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JTAs Successful Ridership Turnaround

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NEW R5 Regency-FCCJ-UNF ... Serves Regency Square, for student-shopping activity and regional transit ... now part of 'R' Regency-Riverside corridor with R1, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: JTAs Successful Ridership Turnaround


1
JTAs Successful Ridership Turnaround
  • FTPN Technology Planning Tools
  • January 21, 2004 Workshop

JTA Service Planning January 21, 2004
2
JTA Transit System Where We Are
  • Transit is multi-modal.
  • Family of JTA Services includes
  • Fixed-Route
  • Bus Lines
  • Trolley
  • Skyway
  • Paratransit
  • Connexion
  • RideRequest
  • ChoiceRide Inter-County Van Shuttles

3
JTA One System Where We Are
  • Bus Line Network is completely re-designed.
  • Focus is on high-demand, high-frequency
    corridors.

4
L
M
E
K
R
P
R
R
L
5
JTA One System Where We Are
  • And ridership measures are reflecting the
    improved performance.

6
JTA Bus LinesPassengers
7
JTA Bus LinesPassengers
8
JTA Bus LinesPassenger Miles
9
JTA Bus LinesPassenger Miles
10
JTA SkywayPassengers
11
JTA One System Where We Are
  • Bus LinesSenior over age 60 FREEReduced
    Fare 0.25, all zonesZone 1 Base
    Fare 0.75Zone 2 Fare 1.35
  • SkywayBase Fare 0.35Senior Reduced
    Fare 0.10
  • PassesUnlimited ride Bus Lines, Skyway,
    RideRequestWeekly 10 Monthly 40

12
Where Are Our Customers?
  • Ridership origins and destinations are remarkably
    similar between JTA Connexion and JTA Bus Lines.

13
JTA Bus Lines Weekday Boardings/ Alightings (for
FY2003)
14
JTA Connexion Weekday Boardings (for 8/5/03)
15
JTA Bus Connexion Weekday Boardings (for
8/5/03)
16
JTA Success How Did we Get Here?
We declared WAR ON AIR!
17
The War on Air
  • Like most transit systems, JTA is plagued with
    the perception of empty buses (air).
  • Mass Transportation is extremely perishable.
  • Once an empty seat departs, you cannot sell it,
    and the revenue opportunity is gone.

18
Wheres the Air? -- ExTRA
  • ExTRA Existing Transit Route Analysis
  • Detailed passenger analysis of existing route
    ridership in FY98.
  • Investigated where people ride and when they
    ride.
  • Knowing this, bus lines can be re-designed to
    improve efficiency or capture additional demand.

19
ExTRA Information Reviewed
  • Population and employment data by segment for
    1990 and projection for 2000 (provided by the MPO
    in Traffic Analysis Zone (TAZ) format).
  • Ridership by segment data (Automated Passenger
    Counters, detail by specific stop).
  • Ridership by time of day (Automated Passenger
    Counters).

20
Wheres the Air?
  • To improve the empty bus syndrome, we need to
    know where seats are available.
  • Empty could be a specific trip, a specific
    route segment, or an entire route at all times of
    day.

21
Wheres the Air?
  • In the past, bus operators phoned in their trip
    counts at the end of the line.
  • This method demonstrated the times of day a route
    was most used.
  • It did not indicate which segments were busiest.

22
Wheres the Air?
  • Another method was manual ride checks.
  • A surveyor would record where people boarded and
    alighted at each stop, for each trip.
  • This method was labor intensive, and also
    required someone to compile all of the
    information into an average trip format.

23
Wheres the Air? APCs.
  • JTA pioneered the use of Automated Passenger
    Counters (APCs).
  • APCs electronically record individual passenger
    boardings and alightings by trip.
  • Data is compiled in an electronic format so it
    can be sorted and analyzed.

24
APCs -- Key to the Effort
  • 25 buses and eight trolleys are equipped with
    automatic passenger counters.
  • APCs record time and location of bus with
    passenger boardings and alightings.

25
APCs How They Work
26
ExTRA Is Now Ongoing
  • The Transportation Analyst assigns APC buses
    quarterly to assess every trip 3-4 times each
    quarter.
  • Random assignments are also made for National
    Transit Database sampling.
  • Data is compiled weekly, assimilated with farebox
    data, and passed to the Data Analyst for weekly
    reporting and storage.

