Title: Business Logistics 420 Public Transportation
1Business Logistics 420Public Transportation
- Lectures 10 Description and Critique of U.S.
Federal Transit Programs
2Lecture Objectives
- Provide an overview of the history of federal
policy and programs that provide financial
support for public transit - Provide a brief description of current federal
programs - Provide an appreciation of the pro and negative
transit funding arguments
3History of Federal Role in Transit Funding
- The Early Period
- Prior to 1960 -- just talk about the condition of
transit -- especially the railroad - 1960 -- First Government Funding for RD HUD
(Dept. of Housing and Urban Development)
Demonstration Grants 25 million)
4History of Federal Role (Continued)
- 1964 -- Urban Mass Transportation ActThe major
piece of federal legislation - Capital Assistance -- 2/3 federal share
- Demonstration grants -- 100 federal
- University grants -- 100 federal
- Planning grants -- 80 federal
- 1970 -- Major funding increase and capital
share changed to 80
5History of the Federal Role (Continued)
- 1974 -- Federal Operating Assistance for
Urban Areas - Major resistance to this move
- Funds distributed to urban areas by formula based
on population and population density - Federal share up to 50
- 1978 -- Operating Assistance for rural areas
under 50,000 population)
6History of the Federal Role (Continued)
- 1982 -- Gas tax used for the first time to fund
transit (0.01/gal. Placed in transit trust
fund) - 1990 -- Additional gas tax dedicated to transit
- 1991 -- ISTEA (Intermodal Surface Transportation
Efficiency Act) allowed for flexing of highway
funds for transit
7History of the Federal Role (Continued)
- ISTEA also changed name of Urban Mass
Transportation Administration to the Federal
Transit Administration - 1992 -- additional .02 for transit
- TEA 21 of 1998 (Transportation Equity Act)
preserved all transit programs and greatly
increased funding
8Typical Federal Transit Budget (Fiscal 2000)
- Total FTA Budget 5.8 billion
- Formula Grants (Capital or
operating) 2.8 billion - Discretionary Capital 2.5 billion
- Planning and Research .1 billion
9Criticism of Federal Programs
- Need to distinguish between capital and operating
- Criticism of Capital Programs
- Gold plated systems (due to low local share)
- Too much emphasis on rail (again, due to too
little local funding) - Premature replacement of vehicles (because
capital money was easy to obtain)
10Criticism of Federal Programs (Continued)
- Criticism of Operating Assistance Programs
- Philosophical
- A local, not a federal function
- Subsidy level depends on service level and fare
policies that are local, therefore, subsidies
should be local - Reduces management incentives for efficiency
11Criticism of Federal Programs (Continued)
- Criticism of Operating Assistance Programs
- Practical
- Large portion of subsidy (68) consumed by higher
production costs -- most notably driver labor,
benefits, administration - Another significant portion (28) used to cover
inappropriately low fares and low ridership
service to suburbs - 4 used to cover general decline in ridership
12False Dreams and Broken Promises -- An
Anti-Transit Point of View
- Transit subsidies have not increased ridership
- Transit subsidies have not reduced congestion or
air pollution or save energy - Subsidies have not helped to revitalize cities
(uses Buffalo as an example, but this is a poor
example) - Transit does not benefit the poor
13A Better Approach
- Introduce competition in the provision of transit
- Periodically bid out all transit services
- Public and private sector can bid
- Competition will reduce waste, improve efficiency
14A Pro-Transit Argument Does Transit Work? A
Conservative Reappraisal
- The 1 argument against transit is faulty
- Total ridership is the wrong way to measure
transit - Transit works where it is high quality and
available - Competition in providing service would be
beneficial
15Study Questions
- What are the key benefits derived from public
transit service that make transit a worthy
recipient of public funding? - Briefly trace the history of federal involvement
in public transit funding - Identify key federal funding programs, what the
funds can be used for and the federal share
provided
16Study Questions
- What are user-side subsidies? How do they work?
What are the pros and cons of using this approach
to providing transit subsidies? - What are the arguments against federal funding of
transit capital and operating expenses, or
transit funding in general? - What case can be made for funding transit
according to Weyrich and Lind?