Billion-dollar potential budget shortfall causes BART to sound alarm
BART will likely need a new funding source in coming years, as fare revenue is expected to fall well short of operating expenses.
BART will likely need a new funding source in coming years, as fare revenue is expected to fall well short of operating expenses.
BART will likely need a new funding source in the coming years, the transit agency’s budget officials said Thursday, as relying mostly on fare revenue is not expected to support operating expenses through the end of the decade.
BART’s fare revenue has been unable to consistently reach beyond an average of 30 percent of its pre-pandemic levels over the last two years, and only began to come close last October, outperforming ridership and fare revenue projections in the agency’s fiscal year 2022 budget.
That ridership fell again, however, amid the Bay Area’s surge in cases tied to the omicron variant over the last three months.
As such, BART now projects it will only reach 36 percent of its pre-pandemic ridership when the fiscal year ends June 30, a significant drop from the 53 percent of pre-pandemic ridership the agency projected in the FY 2022 budget.
And while BART has received roughly $1.3 billion in federal relief funding since the pandemic began, the agency has used roughly half of that amount, spending $25 million per month over the last six months.
At that pace and with the agency’s current operating schedule, budget officials said BART will run out of federal funding in 2024 between January and September, depending on how many riders have returned to the system by then.
BART Assistant General Manager for Performance and Budget Pamela Herhold said during Thursday’s meeting of the BART Board of Directors:
It is clear that we are facing our most challenging revenue outlook throughout our system’s 50-year period.”
Herhold added that cutting expenses will not allow BART to make up projected deficits beyond 2024 – with cumulative totals ranging from $225 million and $2.2 billion over the next 10 years – while still maintaining adequate service across its five-county service area.
Before the pandemic, BART officials had projected average weekday ridership to surpass 500,000 once the agency’s expansion into central Santa Clara County is complete.
BART’s base projection is now just 70 percent of pre-pandemic expectations, with best-case projections at only 80 percent.
To make up for the long-term loss in fare revenue, BART officials said they are in the exploratory stage of placing a revenue-generating measure on a future ballot, most likely in November 2024.
The Metropolitan Transportation Commission has considered a funding measure that would support beleaguered transit agencies across all nine counties in the Bay Area.
BART budget officials also floated the possibility for funding measures specifically for BART’s three-county district – which includes Alameda, Contra Costa and San Francisco counties – or all five counties in which the agency operates.
Board members balked at the BART-exclusive funding measures, arguing that voters are likely to grow fatigued if each transit agency in the Bay Area proposes its own ballot measure.
Board Chair Rebecca Saltzman said:
We just need to look at it and make sure it actually gets us to a place where we can operate for the next 10, 20 years and know that we’re fiscally solvent and we can continue to not only put out the service we’re putting out today, but can continue to increase service.”
BART budget officials noted that funding public transit already seems to be a low priority for voters. In an August 2021 survey by Oakland analytics firm EMC Research of 800 likely November 2022 voters, just 22 percent of respondents said funding public transportation was a “very high priority.” More than half of respondents, meanwhile, said funding homelessness services, public education and pandemic-related services were their top priority.
Multiple board members said that generating support for a potential funding measure will require BART and other transit agencies to make a succinct argument about why they are essential to the region.
Board Director Janice Li said:
We have to rebuild public trust and show the public what kind of system BART is today in 2022. … And it’s really necessary for our survival to communicate better about what we’re doing.”
Board Director Debora Allen suggested BART should reconsider its staffing priorities to improve its financial standing, arguing that the BART’s recent efforts to pivot away from traditional policing are not encouraging former riders to return to the system.
Allen added that potential BART riders view the system as unsafe, and issues like addressing homelessness and personal security are regularly cited in the agency’s rider surveys as areas where BART could improve.
Allen said:
We do not change that (image) with ambassadors and restroom attendants and elevator attendants and social workers to help homeless people. … Those are all really important initiatives for some people, but at the end of the day, the average regular rider wants to see a secure presence at BART.”
Allen also argued that crime within the BART system is generally correlated with fare evasion, and suggested that hastening BART’s efforts to add new fare gates that are harder to evade at its stations would spur riders to return:
The current projection is for that to be done in five years … The slow walk on the fare gates is not helping us. … Fare gate replacement will be the one thing that makes former riders turn around and go ‘hey, maybe there’s some real change now and maybe let’s give it a try’.”
Saltzman said she has had discussions with BART’s budget staff about potential cost-cutting measure’s the agency could take beyond what it has already done, like an incentivized retirement program, but argued it would do little to address the structural challenges BART will face going forward without high fare revenues.
She said:
“Ultimately, those aren’t things that are going to close a billion-dollar gap. … Since we’ve already cut so much, it’s just not there.”
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