoregon.edu/webapps/portal/frameset.jsp?tab=courses&url=/bin/common/course.pl?course_id=_203859_1

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Finance Continued

• Getting commuters to pay for what they are using. Increase the costs of driving alone and a lot.

• Highway tolls that will pay for road upkeep and will help fund public transportation

• Factors such as the type of car they drive, when they drive and the amt of pollution they generate

• Congestion tolls• Tax increases…fuel tax?

Page 25: Team Tiger!! Rawrrr!!

Land Use- Planning and Policy

• Future trends: a growing population and increased urbanization

• Urban growth boundaries• Promoting downtown spaces instead of suburbs• In cities with horrible sprawl already you create

satellite infrastructure• Congestion taxes• FREIGHT.

Page 26: Team Tiger!! Rawrrr!!

Types of Transportation

• Bikes• Flex or Zip Cars…collectivos?• Bus rapid transit, hybrids?• High speed Rail – CA proposal• Freight• Trolleys, subways, metros• Personal Rapid Transit

THERE ARE OH SO MANY OPTIONS!!!

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Page 28: Team Tiger!! Rawrrr!!

Energy

• Using public transportation would dramatically decrease our fossil fuel use.

• Hybrids• Hydrogen Fueled Economy

– What we have talked about in class

– Good method to store hydrogen needed

– Large infrastructure change

– This would be great as far as green house gas emissions but wouldn’t solve congestion problems