27
Line Performance System
  • The Line Performance System (LPS) is a Service
    Planning developed and maintained database.
  • Stores and integrates several sources of
    data 1. APC data 2. Farebox data 3.
    Scheduling System statistics 4. Operating cost
    data 5. TAZ population data

28
LPS Data GIS
  • The 1999 CUTR market research study included
    equipping Service Planning with ArcView GIS
    (geographic information system).
  • Starting with APC data, LPS data is displayed on
    a map for analysis.

29
LPS Data GIS
  • Other data can also be integrated for further
    analysis and evaluation.
  • The 2000 APC upgrade included the Tracking
    Analyst extension for GIS, allowing data to be
    played back.

30
Putting the Data to Work
  • Three years ago, JTAs service design efforts
    were limited by the information available.
  • Today, only one barrier remains, being true
    passenger origin/destination information.
  • This barrier can be overcome with external
    partnerships.
  • One example is the development of the R5
    Interliner.

31
Previous WS-5/SS-2 Interliner
  • Implemented July 5, 1999.
  • From ExTRA, streamlined WS-5 Murray Hill and SS-2
    Glynlea-UNF, and interlined to provide seamless
    service between FCCJ Kent, Downtown, and South
    campuses and UNF.

32
Previous WS-5/SS-2 Interliner
  • Operated 65-minute headways weekdays, 96-minute
    headways Saturdays, and no Sunday service.
  • Slight decrease in ridership, 463 average
    passengers per weekday pre-interline, 446
    post-interline.

33
Partnership with UNF FCCJ
  • July 13, 2000, Service Planning held initial
    meeting with UNF and FCCJ representatives.
  • Reviewed current ridership data (UNF just 30-40
    average weekday boardings, FCCJ 370 at South,
    Kent, and North).
  • Obtained class schedules, construction plans
    (including UNF Technology Park), and UNF student
    residence locations.
  • Discussed attractive transit service.

34
(No Transcript)
35
NEW R5 Regency-FCCJ-UNF
  • Working with UNF FCCJ, new line serves student
    apartments (Melrose), UNF University Center, and
    UNF Technology Park (AOL - Dec. 01) on Kernan
    Blvd.
  • Serves Regency Square, for student-shopping
    activity and regional transit connections
    (Arlington, Southside).
  • Continues inter-campus link with WS-5 interline.

36
R5 Interliner Route Running Times
  • Field analysis performed by Planner/Scheduler.
  • Inventory activity centers for new passenger stop
    locations.
  • Calculate running times with simulated a.m. peak,
    mid-day, and p.m. peak runs.
  • Add recovery time to reach desired cycle time.

37
R5 Interliner Schedule
  • Scheduling Coordinator applies field analysis to
    G/Sched scheduling runcutting software (to be
    replaced with Hastus).
  • Uses APC ridership per trip data and class
    schedules to adjust trips.
  • Balance into a clockface headway.

38
R5 Interliner Runcut
  • Final schedule integrated into quarterly runcut.
  • G/Sched (since replaced with Hastus) optimizes
    pieces of work to maximize pay to platform time
    ratio, based on set number of runs system-wide.
  • Minimize spread time, overtime.

39
R55 Interliner Result
  • Weekday schedules extended until 1046 p.m. from
    UNF to meet night class needs.
  • Sunday service added to serve growing on-campus
    population (2,100 in fall 2001).
  • Weekday 60-minute clockface schedule.
  • Saturday Sunday 90-minute headways.
  • Overall ridership up by 26 percent in March, 35
    percent in April.
  • Discussions with UNF FCCJ on transit fee.

40
R5 Interliner Result
  • Later expanded service to every 30 minutes
    weekdays, 60 minutes Saturdays and Sundays.
  • Ridership nearly doubled from approximately 600
    passengers per weekday to 1,200.
  • Load factor improved to 18 percent, one of top 10
    lines in JTA system.
  • Core of route now part of R Regency-Riverside
    corridor with R1, the second best performing line
    in the system with a 25 percent load factor.

