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  • Houston Landing

    Whitmire’s Metro emphasizes street repairs, microtransit. What does that mean for METRONext?

    By Akhil Ganesh,

    2024-05-28

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1jLmdj_0tT6Vf9800

    Metro is beginning to steer in a different direction under Mayor John Whitmire and his appointed chair of the transit agency, pulling away from a planned expansion of bus rapid transit approved by voters, and moving toward increased roadwork instead.

    “I’m here to let everyone know this is a new beginning. We’re not going to tolerate broken infrastructure, whether it’s our roads and streets or our drainage,” Whitmire said during the groundbreaking for a Metro project to repave all lanes of Westheimer from the 610 West Loop to downtown. “We’re going to fix Houston.”

    An increased focus on road repairs is just one part of the new direction of Metro. In addition to putting off the bus rapid transit expansion, the agency appears ready to scrap plans for a bikeshare program.

    When it comes to expansion of public transit, Whitmire and new Metro Board Chair Elizabeth Gonzalez Brock are placing their hopes in microtransit, such as expanded shuttle service and rideshare.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=3VmHwn_0tT6Vf9800
    Elizabeth Gonzalez Brock, Chair of METRO, speaks during a METRO press conference , Tuesday, May 7, 2024, in Houston. (Antranik Tavitian / Houston Landing)

    “Uber has set the standard for what transportation should look like in the future,” Brock said recently.

    Whitmire’s approach to the Metropolitan Transit Agency of Harris County echoes his moves on transportation projects in Houston, where he has paused multimodal street development and narrower designs in favor of preserving more lanes for traffic.

    The mayor has been vocal about Metro contributing more money for infrastructure, though it is unclear if that involves an increase in Metro’s General Mobility Fund.

    Metro already provides up to a quarter of its sales tax revenue to Houston, Harris County and other smaller cities in the transit agency’s service area. In fiscal 2023, the contribution was $214 million, or 20.8 percent of its sales tax revenue. Of that, $148 million went to the city of Houston.

    The fund shows Metro is equipped to handle some road repairs, but transportation and safety advocates say roads should not be the sole focus.

    Peter Eccles, director of policy and planning for the transit advocacy nonprofit LINK Houston, said focusing on projects that do not improve walkability or street crossings would be “a wasted opportunity.”

    METRONixed?

    The week before the Westheimer press conference, Metro took down the webpages for the University, Gulfton, and Inner Katy bus rapid transit projects. The trio of projects would have added 75 miles of BRT as part of the agency’s METRONext program. That program was at the center of a $3.5 billion bond election approved by 68 percent of voters in 2019.

    Brock points to Whitmire’s election last November, where he took just under 65 percent of the vote, as an endorsement of the mayor’s transportation plans. The mayor nominates – and City Council approves –  five members of Metro’s nine-member board.

    “The public authorized (the bond), they didn’t mandate it,” Brock said. “The public expects us to be very nimble and expects us to be responsible with taxpayer dollars.”

    Brock is reluctant to issue the voter-approved bonds for projects that Metro leaders see as questionable investments. If the agency does issue the bonds, she said the money would be used for public safety, infrastructure, and microtransit.

    Cazares agreed that microtransit has a role to play in Houston, but said it would not be a “silver bullet” to make the transit system better.

    “Public transportation is intended to move a large quantity of people. You are just not going to do that with microtransit,” he said. “You’re going to move a smaller amount of people in an area that is known for urban sprawl.”

    No more bikeshare?

    Metro interim president and CEO Tom Jasien remained noncommittal on a Metro bikeshare program, questioning whether such a service would be used for transit.

    “Is it really the role of Metro to get into what turns out to be more of a recreational use?” Jasien asked, adding, “The transit component is not as strong as we originally hoped it would be.”

    Last September, the Metro board authorized a contract with Quebec-based PBSC Urban Solutions to implement a bikeshare program this summer. Jasien said agency staff had been in contact with PBSC, but he was unaware of what those conversations were about. Follow-up questions about those talks were not answered.

    His comments echo Whitmire’s latest rhetoric on cycling in Houston.

    “I’m all for bikers,” Whitmire said. “Let’s do it on bike paths. It should not interfere with mobility.”

    Eccles said it was hard to distinguish between trips for recreation and transit, but over 60 percent of trips on Houston’s much-reduced BCycle system ended at a different station than where the trip started. That data suggests a majority of rides were for transit purposes, he said.

    However, Jasien said a good number of people ride personal bikes and get on Metro buses. Asked if that trend would be predictive of a successful bikeshare program, Jasien said that he did not think it worked that way.

    “It’s not useful to put a dock in a neighborhood in front of somebody’s house,” he said.

    Eccles said a bikeshare program would be useful to improve equitable access to transit, especially in first and last mile connections.

    “(People) are willing to bike two to three miles,” Eccles said. “That puts a whole lot more of our region in play with transit.”

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