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Transit agencies & Coronavirus


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#1 CNJRoss

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Posted 04 March 2020 - 07:37 AM

Progressive Railroading 3/3/20

APTA assists transit agencies with coronavirus prep plans

 

 

The American Public Transportation Association (APTA) on March 5 will host an educational webinar for transit agencies on the industry's response to the outbreak of COVID-19, known as the coronavirus.

 

SNIP

 

Transit agency executives, federal leaders and infectious disease specialists will discuss best practices for how to prepare a transit agency for a potential spread of the virus.

In addition, APTA will review its standard on developing a contagious virus response plan, and discuss Transportation Research Board publications on disease planning and response. 

 

SNIP 

 

APTA also posted a fact sheet of resources for public transit agencies to use to minimize the risk of the virus being spread to employees, riders and the general public.

 



#2 CNJRoss

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Posted 04 March 2020 - 07:17 PM

Mass Transit  Magazine, 3/4/20
 

More frequent cleaning, additional educational outreach and task forces among steps North American transit agencies are taking to fight spread of coronavirus

 

Transit agencies across North America are stepping up cleaning efforts and APTA will hold a free webinar on March 5 as the industry works to keep vehicles and property clean to limit the spread of the virus.

 

 

Public transportation providers across North America this week have outlined a series of precautions they are taking to help combat the spread of COVID-19, also known as the coronavirus. As of March 3, the United States had 60 cases in 12 states and Canada had 33 cases in three provinces. 

 

While the Centers for Disease Control outlines common sense precautions such as not touching your face, eyes and nose, washing your hands and using hand sanitizer, the close confines and high-touch surfaces found on mass transit systems could be problematic to limiting the spread of the virus.  .  .  .

 

SNIP

 

Many agencies have released their own plans to increase cleaning efforts to limit the potential spread of the virus.

 

More here.



#3 CNJRoss

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Posted 11 March 2020 - 08:09 AM

Reuters 3/6/20
 

FTA advises on transit cleaning, little guidance on system shutdowns due to virus

 

 

NEW YORK (Reuters) - The Federal Transit Administration (FTA) had little new advice to offer transit systems in the event they might have to shut down their commuter networks for the coronavirus outbreak in a conference call on Friday, but told operators they could find sanitation guidance on government websites.

 

In a conference call on Friday hosted by the U.S. Department of Transportation with more than 1,000 participants, K. Jane Williams, acting administrator of the Federal Transit Administration (FTA), said that while the agency “is carefully obviously monitoring the situation, we have not issued any directives or guidance on system shutdowns.”

 

SNIP

 

“FTA does not have specific vehicle cleaning guidelines,” she said.

 

On the call, an official with the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention encouraged transit agencies to work with local health departments and to clean “high-touch surfaces” once a day using products registered with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency for their effectiveness against viruses.

 

On its website, the FTA has directed transit agencies to a CDC webpage that offers interim guidance for businesses. here

 

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#4 KevinKorell

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Posted 14 March 2020 - 10:38 AM

Progressive Railroading, 3/13/20:

 


 

  Coronavirus update: Passenger-rail agencies prepare for service changes, amp up disinfection  

 

 

North American passenger-rail agencies continue to take precautions in response to the outbreak of COVID-19, a disease caused by the new coronavirus. 

 

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Kevin Korell


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#5 CNJRoss

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Posted 17 March 2020 - 06:56 AM

RT&S 3/14/20
 

Transit ridership drops significantly across the country amid coronavirus fears; some agencies cut service

 

 

With the coronavirus continuing to spread fear across the U.S., transit agencies are now starting to feel the effects of more people working from home and more people simply avoiding public gatherings.

 

SNIP

 

Some officials are suggesting raising fares to make up for the loss in revenue. If the money is not recovered, some infrastructure projects could be put on hold.

 

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#6 CNJRoss

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Posted 18 March 2020 - 11:02 AM

Progressive Railroading 3/18/20

 

APTA: Transit agencies, railroads need $12.9 billion in federal help to offset coronavirus costs
 

As Congress works on coronavirus response legislation, the American Public Transportation Association (APTA) is requesting $12.9 billion for public transit agencies and passenger railroads to offset their direct costs and revenue losses related to the outbreak.

 

"Public transportation organizations are taking extraordinary efforts to protect the health and safety of riders and employees while working tirelessly to maintain essential services. We want to ensure that the federal government includes aid to public transportation agencies to help offset the additional costs and lost revenue related to COVID-19," APTA officials said yesterday in a legislative alert to member agencies.

 

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#7 CNJRoss

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Posted 20 March 2020 - 12:32 PM

VHSR email 3/20/20

 

 

vhsr-logo-b_2.png

 

Due to the COVID-19 crisis, Congress is presently debating a potential $50-60 billion bailout for the airline industry as part of a larger economic package to protect our mass transportation systems.

 

Amtrak and our public transit agencies have also been severely impacted by this crisis and we need to make sure that when this is all over, everyone has reliable transportation back to work. 

 

Please take 30 seconds and ask your members of Congress to support the necessary funding to protect Amtrak and our public transit agencies during this crisis.

 

f17a01b9-206f-4494-96e8-6ab142114342.png

 

 

Thank you,

Danny Plaugher
Executive Director

 

P.S: Please forward this email on to others who might be interested in taking action! 

