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PUBLIC TRANSPORT

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Early trolley car in Newton, Massachusetts.

'Public transport', 'public transportation', 'public transit' or 'mass transit' comprise all transport systems in which the passengers do not travel in their own vehicles. While the above terms are generally taken to include rail and bus services, wider definitions might include scheduled airline services, ferries, taxicab services etc. — any system that transports members of the general public. A further restriction that is sometimes applied is that transit should occur in continuously shared vehicles, which would exclude taxis that are not shared-ride taxis.
The term ''public transport'' is preferred in the British Isles and most Commonwealth countries, whereas ''public transportation'', ''public transit'' or ''mass transit'' are used most often in North America. The term ''transit'' is less likely to include long-distance forms of public transportation, such as long-distance or commuter railroads, inter-city buses, or intercity railways.
Public transport is usually regulated as a common carrier and is usually configured to provide scheduled service on fixed routes on a non-reservation basis. The majority of ''transit'' passengers are traveling within a local area or region between their homes and places of employment, shopping, or schools.

Contents
In general
History
Funding
Hong Kong
United States
Environmental impact
Economic impact
Social issues
Food & drink
Sound and noise
Sleeping
Modern public transport
Road
Rail
Water
Air
Sloped or vertical
Emerging technologies
Intermodal transport
Nodes and stops
Ticket systems
Multi-use tickets
Electronic fare card
Free systems
Free travel pass
Transit-for-all
Cultural importance
Tourist attraction
See also
Advocacy organizations
Sleeping on transit
External links
References
More references

In general


Public transport is the primary form of motor transport. Whilst in the western world private cars dominate, in the developing world, which represents the majority of the global population, private car ownership is prohibitively expensive (for example, in dense urban areas through the high cost of parking), and walking, (motor)cycling, and public transport are often the only practicable options, with only the latter being viable for longer distances. This often takes the form of mini-buses (jitneys) that may follow fixed routes but are usually flexible, including taxi-style door-to-door transportation.
Public conveyances that travel on roads alongside private traffic are often slower than private transport because ordinary vehicular speed of travel is further burdened, in the case of public transit, by service headways (wait times for passenger vehicles), connections, and frequent stops to board additional passengers. Use of some public transport systems may take up to two or even three times longer than an equivalent trip in a private vehicle, especially where transfers are required or headways are long. The challenge of headways, connections, and stops generally cannot be alleviated, so improvements to the speed of public transit often have focused on increases to vehicular speed beyond that of private traffic by means of the use of dedicated or semi-dedicated travel lanes (grade-separated, elevated, or depressed rights-of-way) and traffic light preempts.
Public transport in general has a smaller footprint per rider than private motor transit, and thus has a significant advantage in areas with higher population densities, because land space in such areas is at a premium. Cost is not the only relevant factor. In densely settled areas, traffic congestion frequently slows private motor transit to a crawl.
The term rapid transit, is often used to distinguish modes of transit possessing a dedicated right of way and having frequent, continuous service. Still, ''rapid'' transit often fails to live up to the name, as there are no firm guidelines as to how ''fast'' transit must be to be ''rapid''.[1] Light rail is another form of public transit, comprising of a tram or trolley operating on a rail line.

History


Conveyances for public hire are as old as the first ferries, and the earliest public transport was water transport, for on land people walked or rode an animal. This form of transport is part of Greek mythology — corpses in ancient Greece were always buried with a coin underneath their tongue to pay the ferryman Charon to take them to Hades.
Some historical forms of public transport are the stagecoach, traveling a fixed route from inn to inn, and the horse-drawn boat carrying paying passengers, which was a feature of canals from their 17th-century origins.
The omnibus, the first organized public transit system within a city, appears to have originated in Nantes, France, in 1826.

Funding


A Community Transit bus located in Lynnwood, WA

Several Metro articulated city buses located in Seattle, WA, USA.

