[Sustain] Santa Fe, NM Bus Riding Jump Linked To Gas Costs

Eric Brooks brookse32 at aim.com
Mon Jun 2 10:29:25 PDT 2008


http://license.icopyright.net/user/viewFreeUse.act?fuid=MTEwNDY3OA==

June 1, 2008


  Bus ridership jump linked to gas costs

"
Mike Trujillo clung to the bar overhead as the city bus jostled through 
rush-hour traffic.

He stood for the beginning of his ride because every seat on the 
Cerrillos Road bus was occupied by hip-to-hip passengers, and six others 
also surfed the bus aisle that afternoon.

Full buses used to be an oddity for Santa Fe's public transportation 
system, but as the price of fuel climbs toward
$4 per gallon, more people are using the system than ever.

Last month, ridership on Santa Fe Trails increased about 14 percent over 
April 2007, and, although numbers are not compiled for May, both bus 
drivers and riders say buses get more crowded by the day.

"I hear people all the time, constantly, talking about how the prices of 
gas are going up and they are going to start riding the bus," said 
driver Sonya Lopez.

Friday's national gas-price averages continued at record highs of $3.96 
per gallon, with a state average at $3.90 and a Santa Fe average of 
$3.89 per gallon.

Lopez has been a driver for three years, but during the last three weeks 
she's started to notice more passengers on her Route 6, which serves the 
southeastern edge of town. Instead of two or three passengers heading 
home on a recent afternoon, her bus had nearly a dozen.

Back on the Cerrillos Road Route 2, Trujillo began his ride around Fifth 
Street at about
5 p.m., heading home Friday from work to an apartment along Airport 
Road. A broken starter on his car was the impetus for his sojourn into 
public transit, but now that he's gotten used to the idea, Trujillo said 
he might just sell the junker.

"It's a lot cheaper now to ride the bus," he said. "It's the gas. It's 
going way up. It's too too much."

Another bonus of riding, he said after nabbing the seat of a departing 
passenger, is that he avoids the frustration of piloting past 
construction on Cerrillos Road. Instead, the 36-year-old was striking up 
conversations with the driver and running into an old Capital High 
School classmate he hadn't seen in years.

Retiree Gerry Arnold seemed glad to have a seat across the aisle on his 
trip home from volunteering at a Plaza tourist information booth. Arnold 
has been riding the bus downtown two times a week for about three weeks 
since he got fed up with both gas costs and downtown parking. For 
seniors who pay 50-cent fares, it's a much cheaper alternative.

"I probably will go downtown a lot more now," he said.

Arnold drives from his home in Park Plazas to the Santa Fe Place mall to 
catch the bus, a trick several teenagers also used last week. Teens also 
get the
50-cent fare, while adults pay $1.

Increases in transit ridership are good for the city and its residents, 
said Santa Fe Transit Division Director Jon Bulthuis, who said gas-price 
hikes have had an obvious correlation with ridership.

"What I see as a good value out of this is that people are becoming 
aware of an asset that was already in the community and they are 
starting to make choices that are both good for their personal budgets, 
but are also good for reducing traffic congestion and all the positive 
environmental things that go along with public transportation."

Although one gripe about the system is that lesser-used routes are not 
as frequent as the Cerrillos Road spine, Bulthuis said greater ridership 
could change that. "The more we see people taking advantage of the 
system, the more likely it will be that the council will look to add 
services," he said.

Other public transit systems are also seeing more riders, including 
services to rural communities such as Española and Taos provided by the 
North Central Regional Transit District, and the Northern New Mexico 
Park and Ride commuter buses provided by the state.

Ridership between Santa Fe and Los Alamos jumped by
13 percent between April 2007 and last month, and about
44 percent more workers than last year are riding those buses between 
Santa Fe and Albuquerque, a figure that takes into a account that bus 
service became more frequent on the route during that time.

The state has also invested $400 million in a commuter train that is 
already running in the Albuquerque area and will link to Santa Fe by the 
end of the year. Additional services are planned toward the end the year 
including later service on Route 2 and greater frequency on Route 4.

/Contact Julie Ann Grimm <mailto:jgrimm at sfnewmexican.com> at 986-3017 or 
jgrimm at sfnewmexican.com./


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-- 
"I am not a liberator. Liberators do not exist. The people liberate themselves." -- Che Guevara

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