Van Ness bus rapid transit inches ahead
A project to speed up Muni buses on Van Ness Avenue is finally gaining momentum.
A project to speed up Muni buses on Van Ness Avenue is finally gaining momentum.
A project to put dedicated transit lanes in the median on Van Ness Avenue to help speed up Muni buses is finally gaining momentum after more than 10 years of planning.
The San Francisco County Transportation Authority —made up of city supervisors — certified the bus rapid transit project’s final environmental impact report at its Tuesday meeting.
The $126 million project aims to improve transit travel times by 30 percent for Muni riders who take the 47-Van Ness and 49-Mission/Van Ness, which serve the heavily-congested corridor.
That’s about seven minutes in time savings, said Michael Schwartz, a senior transportation planner for the authority.
Transit reliability should also see an improvement of about 50 percent and savings of up to 30 percent of daily route operating costs, according to environmental documents.
Other features to help speed up buses include traffic signal priority and new low-floor buses for faster boarding.
Schwartz said the project still has a funding gap of $18 million, but said he believes the authority will find funds to fill the gap. Funding for the project has come from Proposition K sales tax ($21 million) and the Federal Transit Administration ($75 million).
There have also been concerns of more traffic congestion from some of the public. A bus rapid transit lane down the center of Van Ness would replace one lane of traffic in both directions.
Supervisor Scott Wiener understands the concerns from motorists, but said it’s time for Muni to starting working for riders:
“Right now in many ways Muni is not working for San Francisco. It is not reliable enough. It is not fast enough. It is not predictable enough in terms of when it’s going to arrive and how quickly and efficiently it’s going to travel.”
Construction for the project is set for early 2016. The bus rapid transit system is expected to open for service in 2018.
The environmental report still needs approval from the San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency board, which is supposed to take it up at their meeting next week. The FTA also needs to approve the report, which is expected by the end of this month.
Jerold serves as a reporter and San Francisco Bureau Chief for SFBay covering transportation and occasionally City Hall and the Mayor's Office in San Francisco. His work on transportation has been recognized by the San Francisco Press Club. Born and raised in San Francisco, he graduated from San Francisco State University with a degree in journalism. Jerold previously wrote for the San Francisco Public Press, a nonprofit, noncommercial news organization. When not reporting, you can find Jerold taking Muni to check out new places to eat in the city.
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