Author: Clair

  • PRT, the State Budget, and Major Service Cuts–What’s Going On?

    PRT, the State Budget, and Major Service Cuts–What’s Going On?

    [Image Description: Black text reads “Breaking: PRT proposes devastating transit service cuts. Our coalition has a better idea.” on a white background with a red star. Below, many hands hold up colorful signs that read “Transit for All PA!”, “Transit Moves Us”, and “Dignity for Intercity Bus Riders”.]

    Devestating cuts to transit service have been proposed in Allegheny County. The time is now to learn more and take action!

    Our entire region needs a good transit system in order to function–whether you’re taking ACCESS to your doctor’s office from McKeesport, or taking the T to work from the South Hills. The state government has proposed a budget $100 million short of what Pittsburgh Regional Transit (PRT) needs to maintain current service levels–which are already 20% less than what they were five years ago. 

    On March 20th, PRT announced the cuts they would have to make in order to operate under the proposed budget, and we’re not gonna lie–they’re bleak. If enacted, the cuts would gut paratransit, shrink or eliminate 95 lines, and bring fare hikes across the board. These cuts would hit hardest for our disabled community, elders, and folks with no other transportation options.

    But transit riders and workers are ready with a response that meets the scale of the crisis. 

    Our statewide coalition, Transit For All PA!, is organizing thousands of riders across the state to push for a new, dedicated funding source for public transit in the state budget. From Pittsburgh to Pottstown, Erie to Philly, we all need abundant, protected public transportation. And we can win it, together! 

    Use our tool to email your state elected officials, and mark your calendar for our statewide call on April 2nd, where we’ll lay out our platform and put it into action together.

    Then, keep reading under the cut for our guide to the biggest impacts these proposed cuts would have on our region. Remember, better transit–not worse–is possible, necessary, and transformative. We’re ready to bring this challenge to our state elected leaders: are you ready to meet this moment with us?


    Now that you’ve taken action, let’s get into the nitty gritty. What exactly did PRT propose at their board meeting on March 20th? You can watch a recording of the meeting here, or you can keep reading for our guide to the biggest impacts: 

    General & Infrastructural Impacts

    Let’s start at a high level. PRT has already lost 36% of its service and 50% of its riders in the last two decades, and these proposed cuts would remove even more from our already service-starved region. 

    In PRT’s own estimation, the proposed cuts would have a devastating effect on our region as a whole, with disabled riders and night shift workers particularly impacted: 

    • All service after 11 PM will be eliminated, leaving night shift workers with no way to get home
    • Half of PRT’s bus garages, Collier and Ross garages, would have to close–a major blow to operator jobs across the system
    • 180,000 residents and 50,000 jobs would lose access to public transit
    • St. Clair Hospital, CCAC West campus, and many K-12 schools would lose service completely
    • Downtown Pittsburgh would lose 30% of service, and the Pittsburgh airport will lose 63% 
    • These cuts would hit hardest for those who have no other way to get around 
    • The Bus Line Redesign project that we have been working so hard on would be eliminated
    • Three bridges, ten park and ride lots, and the Wabash tunnel would close entirely 

    On top of all this, such drastic service cuts would also create a traffic crush on our streets, and more crowding on buses and trains–as well as worsening impacts to climate change and air pollution by forcing more people into personal vehicles.

    Service Cuts & Fare Hikes

    PRT also proposed major cuts and fare increases to both fixed-route and paratransit services across the region. 

    Paratransit Impacts

    [Image Description: a map of Allegheny County showing communities that would lose paratransit service guarantees under the proposed cuts. There is a blue shape overlaid on the center of the county that shows areas that would retain service, which extends out to small pieces of several communities in all directions.]

    The above map shows the devastating changes to Allegheny County’s paratransit service under the proposed cuts. The blue zone shows areas that are within the minimum-standard ADA service zone; in these areas, service frequency and reliability would remain the same, but it would be 62% smaller than it currently is today. 

