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Special Thanks to the Medford Mail Tribune for posting these
alternatives in the Sep. 3 edition. We hope to check back with these
service providers to see how they are holding up. The last time we
checked, the ones we know were swamped to begin with, and swamped again
after Route 4 went away. Many private foundations specifically prohibit
replacing government services in their grant applications, making it
even more difficult for these providers to meet the increased need.
September 3, 2006
Alternatives available for Valley Lift customers
The Rogue Valley Transportation District has compiled
a list
of alternative
transportation services that Valley Lift customers on the canceled RVTD
Route 4
can use. Some are free and others charge a fee.
Non-taxi alternatives:
- HASL-Handicap
Awareness and Support
League Inc. for Josephine County customers needing to come to Medford. Call
479-4275.
- Providence
Medivan, available by
appointment for transportation to and from medical appointments for
those with limited mobility. Advance notification is requested for
scheduling purposes. Call 541-732-5054 for more information.
- Rogue Valley Medical
Center. Vans
are available to
transport individuals (wheelchair bound or ambulatory) with no other
means of transportation to and from medical appointments. This service
is offered free of charge from 8 a.m. to 4:15 p.m., Monday through
Friday, and is available in limited areas of the Rogue Valley.
For specific areas covered or to schedule a pickup, call 789-5233.
- RSVP
Call-A-Ride. Volunteer drivers
provide transportation to medical appointments for seniors (60-plus)
and the disabled. 857-7783. Requires $20 annual fee.
- TRE
requires 24-hour advance notice
for ride requests. The rates are generally less than cab fare. Group
rides can be provided at discounted rates. TRE also has scrip which can
be purchased at a discounted rate. 772-6288.
Taxi companies:
- Metro
Taxi: 773-6665
- Sitio
Paisano: 282-5697
- Valley
Cab: 772-1818
- Yellow
Cab: 772-6288
RIDER
ALERT!
Route 4: A Bus Doesn’t Run Through It Anymore
Rogue Valley
Special Transportation Update
Route 4 to
stop running 6 p.m. Thursday
Overview
We started attending Rogue Valley Transportation District Board of
Directors (RVTD) meetings in late May because we heard that Route 4 was
going to be cancelled due to shortfalls in federal funding. Three
months, a public demonstration, ten news and radio interviews, a dozen
meetings, thirty bus rides and hundreds of hours of staff time later,
Route 4 is still going away. We’re glad we could help in getting Route
4 extended for two months, and we’ve learned a whole lot about our
transportation district, both good and bad. It’s a long and complicated
story that predates us by years. Here’s what it looked like from our
angle.
“Over
a year and a half ago, the Jackson-Medford Chamber offered to help
develop a business plan. They’ve come and offered their help, no charge
to do it.”
–Mike
Quilty, City of Central Point and Metropolitan Planning Organization,
chastising RVTD for still not having a business plan, which Ashland
Mayor John Morrison called “absolutely necessary” for any further
investment by outside agencies. The RVTD Board has been demanding
management publish a business plan for months.
”While
it might seem logical to have all the routes cut back symmetrically,
it, has crossed our mind that we shouldn’t be penalizing our best
customers for using some services extremely frequently.”
--RVTD
General Manager Peter Jacobson, on why customers on the busier lines
are more “loyal” and better customers than the peripheral route riders.
He says this all the time.
“We
could face another deficit next year of maybe more than half a million
dollars, and another deficit the following fiscal year, of over half a
million dollars, so these are not one-shot deficits. They are recurring
deficits.”
—RVTD
Board Member Ernie Garb, August 17, giving people heads up that this
will likely happen again for the next two years at least because of
increasing fuel, payroll, and other costs. That’s pretty good notice,
the 4 was kind of a surprise.
April 2006:
We attended a long-range planning meeting the Rogue Valley Council of
Governments (RVCOG) held in Medford and heard that Route 4 would
probably be cut at the end of the year because of the “burden” of
paratransit. We spoke out against the route cut, planner Craig
Anderson’s characterization of the disabled as a “burden,” and a
proposed payroll tax put forward as a solution. It seemed like the
meeting was just to rubber stamp the payroll tax. It got a lot more
complicated.
In May, we read in the paper that RVTD was cutting Route 4 after
cancellation of $1.2 million in federal grants. We went to the June 8
RVTD public hearing and testified against the cut, because we know
people who live on that route, and refused to let them suffer because
RVTD failed to plan for cuts it turned out they expected a year ago.