Public transport systems generally rely on government subsidy to supplement fare collections, though a few systems are run as unsubsidized commercial enterprises or are entirely paid for by governments. The percentage of revenue from passenger charges is known as the farebox recovery ratio. Transit systems earn incidental revenue from their unused real estate, in the form of parking fees, leasing space to shops and vendors, advertising, and lately, leasing their tunnels and rights-of-way to carry fiber optic communication lines.
Some systems are owned and operated by a government agency; other transportation services may be commercial, but receive greater benefits from the government compared to a normal company, e.g.,

★ direct payments to run unprofitable services.

★ government bailouts if the company is likely to collapse (often applied to airlines).

★ tax advantages, e.g., aviation fuel is typically not taxed.

★ reduction of competition through licensing schemes (often applied to taxi and airline services.)

★ allowing use of state-owned infrastructure without payment or for less than cost-price (may apply for railways).
One reason many cities spend large sums on their public transport systems is that heavy automobile traffic congests city streets and causes air pollution. It is believed that public transport systems alleviate this, but reducing car traffic is not always assured.
Some city councils fund public transport infrastructure to promote business and economic growth, or to regenerate deprived ares of the city. Examples of public transport planned according to this philosophy are the Docklands Light Rail and Crossrail projects in London.
Some government officials believe that use of taxpayer dollars to fund mass transit will ultimately save taxpayer money in other ways, and therefore, state-funded mass transit is a benefit to the taxpayer. Since lack of mass transit results in more traffic, pollution, and road construction to accommodate more vehicles, all costly to taxpayers, providing mass transit will therefore alleviate these costs.
Another reason for subsidies for public transit are the provision of mobility to those who reject its use on convenience, environmental or safety grounds and those who cannot afford or are physically incapable of using an automobile.
Hong Kong

In Hong Kong, MTR Corporation Limited and KCR Corporation are given the rights to utilise lands near stations, depots or tracks for property development. Profits from land development cover the partial cost of construction, but not operation, of the urban rail systems. Similar arrangements are available to the ferry piers of franchised ferry service providers. Franchised bus operators are exempted from paying tax on diesel.
United States

Main articles: Transportation in the United States

In the United States, operations of most public transit services are financially subsidized by local and state governments, who provide matching funds to receive up to 80% capital grant aid from the Federal Transit Administration (FTA), an agency of the U.S. Department of Transportation . This agency administers programs which provide funding and support services to state and local agencies which operate a wide range of public transportation services.
These include local urban and suburban bus and paratransit services, light rail, heritage streetcar systems, cable car, subway, rapid transit, and commuter rail services.
Special rural transportation programs of the FTA and some state governments provide assistance for bus and para-transit services in some areas.
New York City has the most extensive transit system in the country, operated by the Metropolitan Transportation Authority MTA. About one in every three users of mass transit in the United States and two-thirds of the nation's rail riders live in the New York City Metropolitan Area. MTA FactsArlington, Texas (pop. 360,000) is the largest city in the United States without conventional fixed-route public transportation. (Arlington operates a demand responsive paratransit service( Handitran.))

Environmental impact


Emissions from road vehicles account for over 50% of U.S. air pollution. For every passenger mile traveled, public transportation uses less than one half of the fuel of private automobiles, producing 5% as much carbon monoxide and less than 8% as much as the other pollutants that create smog (such as volatile organic compounds and nitrogen oxides). Scientists estimate that public transportation already reduces emissions of carbon dioxide, which contributes to global climate change, by over 7.4 million tons annually. If Americans were to use public transportation at equivalent rates as Europeans, scientists estimate that U.S. dependence on imported oil would decrease by more than 40% and that carbon dioxide emissions would be reduced by more than 25%. [2] [3] However, in almost all cases, public transit systems in the United States have had almost no impact on the number of drivers. [4]

Economic impact


Development generated since 1985, when Alewife station opened in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