41
Wheres the Air? Industry Measures
  • The transit industry has relied on two key ratios
    to measure the productivity of a route.
  • Passengers/Hour
  • Passengers/Mile

42
Wheres the Air? Passengers/Hour
  • The number of passengers (per the Farebox)
    divided by the platform or scheduled hours
    operated.
  • Dependent on route length and speed.
  • In FY00 JTAs system-wide passengers/hour was 15.
  • Good measure to compare efficiency of modes.

43
Wheres the Air? Passengers/Mile
  • The number of passengers (per the Farebox)
    divided by the scheduled miles operated.
  • Dependent on route length and speed.
  • In FY00 JTAs system-wide passengers/mile was
    1.12.
  • Is an efficiency measure.
  • Does not address number of seats occupied.

44
Wheres the Air?Load Factor
  • Neither of the traditional transit measures
    provides, in a straightforward manner, how full
    the buses are.
  • Passengers per Trip can be used, but does not
    reflect how far along a route passengers are
    carried (3 miles occupied, 7 miles empty).
  • One key measure can provide an easy snapshot of
    How full is the bus?

45
Load Factor
Passenger Miles Load Factor Seat
Miles
46
Load Factor
  • It is the amount of time that the total available
    seats provided are occupied by passengers.
  • Load Factor is the key measure for intercity mass
    transportation providers, such as airlines.
  • Mass Transit traditionally has not used load
    factor since it has not had passenger miles
    available per route.

47
Load Factor Passenger Miles
Passenger Miles Passengers X Trip
Length
48
Load Factor Passenger Miles
  • 10 passenger miles 1 passenger traveling 10
    milesOR
  • 10 passenger miles 10 passengers traveling 1
    mile

49
Load Factor Passenger Miles
  • APCs provide a average trip length per passenger,
    per line.
  • This measure has been used in the past for a
    system-wide average for National Transit Database
    reporting.
  • The total number of passengers is provided
    through the farebox.

50
Load Factor Seat Miles
Seat Miles Seats/Bus (43) X No. of
Miles
51
Load Factor Seat Miles
  • Seat miles are our basic unit of production.
  • A unit of production is what we make. For
    instance, a bus is the basic unit of production
    for Novabus.
  • A seat alone is not, since we do not sell it
    sitting still. We sell a seat in motion.
  • We measure motion by the distance traveled, or
    miles.

52
Load Factor
  • Load Factor tells us how full our buses are over
    the entire length of their trips.
  • A load factor of 1.00 would mean all of the
    available seats are occupied by passengers for
    the entire length of every trip.
  • JTA bus lines had a 16 percent overall load
    factor for FY2000.

53
Whats an Acceptable Load Factor for JTA?
  • Airlines use break-even load factor as
    performance base. Since JTA is not primarily
    driven by profit, break-even load factor is far
    above what is acceptable.
  • The fixed-route system is primarily hub and
    spoke. This design results in peak-direction
    traffic. A 0.50 load factor would mean all
    seats are occupied in the primary travel
    direction.

54
Prioritizing Changes by Load Factor
  • Since we desire to continuously improve the
    passenger loads over the entire system, basing
    acceptable on the average load factor will
    provide a moving target.
  • Bus lines can be divided into four categories,
    based on load factor performance.

55
Line Performance Categories
  • High Performing Lines (0.20 and above)Success to
    duplicate.
  • Promotion Needed Lines (0.15 - 0.20)Ridership is
    well distributed between segments and times of
    day. Build demand with market promotions.
  • Re-Design Lines (0.10 - 0.14)Conduct detailed
    analysis of segment and time-of-day ridership.
    Consider frequency and routing adjustments.
  • Poor Performing Lines (below 0.10)Consider
    discontinuance if all other efforts have failed.

56
War on Air Continuing Process
Schedules Effective
Implementation
Data Collected Analyzed
Quarterly Service Change Staff Meeting
Proposals for Improvement
Public/Stakeholder Comment
57
Last Thoughts on the War
  • Load factor management assumes that there is a
    base demand.
  • Overall, frequency (or lack thereof) is an
    ongoing problem sited by JTA customers.
  • Only 66 percent of JTA bus lines currently meet
    30-minute peak-hour headway policy.
  • A core network and market must be retained if
    transit can grow.
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