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Regional Transit Authorities. Structure, Funding, What Works and What Doesn’t Work. General Comments. Many systems are city and county functions In many states, there are multiple models even within a single metropolitan area No one predominate method Pros and cons to all.
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Regional Transit Authorities Structure, Funding, What Works and What Doesn’t Work
General Comments • Many systems are city and county functions • In many states, there are multiple models even within a single metropolitan area • No one predominate method • Pros and cons to all
California Bay Area • Strong MPO oversight • Over 20 individual transit operators
Metropolitan Transportation Commission • Coordinates and plans major projects • 19 commissioners and 3 non voting from federal and state agencies • Controls flow of federal and state transportation funds
Bay Area Rapid Transit • 9 members elected by district • Sales tax and property tax
Golden Gate Bridge, Highway, and Transportation District • 19 members from 6 counties paid $50 per day • 50% of bus and ferry expenses from surplus bridge tolls
SamTrans • 9 members from county, cities, and public at large plus 1 transportation expert • 0.5% sales tax • Also administers Caltrain
Colorado Regional Transportation District • 15 member board elected by district • Sales tax of 0.6% increased to 1% for FasTracks construction • 3% discount for timely payment of sales tax revenue
Illinois Citilink • Mayor of each of the 3 jurisdictions appoint 1 member for each 100,000 or portion thereof • Voter approval of tax
Indiana CityBus • 7 members appointed by mayors and councils of Lafayette and West Lafayette • Taxing district that is larger than service area and includes suburban areas in Tippecanoe County
Massachusetts Worchester Regional Transit Authority • 14 member towns • 14 board members appointed by City Manager or Mayor of Worchester, Chair of Board of Selectman, or Town Manager of each town • Commonwealth provides large share of operating expense • Cities served pay assessment • Except MBTA, all operators and maintainers must be private employees
Michigan Metro Transit • Serves Kalamazoo and 5 surrounding towns, plus 2 colleges • 7 members appointed by Kalamazoo mayor confirmed by council • Kalamazoo – 3 year renewable millage
Capital Area Transportation Authority • 10 members appointed by member towns; MSU and County have non-voting representation • Combined with MSU system, which funds services • Renewable millage
Nebraska Metro Area Transit • 5 board members appointed by Omaha mayor and confirmed by council • Tax levy on all tangible and real personal property in the City of Omaha • Service contracts outside of Omaha and cannot use Omaha levy
New York Capital District Transportation Authority • 9 member board appointed by governor confirmed by Senate; 3 from Albany County and 2 each from 3 other counties • Gross receipts tax on oil and gas companies levied by NYS • Mortgage recording fee
North Carolina Charlotte Area Transit System • Metropolitan Transit Commission – City of Charlotte, Mecklenburg County, 6 towns, and NC Board of Transportation • City department, private operation • Sales tax
Ohio Southwest Ohio Regional Transit Authority • 3/10 of 1% of earnings tax collected by City of Cincinnati on everyone who lives and works in the city • 9 members appointed by Hamilton County Commissioners with 4 recommended by the Cincinnati City Council
Oregon Lane Transit District • .0064% ($6.40 per $1,000) of wage paid by an employer and the net earnings from self-employment • 7 members from specific districts appointed by governor confirmed by Senate
Cherriots – Salem-Keizer Transit • 7 elected by district • Property tax levy approved by voters
Pennsylvania • Strong state funding role and oversight • Funds collected at state level and distributed based on formula and performance; requires small local match • Act 44 Public Transportation Program
Capital Area Transit • 6 members; 2 each from Harrisburg, Cumberland County, and Dauphin County
Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority • 1 each from 5 counties, governor, Senate and House majority and minority leaders; total of 10 members
Texas Capital Metropolitan Transportation Authority • 7 members; 2 Austin City Council, 1 Travis County, 1 suburban mayoral representative, 1 from Williamson County, and 2 from MPO • 1% sales tax
Dallas Area Rapid Transit • 13 member cities • 15 members based on population; 8 from Dallas and 7 from suburban areas • 1% sales tax
Metropolitan Transit Authority of Harris County, Texas • 9 members: 5 from Houston, 2 from other 14 member cities; 2 from county • 1% sales tax • Has major role for arterial streets and freeways
Washington Spokane Transit Authority • 9 members who are elected officials for jurisdictions that make up the Public Transportation Benefit Area • Sales tax
Board Membership • Board membership does not always reflect level of service and/or population • Elected boards are exception, but elected representatives are not
Funding • Multiple funding sources exist • Funding can be unpredictable based on the economy • Renewal can be both a carrot and a stick
Wisconsin Issues • What should the Council consider?
MPO representation • Labor law, in particular, the “Mediation/Arbitration” law • Funding: • Cannot just replace current revenue, must allow for growth • Fares do not keep pace with cost growth • Continued state role in funding and oversight