Transit oriented development attempts to maximize the economic and environmental benefits of public transit investments by encouraging greater development density within walking distance of stations. Few localities have the ability to seize and reassign development rights to a private transit operator, as Hong Kong has done.
Detractors point out that public transit rarely covers its operating costs through fares (though this may be a misleading statement, since part of a freeway's "operating" cost, that of owning and maintaining vehicles, is tacitly covered by its private users). No transit agency in the U.S. has achieved this for several decades [1]; as of 2003, U.S. transit operators obtained only 32.6% of their operating funding from fares, the rest coming primarily from government subsidies [2]. At times, transit unions have staged strikes, which have the potential to bring a public-transit led city to a virtual standstill. However, automobile congestion continues to grow [3] and since 1995, U.S. public transportation ridership has risen 21% – more than the same period's increase in roadway vehicle miles or airline passenger miles. [4] Several U.S. states that were considered bastions of highway-only thinking, such as Colorado and Utah, had approved major public transportation investments by 2005.

Social issues


Critics of public transportation systems often claim they attract "undesirable elements" and tell of violent criminals preying on passengers and homeless people sleeping on trains and relieving themselves in public areas.[5] On a few occasions, passengers have reacted by taking the law into their own hands (as in the notorious 1984 case of the "subway vigilante", Bernhard Goetz).
Despite the occasional highly publicized incident, the vast majority of modern public transport systems are well-patrolled and generally have low crime rates. Most transit operators have developed methods to discourage people from using their facilities for overnight shelter. Well designed transit systems are used by many social classes and new systems have a major positive impact on real estate prices. The Hong Kong metro MTR generates a profit by redeveloping land around its stations. Much public opposition to new transit construction protests the impact on neighbourhoods of the new economic development public transportation attracts.
By contrast, car accidents cause an estimated 1 million fatalities per year world wide. In the United States alone there were 42,643 automobile accident fatalities in 2003, almost three times the total number of murders (14,408). Over 9 in 10 commuters in North America travel to work by car.
Food & drink

No Food Or Drink On Metro, Washington, D.C.

Some transport systems forbid (the consumption of) food or drink when riding on public transport. Sometimes only types of food are forbidden with more risk of making the vehicles dirty, e.g. ice creams and French fries.
Rules tend to be more strict in metros, trams, and buses than in non-metro trains (also in other regards, see sitting). In fact, the latter sometimes sell food and drink on board, or even have a dedicated buffet car and/or dining car. Also consuming brought-along food and drinks is allowed, except in these special carriages.
Smoking is prohibited in all or some parts of most public transportation systems due to safety and health issues. Generally smoking isn't allowed on the actual buses and trains, while rules concerning stations and waiting platforms differ from system to system.
Sound and noise

In addition to talking to each other, many passengers use their cell phone in public transport. Although usually not allowed, sometimes music is played aloud. Some rail operators provide "quiet cars" where also talking is not allowed.
Sleeping

Bus shelter with seats designed to deter sleeping.

In the era when long distance trips took several days, sleeping accommodations were an essential part of transportation. Today, most airlines and long-distance trains offer reclining seats and many provide pillows and blankets for overnight travelers. Better sleeping arrangements are commonly offered for a premium fare (e.g. first class, business class, etc.) and include sleeping cars on overnight trains, larger private cabins on ships and airplane seats that convert into beds. Budget-conscious tourists sometimes plan their trips using overnight train or bus trips in lieu of paying for an hotel.
The ability to get additional sleep on the way to work is attractive to many commuters using public transportation.
Occasionally, a local transit route with a long overnight segment and which accepts inexpensive multi-use passes will acquire a reputation as a "moving hotel" for people with limited funds. Most transportation agencies actively discourage this. For this and other reasons passengers are often required to exit the vehicle at the end of the line; they can board again in the same or another vehicle, after some waiting. Also, even a low fare often deters the poorest individuals, including homeless people.
One example of the moving homeless shelter phenomenon is the Santa Clara Valley Transportation Authority (VTA) bus line 22 [5] between Palo Alto, California and San Jose, California in the United States. It is often called "Hotel 22" or "Motel 22" by the homeless of Silicon Valley.[6][7]A pass for a night costs US$5.25 and $61.25 for a month, much less than a hotel, house or apartment.
Another example is the interurban rail services operated by CityRail out of Sydney, Australia. Fairly comfortable trains operate between Sydney and Lithgow or Newcastle during the night, trips of approximately 2½ hours. Age, Disability and Sole Parent pensioner excursion fares are AU$2.50 for an all-day ticket.
The New York City Subway, which operates 24 hours per day, also sees its share of homeless people who sleep in the subway system, both in stations and on trains.