Our friends at Ridgeview say they faxed and mailed over 120 letters to
politicians, business proprietors, and the public, but got only one
response, a form letter from Gordon Smith. There was a month of
discussion between the Board and the public, including senior and
disabled riders, parents of school children, veterans, staff and
students from SOU and RCC, health care professionals, and residents of
the Route 4 corridor, but ultimately the Board cancelled the route on
June 28th, two days before the cut would have taken place. They gave
all those people two days’ notice.
The Rally
“Mr.
Jacobson, I don’t mean to be disrespectful, but I’ve heard you say a
few times at different meetings ‘we need to keep the bus service going
for our loyal customers on other routes’. I don’t understand, who’s not
loyal on Route 4?”
--Nancie
Ozimkowski, Aug. 17 RVCOG meeting
We started telling Route 4 riders about the cut (most of whom didn’t
know) in June, posting news coverage and video footage on the Internet,
and calling local elected officials asking for help. We called all the
folks we could and held a rally on Barnett at the I5 overpass Route 10
stop, which is the closest RVTD buses will come to Rogue Valley Medical
Center, the final destination of the doomed Route 4 (special thanks to
DASIL, Oregon Action, the Rogue IMC, and Southern Oregon Jobs With
Justice!). Enough disabled folks and supporters turned out to draw all
our local, non-FOX tv news channels (the local media has actually been
incredibly supportive in this crisis). People told us all over that
they saw us on tv. Strangers approached us in the bus depot and thanked
us for the rally. It was great.
Our Work Pays Off, a little
Representative Peter Buckley (District 5 Ashland) listened to our story
and called the Board to task for not preparing for cuts it turns out
they knew about long ago, and RVTD staff’s failure to put forth a
business plan after being so directed by the Board for months. Buckley
also tried to encourage the local business community to step in and
support Route 4, but business leaders complained that RVTD had failed
to show the customary planning any investor would demand before
committing to a business that had shown a checkered track record after
several capital injections over recent years. No one was interested in
supporting RVTD until they showed a believable business plan, which is
still forthcoming to this day. Business planning is junior-level
coursework at SOU.
RVTD extended Route 4 one month, and the Metropolitan Planning
Organization (MPO) stepped in and extended Route 4 for another month.
We want to thank RVTD and the MPO for helping to mitigate the hardship
of cancellation with two days’ notice for the many people who used that
service. The two months allowed some of those living on the Route 4
corridor to adjust to the loss of a bus that has run for over twenty
years. Is that right? I heard a rumor…
The Survey
Representative Buckley pointed out that it would be useful to know
exactly who was riding Route 4 and why, so we took Route 10 up from
Ashland and spent five blistering July days riding the 4, asking riders
why and how often they used the bus. We got surveys from 52 different
individuals; read the results at www.dudesrus.org
“projects.” We met so many awesome and friendly people of all walks of
life, who were concerned for their future without public
transportation. This had the positive side effect of making 52 friends
who thanked us for our advocacy work and were glad to hear about our
organization. Special thanks to SOU Economics and Math departments for
troubleshooting our survey. Nancie got an A in Math 243 during all
this. Shout to Merzhy and Kemball, thanks for being open minded.
The Meetings
A special working group was formed by RVCOG to “improve the quality of
transportation services for people with special needs, and to improve
the means by which these services are delivered and funded.” DUDE
secured a seat on that committee and we will update you as to outcomes
when they occur. There was also a public meeting called by the United
Way between several local private foundations with service providers
and advocates to assess how they could help. We have to honor the
United Way, the Gordon Elwood Foundation, the Anna May Family
Foundation, and the Oregon Community Foundation for hearing our
concerns.
The RVTD Board of Directors voted in July to consider attempting to
field a payroll tax on the November ballot but decided in August not to
go out for the tax we first heard about in April so long ago. We were
originally against the tax because it seemed to be drowning the problem
with money without fixing the problem, but when we heard how much
revenue a relatively small tax, 5 cents on $10 (give or take) would
generate, we changed our minds and lobbied for it. The MPO went on the
Jefferson Exchange and advocated for the tax in August, but finally,
the Board voted against it, with Directors Mansfield and Garb voting in
favor.
”In
fact, the first time we ever saw someone from RVTD in our Council
Chambers was when you had difficulty, and we have all come here to give
you our suggestions and we’d like to hear back from you.”
–Talent
Mayor Marian Telerski, August 17, telling RVTD management they waited
too long to share information about budget shortfalls.
At a meeting Aug. 17, attended by a broad spectrum of elected and
appointed officials from municipalities, ODOT, and statewide orgs,
Roger Martin, Executive Director of the Oregon Transit Association,
argued that two months was too short a time to field a tax campaign.
