If you haven’t noticed that public and private
sector resources aimed to support the poor are being removed, this should be a wake up call. The wealthy are pulling out all funding and support to increase their personal profits.
North American implementation of bus transit is horrible (I don’t know about the rest of the world) but it is appropriate scale for smaller towns and routes, so we need to find a way to make it work. It seems like it’s been in a death spiral for decades where the worse it gets, the worse the clientele gets and the lower the prices everyone expects.
Maybe it’s something that doesn’t work well as a private company.
Or maybe at least the terminals should be publicly operated by the city or town they’re in. Where I live, there’s a focus on “transit hubs” where you try to bring different transportation modes together in one place for synergy. That probably has to be publicly owned
I’m a huge train fan, and firmly believe we can and should serve half the US population with high speed rail. But there’s always that other half the population, with much lower density, that should also have an alternative to cars. Buses, including intercity, really ought to work at that scale
Bus transportation has been in decline for decades. It’s just a terrible form of travel.
But it’s better than nothing … esp when so many do not own vehicles and rail travel still operates in 20th century mode.
If you haven’t noticed that public and private sector resources aimed to support the poor are being removed, this should be a wake up call. The wealthy are pulling out all funding and support to increase their personal profits.
I agree, it is better than nothing.
The USA needs a windfall tax like yesterday.
Or the gov’t could just raise taxes and close loopholes for the super rich.
North American implementation of bus transit is horrible (I don’t know about the rest of the world) but it is appropriate scale for smaller towns and routes, so we need to find a way to make it work. It seems like it’s been in a death spiral for decades where the worse it gets, the worse the clientele gets and the lower the prices everyone expects.
Maybe it’s something that doesn’t work well as a private company.
Or maybe at least the terminals should be publicly operated by the city or town they’re in. Where I live, there’s a focus on “transit hubs” where you try to bring different transportation modes together in one place for synergy. That probably has to be publicly owned
I’m a huge train fan, and firmly believe we can and should serve half the US population with high speed rail. But there’s always that other half the population, with much lower density, that should also have an alternative to cars. Buses, including intercity, really ought to work at that scale
In Switzerland, bus travel (and all the rest of the public transit system, including trains, trams and boats) is fuckin fantastic, just so you know.
I’d rather ride a Greyhound than take a plane. Greyhound doesn’t make me take off my shoes and sit with my knees jammed into the seat in front of me
It’s the only affordable form of long distance travel, though (not counting hitchhiking)
It’s not in places that actually know how to do it.
And nowhere in the US knows how to do it.
I ride the buses in NYC frequently. They are fine.