Modern public transport


Public transportation comes in many forms:
Road

Bush taxi

A motorway interchange at Faizabad (Islamabad, Pakistan)


Share taxi including minibus and maxi-taxi

Auto rickshaw

Bus normally serving a regular fixed route but could include a variable route, divert-on-demand service.

Bush taxi of West and Central Africa

Trolleybus and electric bus

Jitney or Songthaew

Limousine

Matatu, of East Africa

Motor coach

Paratransit

Rickshaw

Taxicab

Transit bus

Vanpool

Vehicle for hire

Velotaxi

Combi of Peru

Community bicycle programs
Rail


Cairo Metro.


Metro entrance in Amsterdam.


Automated guideway transit (AGT), also called ''Peoplemover''

Cable car on rails, used in cities, a streetcar (tram) pulled by a cable

★ Cable car on rails, used in mountains.

Rack railway (or rack and pinion railway)

★ Elevated railroad, such as the Chicago 'L'

Light rail a tram-like system with no significant sections of the route shared with cars or pedestrians, such as the San Diego Trolley or the St. Louis Metrolink

Magnetic levitation train (Maglev)

Metro (also known as 'subway' or 'underground')


Rubber-tired metro


Advanced Rapid Transit

Monorail

Train, including commuter train and high-speed rail

Tram (tramway or streetcar)
Water

Metro Transit ferry, Halifax. Fare is $2.00 CAD. Each vessel carries 400 people.


Ferry, including hydrofoil, catamaran and hovercraft

Water taxi
Air


Airliner

Helicopter
Sloped or vertical

Portland Aerial Tram car descends towards the growing South Waterfront district in Portland, Oregon.


Aerial tramway or the similar Gondola lift and the more basic Aerial lift are vehicles suspended from aerial cables

Chairlift

Conveyor transport (term includes escalators and horizontal or slightly inclined moving sidewalk - "Travolator")

Escalator

Elevator or lift

Funicular, used in mountains, tram-like vehicle on rails pulled by a cable up and down a very steep slope.

Gondola lift
Some of these types are often not for use by the general public, e.g. elevators in offices and apartment buildings, buses for personnel or school children, etc.
Emerging technologies


Group rapid transit

Dual mode transit

Personal rapid transit

Automated highway systems

Bus rapid transit

Maglev rapid transit

Intermodal transport


In recent years, an increasing emphasis has been placed on intermodal transport facilities. These are intended to help passengers move from one mode (or form) of transportation to another. An intermodal station may service air, rail, and highway transportation for example.
Main articles: Intermodal passenger transport

Nodes and stops



Stations are an important aspect of any public transportation system. Specific types include:

Airport, Heliport

Airport terminal

Bus stop (including bus station, bus depot)

Metro station

Park and ride

Ship terminal, ferry slip, pier or wharf

Taxi stand

Terminal station

Railway station

Tram stop
In addition one can alight from and usually board a taxi at any road where stopping is allowed. Some fixed-route buses allow getting on and off at suitable unmarked locations along that route, typically called a hail-and-ride section.

Ticket systems


Octopus fare card used in Hong Kong.

New York City subway token, now obsolete.

Commuter tickets of Japanese railways.

Different arrangements for fare collection are in use. Depending on the type, fares:

★ must be bought in advance, one cannot physically enter the railway platform, vehicle, etc. without passing a turnstile, fare gate or ticket inspector (usually found in a metro).