MPO Chair and Central Point City Councilor Mike Quilty expressed his
frustration that RVTD had not yet come up with a business plan and was
in such dire straits after approaching the MPO for money over a year
ago. Quilty claimed RVTD knew that years of cuts were coming but failed
to reveal that knowledge over the months of MPO injections. Ashland
Mayor John Morrison echoed Quilty’s frustrations, saying the City of
Ashland could no longer support RVTD until management and transparency
improved. Several other elected officials agreed, including the City of
Central Point and Talent Mayor Marian Telerski for example.
Where We Stand Now
DUDE will join other advocates, special transportation and social
service providers, and RVTD staff and committee members on the new
RVCOG working group, and we will fight for services for our
constituents in those meetings, but it looks as if Route 4 is really
going to be cancelled unless a solution is found by September 1. We are
grateful for all the support so many people have given us lobbying for
public transportation, and will continue to advocate for services as
the Valley grows more and more congested and polluted until people
realize how important public transit is for all walks of life,
disabled, driving, ambulatory or not.
“You
can’t wait when you know there’s a problem coming until a crisis. We
can’t help with a crisis; we can help with a problem.”
–Mike
Quilty, Aug. 17, complaining that RVTD told the Cities and other
agencies about the revenue shortfall too late for them to help, because
their budgets had to be published by May, when RVTD went public with
the cuts.
Immediate
Action Still Needed: Train Wreck Approaches
We still disagree with a number of the current management’s
philosophies and will continue to point out action that needs to be
taken to stop the imminent crash of the entire system, if we really are
going to sustain two more years of half-million dollar reductions:
Who’s next?
•
If farebox revenues will only cover fifteen percent or so of operating
revenues, increasing frequency of buses in peak hours will only drive
UP costs, rather than make money. This flawed logic is core RVTD dogma
at present;
•
The ridership after the July fare increase is RVTD’s ridership who will
take the bus regardless of how much it costs, because they have to:
trying to compete with the private automobile will never be a
sustainable strategy because the two are structurally different. The
public sector provides transportation because the people who use it
would be a greater tax burden without it, and RVTD will never bid
enough people out of their cars to sustain the system, or the private
sector would step in and capture the profits. We need to target RVTD to
the needs of those who CANNOT find other means of transportation, NOT
TO THOSE WHO HAVE PRIVATE TRANSPORTATION! The bus is ultimately for
people who don’t have cars, not for those who could drive but choose
not to. We want them aboard, but the core ridership has no alternative,
will pay whatever fare because they have to, and will wait as long as
they have to at the stations;
•
Posting departure times at bus stops will mitigate frustration at long
intervals between buses, because people will know when the bus will
arrive and find other ways to spend their time rather than simply wait
for the bus. We have yet to find a single bus stop in the entire system
where arrival/ departure times are accurately posted, even though every
stop has a place to post the times;
•
Late-night and weekend service is crucial to the economic survival of
the middle- and working-class populations who cannot afford private
transportation to work, and the tax burden will be lessened as they
stop consuming transfer payments (food stamps, subsidized housing, WIC,
etc) as their employment improves with increased transportation;
•
And finally, for now, we are outraged and incensed every time RVTD
general manager Peter Jacobsen claims that “loyal customers” should not
have to pay the penalty for the revocation of federal grants. How are
customers on the 10 or the 60 more “loyal” than customers on Route
4??!!!??? Jacobsen has said this at numerous meetings but we keep
shouting back NO! The Route 4 riders are every bit as valuable as the
route 10 customers and have the same rights as every one else. This is
geographic discrimination and a fallacy because very often, as we found
in our survey, the “loyal riders” on the more central routes ARE PEOPLE
WHO GOT THERE BY TAKING ROUTE 4!!! This allegation of differential
loyalty is ridiculous, obscurantist, and discriminatory.
PS: we didn’t start any
of the “rumors”. We have video for all our quotations.
July
16, ’06: survey results:
DUDE/ RVTD/ SOU Route 4 Ridership Tabular
Summary With
Comments
Age
10-19
11
20-29
9
30-39
7
40-49
6
50-59
7
60+
5
Average rides per week
6.3
Average rides per month
32
less one
unusually high entry
29
Percent of people who answered “yes, I use Route
4” per
activity
(Don’t add up to 100% because could check more
than one)
Ride Route 4 to
Transfer from 4 to
Work
50%
46.5%
School
14%
16%
Medical/ Pharmacy
54%
42%
Grocery Store
21.5%
35%
Retail Shopping
30%
39.5%
Bank
23%
33%
Pay Bills
16%
28%
Other
43%
42%
Percent of riders who answered, “if Route 4 was
cancelled,
would you…”
Get another ride
17%
(3 unsolicited “taxi” entries)
Walk to destination
66%
Find a different destination
11%
Stop doing that activity
21%
Move somewhere else
8.5%
Would you ride Route 4 if it ran 3 times per day?
