Mass Regional Transit Authorities Face Major Budget Crisis
Fast-forward to this week, and that memory immediately sprang to mind when I read the transportation section of Gov. Charlie Bakers annual state budget proposal. And discovered that hes planning to level-fund the 15 regional transit authorities (RTAs) for $80.4 million, according to the Mass Budget and Policy Center, while most Bostonians are focusing on the ongoing fight to keep the MBTA solvent. Authorities like the Merrimack Valley Regional Transit Authority
which is already cutting back bus, van, and Boston commuter service and eliminating that Sunday service I kept missing in the early 90s. Since level-funding means a budget cut, given annual cost increases. And its not looking like the legislature is likely to swoop in to save the RTAs later in our now-normalized austerity budget process.
After all, if the legions of working- and middle-class Bostonians that rely on public transit cant yet force elected state officials to properly fund the MBTA, the smaller numbers of riders in outlying cities like Brockton, Fitchburg, Lowell, and Lawrence are in even worse straits. Especially when many of them are immigrants who cant vote.
Yet the need for public transit gets more dire the farther you get from Boston. If you dont have a car in places like Athol, Greenfield, Holyoke, and Pittsfield, literally your only inexpensive transit option is bus service run by your regional transit authority. Which Ive already made quite clear is of limited usefulness at the best of times. RTAs dont go everywhere riders need to go and dont run many of the times riders need to use them. As I experienced during my brief, unpleasant Lawrence sojourn.
People without cars in the many parts of the state that arent reached by the MBTAs main bus and subway lines are already at a major disadvantage in terms of their ability to access jobs, laundry, shopping, education, social services, daycare, and healthcare in the best of times. If RTA service continues to be whittled away year by year, eventually there will be no public transportation left in many locales. And taking an Uber or Lyft wont be an option for people that cant even afford a hike in bus fare. Even while those private transportation services are angling to replace public transit for those that can pay their largely unregulated fares.
Read more: https://digboston.com/townie-mass-regional-transit-authorities-face-major-budget-crisis/