★ must be bought in advance as a voucher for a user-determined amount of money, which is encoded on a ticket or smartcard by electronic, magnetic, or optical means. A fare is deducted automatically each time the ticket is used — either just upon system entry, or at both entry and exit where the fare is variable by distance. The latter is often found in newer systems.

★ must be bought in advance, checked by a conductor or Revenue Protection Inspector etc., upon entry (usually found on buses in North America and Western Europe, and on commuter rail systems).

★ must be bought in advance, checked randomly by a ticket controller (proof-of-payment system, usually found in Europe and occasionally the United States).

★ can be bought both in advance or during the ride, with the fare sometimes being higher in the latter case, see also Conductor; in this case purchase in advance is often possible at major stations, but usually not at a typical tram or bus stop.
Passengers may be issued with a paper ticket, metal or plastic token, or an electronic card.
Multi-use tickets

Special tickets (other than for a single ride at the regular price) include:

★ passes for unlimited travel within a period of time.

★ passes for unlimited travel during a given number of days that can be chosen within a longer period of time (e.g. 8 days within a month).

★ multi-ride tickets.

★ discount tickets valid for someone with a discount pass, etc.

★ season tickets.

★ Citycards and Sightseeing Passes. Free public transport tickets are included.
Passes may be for a particular route (in both directions), or for a whole network.
Electronic fare card

Electronic fare cards are designed to be read by a computer input device and include:

Magnetic stripe card — privileges and fare remaining are magnetically encoded on the card after each use.


★ Paper tickets with magnetic stripes (adopted by a few rapid transit systems like BART before plastic magnetic stripe cards went into widespread use).


Common Stored Value Tickets — formerly used in Hong Kong.


MetroCard — used in New York City.


Metropass — used in Toronto.


★ ATICard — used in Puerto Rico.

Smartcard — typically credit card sized with an embedded microprocessor. Contactless cards are preferred for transit fare collection because they speed riders through fare gates. Examples include:


AndantePorto (2002) - first fully contactless system, even for occasional riders


BreezeAtlanta, Georgia (2006)


CharlieCardBoston (2006)


Chicago CardChicago (2002)


EasyCardTaipei (2002)


EZ-Link cardSingapore


Go-To CardMinneapolis-St. Paul


Presto cardGreater Toronto Area (to be introduced in 2007, completed in 2010)


M-CardSt. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador (2006)


MetroCardChristchurch, New Zealand


mykiMelbourne (2007)


Navigo cardParis (2001)


Octopus cardHong Kong


OV-ChipkaartRotterdam (2006), rest of the Netherlands (2008)


Oyster cardLondon


RejsekortZealand (2008), rest of Denmark (2009)


SmarTripWashington, D.C.


SmartRiderPerth


Suica & ICOCAJapan


Tarjeta Bip!Santiago, Chile (2007)


TcardSydney


Ticket 2000Verkehrsverbund Rhein-Ruhr (2001)


T-money (2004), Upass (1996), Mybi (2000) — South Korea


Touch n GoKlang Valley (1997), rest of Malaysia (1998)

SMS tickets that use a passenger's cell phone as a payment device. It has been implemented as a supplementary fare charging system in Zagreb and Helsinki in Europe, but is still considered to be in its early development. Korail uses SMS ticket since 2005.
Free systems

'Free' or 'Zero-fare' public transport services are funded in full by means other than collecting a fare from passengers.
Main articles: Zero-fare public transport

Zero-fare services may be funded by national, regional or local government through taxation or by commercial sponsorship by businesses.They usually use relatively small vehicles such as buses and trams.
Several mid-size European cities and many smaller towns around the world have converted their 'entire bus networks' to zero-fare.
Local zero-fare 'shuttles' or 'inner-city loops' are far more common than city-wide systems.
Free travel pass

A 'Free travel pass' is the right of a certain class of passengers to use a public transport service without paying a fare or presenting a ticket. They may need to present an identification card.
Main articles: Free travel pass