    In the pink zones of the map, paratransit riders would lose service protection–in other words, there would be no guarantee that paratransit could pick them up at the time or day that they need to make a trip. They could be told that their ride wouldn’t be available until three hours later than needed, or they could be told that they couldn’t get a ride at all. This is an unacceptably bad proposal for our disabled community. Riders could be left stranded on their way to doctor’s offices, jobs, grocery stores, and more–or forced to pay up for a car or an accessible taxi/rideshare. Paratransit is a lifeline, and to shrink it by the proposed 62% would be a massive blow.

    On top of these massive service cuts, paratransit fares would increase between 14% and 24%, depending on the length of the ride–bringing the cost of a ride between $3.90 and $6.00 for most riders. 

    Impacts on Fixed Route Transit (Bus, T, and Incline)

    When it comes to fixed-route bus, T, and incline service, fixed-route fares would increase 9%, bringing a regular fare from $2.75 to $3.00.

    PRT proposed a 40% decrease in service across the board. The map below shows affected areas, with pink areas losing transit altogether.

    [Image Description: a map of Allegheny County showing communities that would lose all service under the proposed cuts in pink.]

    Below is a chart with proposed changes to weekly service:

    Routes eliminated entirely (41)

    • 2
    • 4
    • 7
    • 14
    • 18
    • 20
    • 26
    • 29
    • 36
    • 38
    • 39
    • 40
    • 41
    • 43
    • 58
    • 65
    • 71
    • 19L
    • 51L
    • 52L
    • 53L (service will increase on the 53 to replace cuts) 
    • G3
    • G31
    • O1
    • O5
    • O12
    • P7
    • P10
    • P12
    • P13
    • P16
    • P17
    • P67
    • P69
    • P71
    • P76
    • Y1
    • Y45
    • Y47
    • Y49
    • Silver line (service will increase on Blue line to replace cuts)

    Routes with major service reductions (34)

    • 1
    • 6
    • 8
    • 11
    • 12
    • 13
    • 15
    • 16
    • 17
    • 21
    • 22
    • 24
    • 27
    • 31
    • 44
    • 54
    • 56
    • 64
    • 69
    • 74
    • 75
    • 77
    • 79
    • 81
    • 82
    • 87
    • 88
    • 91
    • 28X
    • G2
    • P68
    • P78
    • Y46
    • Red line

    Routes with minor service reductions (20)

    • 48
    • 51
    • 55
    • 57
    • 59
    • 83
    • 86
    • 89
    • 93
    • 61A
    • 61B
    • 61C
    • 61D
    • 71A
    • 71B
    • 71C
    • 71D
    • P1
    • P3
    • Mon Incline

    Fixed-route service would be cut entirely from 19 municipalities and 3 Pittsburgh neighborhoods:

    Municipalities with no service

    • Ambridge
    • Ben Avon
    • Brackenridge
    • East McKeesport
    • Edgeworth
    • Emsworth
    • Glen Osborne
    • Glenfield
    • Hampton
    • Harrison
    • Haysville
    • Leetsdale
    • North Fayette
    • Pitcairn
    • Reserve
    • Shaler
    • South Park
    • Trafford
    • Upper St. Clair

    Neighborhoods with no service

    • Banksville
    • Ridgemont
    • Swisshelm Park

    This is overwhelming! What should I do?

    These cuts don’t have to happen–we can still act now to save our system! If you haven’t already, use our tool to contact your elected officials. Then, sign up for our statewide organizing call where we’ll start to put the pressure on the state government to champion transit funding for big cities and small towns alike. 

    Stay tuned to our newsletter, blog, and social media for more updates as they develop!

  • ACT NOW: Stop Catastrophic Service Cuts

    ACT NOW: Stop Catastrophic Service Cuts

    Image description: big red keystone shape with the text “Take Action! Stop Transit Cuts Now! in bold”

    BREAKING: In reaction to the budget shortfall proposed by Governor Shapiro earlier this Spring, PRT has detailed sweeping service cuts and fare increases that could devastate Pittsburgh’s public transit system starting as early as 2026. Send your letter now to stop these cuts

     

    Under these proposals, the entire system would see a 40% decrease in service and a 9% increase in fares. Paratransit service would be cut a staggering 62%, and fares increased 20%.