Would you ride Route 4 if it ran 2 days per week?
A number of riders spontaneously entered
identical, “No,
don’t cut, will ride every day” entries
and circled all days in violation of the conditions of the question.
Raw
Data “Don’t
Cut” = yes
“Don’t Cut” = no answer
3 per day
84%
94%
54%
2 per week
79%
92%
44%
Preferred Days
“Don’t
Cut” = yes
“Don’t Cut”
= no answer
Mon
62%
61%
Tues
51%
46%
Weds
53%
49%
Thrs
55%
52%
Fri
51%
46%
Sat
34%
24%
Sun
32%
21%
Do you have private transportation?
23% “yes”
77% “no”
“Do you think people who aren’t physically able to
ride a
city bus should have access to alternative public transportation?”
95.3%
“yes”
4.7% “no”
Route 4 “Other” uses
daycare/ yes/ daycare/ yes/ mental health/ to see
my sister/
visit shutins/ save lives/ yes/ see friends/ yes/ sk8 park/ my
grandma’s house/
kids/ visit friends/ home/ leisure/ park/ friends & park/ courts
&
p.o.s/ everywhere/ park/ getting cross town/ visit friends
Transfer from Route 4 “Other” uses
daycare/ Live in Ashland/ yes/ home/ Day care/
mental
health/ ya cause I live in Talent/ yes/ visit shutins/ home/ save life/
yes/
leisure/ park/ yes/ visit childrens White City/ yes go home/ movies
Comments
We need this bus!/ We need this rout because most
of the
riders doesn’t have any transportation for just going to a docters
appointment/
We really need this route!/ You already charge $2 what next/ I have
tendonitis—hard to walk/ Must continue!!!/ Keep Rt 4!!!/ Thanks for the
30 day
reprieve, we really believe you should pare the entire system, rather
than
allocating the hardship to the smallest number of people, we believe
Route 4
riders are just as "loyal and valuable customers as the rest of the
system
users, why are other riders "loyal customers," to quote General
Manager Peter Jacobsen, and Route 4 riders are not? It's a logical
contradiction./ Many, for example “I am psychotic neurotic & I have
a boy
named Sioux” or “30 rides per month for emergency care, psyche Rx
emergency
room”/ I work at hospital in kitchen/ We need this bus!/ I heart Route
4 please
don’t take it away I wouldn’t be able to go to the sk8 park during the
week!/
keep this bus the way it is PLEASE!/ it will suck horrably not having
this
Route!/ This is a crucial bus to all walks of life. DO NOT cut!/ keep
Route 4
going, people count on it/ keep Route 4 running please/ Route 4 is very
important to me + my family/ Let’s get with the program I’m from Eugene
My
what a Big difference./ Keep Route 4 going!/ I need route 4!/
Please
don’t take it away
call for names/ contact info
Methodology: We rode Route 4 in the morning,
midday, and
afternoon over three days in mid July; we asked every single rider who
got on
the bus to take the survey except when they got on on the last stop or
two
before the transit station. Most (probably 85%) took the survey; those
who did
not refused the survey themselves, i.e. we did not select individuals
to give
the survey to or not. We asked everyone; a few declined. Some had to
get off
the bus before the survey was completed; a number of individuals tried
to take
the survey and gave up. Considerations include perhaps that K-12 is out
of
session; the weather was probably average (hot, dry); we were in
mid-month
while State checks come out at the end of the month, etc, there are
probably
more valid known and unknown variables. Nonetheless, and
notwithstanding some
unexpected, unsolicited but significant alteration of certain question
options,
we got enough returns to make discussion meaningful and significant.
Most
questions were answered by over 45 riders or so.
Average age of those who answered was 31, 45
answered; ages
by decades were
11 answered
age 10-19
9 answered 20-29
7 answered
30-39
6 answered
40-49
7 answered
50-59
5 answered
60+
Average rides per week = 6.3, 53 answered
Average rides per month = 32, 51 people answered
Removing one remarkably high answer returns 29
rides per
month on average
(5 days per week = 20 days per month Route 4 is
currently in
operation)
56 people answered the question “where do you ride
the bus”
with the results
50% took Route 4 to work; 14.% answered “school,”
54%
answered “medical/ pharmacy,” 21% answered “grocery store,” 30 %
answered
“retail,” 23% answered “bank,” and 16% answered “pay bills.” 43% said
“other,”
with answers such as “daycare,” “mental health,” “visit friends” or
family, to
go to the park, “everywhere,” and “courts & p.o.s,” for example.