The following types of passenger often receive free travel on transport services:

students

★ elderly persons

★ children

employees

Transit-for-all


'Transit-for-all' is the name given to a popular movement arguing for the importance of investment in public transportation.[8] Advocates of transit-for-all initiatives argue that the approximately 70 billion dollars currently assigned to subsidizing cheap oil should be reinvested in public transportation. Supporters of transit-for-all initiatives claim there are three main benefits to such a strategic realignment of resources: first, it will benefit the environment and, therefore, the nation’s health; second, it will increase the economic mobility of citizens currently marginalized because of their geographic isolation and revitalize neighborhoods by reconnecting them to their surroundings; third, it will decrease American dependence on foreign oil, thereby improving U.S. national security. [9] [10]

Cultural importance


Tourist attraction

Some means of rail-based public transport are also tourist attractions and/or well known landmarks in their own right. These include San Francisco's famous cable cars, the Molli steam powered train in Bad Doberan, the kusttram along the whole Flemish coast, the Schwebebahn Wuppertal, the Seattle Monorail, The Enoshima Electric Railway in Kamakura, Japan, and the Christchurch Tram

See also



List of U.S. cities with high transit ridership



Carsharing — seen as highly complementary to public transport

New Mobility Agenda — new thinking about transport in cities

Hackney carriages

Colectivo

ISO 21214

ISO 24014

Paratransit

Public transport route planner

Quality Assurance in Public Transport

Shared transport

Timetable

Toilets in public transport

Transit-oriented development

Transit planner

Transit fares

Travel class

Utility cycling

Urban economics
Advocacy organizations


American Public Transportation Association

Association for Public Transportation (Boston, Mass.) [6]

Community Transportation Association of America [7]

International Association of Public Transport [8]

Light Rail Transit Association (UK)

★ National Corridors Initiative [9]

Public Transport Users Association — lobby group for Victoria (Australia)

Southern California Transit Advocates — volunteer group in greater Los Angeles [10]

Taxicab, Limousine & Paratransit Association (TPLA) [11]

Transport 2000 (UK)

T Rider's Union (Boston, Mass.) [12]
Sleeping on transit


Night bus

Night train

Freighthopping

External links



UITP | International Association of Public Transport

NAUTF | North American Urban Transit Forum

APTA: American Public Transportation Association

Public Transportation: Wherever Life Takes You

IMB International Maglev Board

Metro systems' graphics indexed by city

The biggest database and photogallery of public transport

National Transit Institute

Transport Briefing

Public transport in Russia

Public transport guide (Europe)

ELTIS, European Local Transport Information Service, about urban transport and mobility.

public transport net - pics and infos about public transport

HAMEKASHER Nostalgic website dedicated to the bus company operated in Jerusalem 1931-1967

References


1. Discussion of speeds of ''bus rapid transit'' tunnel in Boston
2. www.fypower.org/pdf/RES171664_shapiro.pdf
3. http://www.apta.com/media/releases/earth_day.cfm

4. http://www.heritage.org/Research/UrbanIssues/bg1721.cfm
5. Achs, Nicole. "Roadblocks to public transit: for reasons ranging from prejudice to pragmatism, many suburbanites are fighting tooth and nail to keep mass transit out of their neighborhoods." ''American City & County'' 106, no. 1 (January 1991): 28-32.
6. Jane Lii, "Refuge On The Road: Homeless Find Nighttime Haven — The No. 22 Bus From Menlo Park To San Jose", ''San Jose Mercury News'', 9 January 2000, 1A.
7. Cathy Newman, "Silicon Valley: Inside the Dream Incubator", ''National Geographic'' 200, no. 6 (December 2001): 52-76.
8. http://modeshift.org/?p=79
9. http://publictransportation.org/facts/
10. http://www.apta.com/media/releases/070312_ten_billion.cfm http://www.enewsbuilder.net/capmet/e_article000117869.cfm

More references


Australia: Trinity College, Western Australia

USA Transport Research Board TRIS Database

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