    We know that transit is a public necessity, connecting people across our region–no matter their neighborhood, income level, or ability–to jobs, healthcare, food, and community. The state government’s budget proposal will revoke access to these lifelines for thousands.

    Alongside our partner coalition Transit For All PA!, we’re calling on our elected officials to find a stable, alternative funding source for public transit–one that restores transit funding and service to pre-2019 levels across the state, from Pittsburgh to Erie to Philly and everywhere in between.

    Will you take action with us by sending a letter to your state representatives?

    In the last 5 years, PRT has already quietly cut 20% of its service, and with it, communities as diverse as McKeesport, Greentree, and Monroeville are already struggling to reach jobs, healthcare, food, and community. If we further reduce service and increase fares to the proposed extent, the system will become effectively unusable for riders in our area. Riders are already seeing wait times of up to an hour for their daily commutes, and many riders are simply not able to afford that level of uncertainty. PRT generates over $700 million each year, supporting over 5,000 jobs. We cannot afford to cut that generator down by 40 or 60 percent.

    See more details about these cuts on the PRT website here

    Transit riders are ready with a response that meets the scale of the crisis. The crisis is statewide: the state budget doesn’t just affect Pittsburghers, but also people riding SEPTA to work in Philadelphia, elders moving around their communities safely in Erie, and disabled community members using paratransit in Harrisburg. It’s all the same state budget, so the solution needs to be statewide.

    Our statewide, rider-led coalition, Transit for All PA!, is organizing for new, dedicated funding sources at the state level to fund the service riders need in order to use the system. We’re calling on state legislators to find a new, stable source of funding for public transit, which would restore transit service across the state to 2019 levels–and even improve transit access in communities outside Pittsburgh and Philadelphia.

    A new funding structure is possible, and we’re ready to bring this challenge to legislators. Are you ready to meet this moment with us? Join the next Transit for All PA! call to organize with riders across the state!

  • It’s Transit Worker Appreciation Day!  ?

    It’s Transit Worker Appreciation Day! ?

     

    This Transit Worker Appreciation Day, we’re showing the love and showing up for transit funding!

    Whether you ride the T in the South Hills, drive the bus out of the West Mifflin Garage, cruise down the Martin Luther King Jr. Busway, or work on power and signal out of South Hills Junction, workers and riders of public transit across Allegheny County and all of Pennsylvania are facing a funding crisis that stands to cut our service down to unprecedented levels.

    On Tuesday, March 18th, PPT is meeting the challenge with a day of organizing–and, most importantly, celebrating the transit workers who keep our communities moving! By celebrating Transit Worker Appreciation Day with us, you’ll have the chance to give your favorite bus, T, or busway drivers some love, while also standing up to protect their jobs and transit service across the state.

    Want to share the love? Here’s how:

    1. Sign our petition to tell the state government: protect and expand our transit funding!


    2. Sign up to canvass with us! Educate riders and show transit workers some love!

    We will be out in full force talking to riders about who PPT is, the current PA state funding crisis threatening to impact public transportation, and asking them to share goodie bags of tasty treats and PPT swag with their operator when they board the bus.

    Participants can choose from two different canvassing shifts: 7am-9am or 4pm-6pm (or join us for both!). We will meet to review the plan, and during the shift we will work in teams at a handful of busy bus stops. We’ll end with a debrief at the same location we began at.

    Bring warm layers, good shoes and a big smile. There will be plenty of waving and exclamations of “Happy Transit Worker Appreciation Day!” when the bus door slides open!


    Want to learn more?

    The fight for statewide transit funding goes way beyond Transit Worker Appreciation Day–we’re organizing for it all day, every day! Check out our statewide campaign and sign on to our platform by visiting the Transit for All PA! website.