Asked “do you transfer to” any of these
destinations, 46.5%
said they transferred to work, 16% transferred to school, 42%
transferred to
“medical/ pharmacy,” 35% transferred to “grocery store,” 39.5%
transferred to
retail, 33% transferred to bank, 28% transferred to “pay bills,” and
42%
transfer to “other.”
When asked how they would replace Route 4, 17%
said they
would “find another ride,” with 3 of those spontaneously answering
“taxi”; 66%
said they would “walk to destination”; 11% said they would pursue that
activity
at another location; 21% said they would stop pursuing that activity,
and 8.5%
said they would stop doing that activity.
The question “if you could extend Route 4 by one
more stop”
caused some confusion, many answered with stops that already exist or
would be
duplicated with new stops; it seems like a simple question but many
answered
“Black Oak Medical Plaza” for example, which is already serviced by
Route 4.
Other answers included “higher up highland,” State Street medical/
senior/
veteran services, “Rogue Valley Manor (2),” “across the overpass,”
“Dairy
Queen,” “WinnCo,” “down to South Gate/ cut South Gate out of Route 10,
have 10
take 62 to Ashland,” or “yes.”
“Albertsons” got 5 unprompted entries, the most of any duplicate entry.
The question “Would you ride Route 4 if it ran 3
times per
day/ two days per week” provoked some avoidance as well: a number of
people
answered “yes/no” and then selected “all days” when asked for their
preferred
two days. Some answered “no” to the 3 per day/ 2 per week question and
then
circled all days as preferred. We broke them out three ways for
interpretation,
as answered with raw data, with the 14 people who spontaneously
answered no and
then indicated they would ride the bus all days included as “yes”
answers, and
then excluded as not answering the question properly, with the results
raw data:
84% answered “yes,
would use Route
4 if it ran 3 times per day
79% answered “yes,
would use Route
4 if it ran two days per week”
counting “no, would use all days” as “yes” answers:
94% said yes, would
use if ran 3
times per day
92% said yes, would
use if ran two
days per week
excluding “no, run it every day” answers as
incorrect:
54% said yes, would
use Route 4 if
it ran 3 times per day
44% said yes, would
use Route 4 if
it ran two days per week.
Preferred days with “no, run it all days” excluded
were
Mon 61%, Tues 45.5%, Weds 48.5%, Thurs 51.5%, Fri
45.5%, Sat
24%, Sun 21%
Preferred days with “no, run it all days” answers
as “yes”
to all days returned
Mon 62%, Tues 51%, Weds 53%, Thurs 55%, Fri 51%,
Sat 34%,
Sun 32%
23% of the 47 riders who answered the question
have private
transportation.
95% of 43 riders who answered the question said
people who
cannot ride the regular bus due to physical limitations should have
access to
alternative public transportation.
84% of riders answering the question said we could
contact
them.
July
10, 2006: Going out to ride the 4 some more, to start
taking surveys; several people have commented that the survey is really
just a
smokescreen invented by Buckley & RVTD to throw us off the trail
and get us
out of the public eye, but this logic is patently flawed in that
>we’re
actually going to be interacting with the very people we would be
organizing if
for example we were scheduling another protest< hello, we’ll be
interacting
with the people who will lose the service, who exactly should we talk
to
instead?
And
then, if
you’ve ever attempted to write a grant, you know that the first
question
funders ask is, “how do you quantify the need?” Well, when we come out
and say,
“Don’t cut Route 4, people need it,” and the funders say, “well, who
rides it?
Where are we going?” well, if we say, “uh, we don’t know, really, we
just think
some people want it,” the funders will say, “no, you don’t really know
anything
about this at all, you don’t even know if people will still ride it,
you
haven’t done the due diligence that proves you won’t just throw the
money away
again. Next!”
If
we’re
going to be making arguments about policy, we can argue from a more
solid
foundation if we actually have...information! Finally, if all the Route
4
riders really ARE just going to the movies, and that is not important,
then we
can work on the next real emergency and let Route 4 die a stifled,
unnoticed
death.
June
19, 2006: We are going out today to ride Route 4 for
what could be the last time! Join us
Accessible
Housing
Health
Care
Inclusion
more
later, under construction
updated
April 2004
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