 

Note:  'Take Action' button works for addresses in all states; sends a message to the President; 2 Senators, and District Representtive.



#8 KevinKorell

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Posted 23 March 2020 - 08:34 PM

Progressive Railroading, 3/23/20:


 

  Coronavirus update: Passenger-rail agencies suspend fares, further revise schedules  

 

 

 

Sound Transit in Washington, Santa Clara Valley Transportation Authority in California and Metro Transit-St. Louis have suspended fare collection on their light-rail systems to help protect rail employees and riders from the spread of coronavirus.

 

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Kevin Korell


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#9 KevinKorell

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Posted 24 March 2020 - 01:52 PM

Connecticut Post, Bridgeport, CT, 3/24/20:


 

  Metro-North, other commuter lines seek $25 billion in coronavirus relief 

 

 

 

With ridership plummeting because of coronavirus restrictions, a coalition of the nation’s largest commuter systems — including Metro-North — is demanding $25 billion from the federal government to help make up losses.

 

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Kevin Korell


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#10 CNJRoss

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Posted 24 March 2020 - 02:53 PM

Metro Magazine, 3/23/20

 

Coalition of transit agencies demand at least $25B in federal aid

 

A coalition of U.S. transit agencies, including the Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA, Chicago Transit Authority (CTA), Dallas Area Rapid Transit (DART), Kings County Metro in Seattle, Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority (Metro), MARTA in Atlanta, NJ Transit, San Francisco Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART), SFMTA in San Francisco, and Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority issued a letter to Congressional leaders urgently requesting the federal relief package includes at least $25B of dedicated support for public transportation agencies.

A PDF of the letter is attached at the bottom.

Full text of the letter is available below:

 

The Honorable Mitch McConnell
Majority Leader
Unites States Senate
Washington, DC 20510

The Honorable Nancy Pelosi
Speaker
U.S. House of Representatives
Washington, DC 20515

The Honorable Charles E. Schumer
Minority Leader
United States Senate
Washington, D.C. 20510

The Honorable Kevin McCarthy
Minority Leader
U.S. House of Representatives
Washington, DC 20515

Dear Leader McConnell, Speaker Pelosi, Leader Schumer, and Leader McCarthy:

The COVID-19 pandemic is a national disaster and it requires a national solution. We are coming together to urgently request that the federal relief package includes at least $25 billion of dedicated support for public transportation agencies. Federal aid, utilizing federal formulas, must be directed to areas of the country that have had significant financial impacts and where essential workers rely most heavily on public transit.

 

This pandemic does not discriminate between Republicans and Democrats. No industry, company or organization is being spared from the devastating public health and economic consequences of this crisis.

 

The goal of the federal package is to stabilize the economy and establish a back stop that will propel the country forward. Public transit agencies are literally on the frontlines of that effort: We are helping the heroes most critical in this time of crisis – healthcare professionals, first responders, and grocery, utility and childcare workers – do their job. It’s a responsibility we take seriously – no matter the cost.

 

Now is the time for the federal government to match that commitment.

 

The looming financial catastrophe is clear. While emergency personnel need our infrastructure to do their jobs, overall ridership on our systems has plummeted every day – dropping as much as 90 percent in some cases. Combined with falling tax revenues and dramatically increased cleaning costs, this collapse of revenue has resulted in immediate and enormous funding gaps.

 

The collective losses, which early projections show are expected to be in the tens of billions of dollars, can never be recouped and have a compounding impact on our ability to borrow.

 

Congressional proposals, while appreciated, thus far are stop-gap measures. Public transit agencies are taking action to address the financial crisis we are all facing. Scaling back service isn’t enough to keep our operating budgets in the black. And allowing critical state-of-good-repair investments we’ve fought long and hard for to be gutted in favor of operational costs is a non-starter. We need comprehensive, permanent solutions that put public transportation first.

 

Transportation systems represented in this letter serve regions that combined make up 32 percent of the national gross domestic product. The economy in our major urban regions nationwide won’t be able to rebound from this crisis without us. In fact, we’ll be the shot in the arm needed to beat it – moving nearly 20 million Americans to jobs, school, shops and stores and revitalizing our local economies in the process.

 

Bottom line: Any federal relief package will not maximize value for the country’s economy without a robust, targeted investment in public transportation. This is a matter of national interest and core part of any national recovery. Congress must act swiftly to provide real relief in real time; the financial health of the country depends on it.

Sincerely,

Pat Foye
Chairman & Chief Executive Officer
Metropolitan Transportation Authority
New York, NY

Rob Gannon
General Manager
King County Metro
Seattle, WA

Jeffrey A. Parker
General Manager/CEO
MARTA
Atlanta, GA

Robert M. Powers
General Manager
San Francisco Bay Area Rapid Transit District (BART)
Oakland, CA

Gary Thomas
President/Executive Director
Dallas Area Rapid Transit
Dallas, TX

Dorval R. Carter, Jr.
President
Chicago Transit Authority
Chicago, IL

Kevin S. Corbett
President & CEO NJ TRANSIT
Newark, NJ

Jeffrey Tumlin
Director of Transportation
SFMTA
San Francisco, CA

Phillip A. Washington
CEO
Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority (Metro)
Los Angeles, CA

Paul J. Wiedefeld
General Manager & CEO
Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority

 

 






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