Neighbors,
At the link below you can access a copy of the first deliverable for the
Wake County Transit Investment Strategy. It is called the Wake County
Transit Choices Report. At 66 MB it is too large to attach to an email.
I found it be richly detailed and very helpful. I hope you find it useful.
This document will be part of the community dialogue until March, with
opportunity for input and surveys throughout that period.
Please let me know if you have any problems accessing the document.
I will be happy to discuss the process and outcomes of our all-day work
session with Jarrett Walker on January 20. Please call or email.
Thank you,
Will
William A. Allen III
919-349-6566 Mobile
* 2015-1-14 Transit Choices Report FINAL.pdf (66.4 MB)
Download the attachment by
<https://kimley-horn.securevdr.com/d/s171086aca914f9d8> clicking here.
The report was jointly drafted by Jarrett Walker and Associates and Kimley
Horn.
The Wake County Transit Investment Strategy is a partnership that includes
Wake County, Triangle Transit, CAMPO, City of Raleigh, Town of Cary,
Research Triangle Foundation, NC State University, and Raleigh/Durham
Airport. These entities comprise the Transit Core Team (TCT).
The report steps back from detailed planning processes and begins with the
development of a strategy for identifying and allocating transit
investments. It is one step in a multi-step planning process.
Transit Choices Report Summary
History of Transit Planning
The report provides a detailed history of transit planning in Wake County
that includes previous transit planning reports, visioning exercises,
legislation and draft plans. In 2013, Wake County, CAMPO, Triangle Transit,
NC State University, Raleigh Durham Airport, City of Raleigh, Town of Cary
and the Research Triangle Foundation agreed to hire a consultant to review
previous planning efforts and provide an updated transit vision for our
community.
Current Status
The report notes the County is growing and changing quickly, and these
changes will likely lead to a higher demand for transit, and higher levels
of public interest in having a good transit system. The demographics and
density of the population impact the demand for transportation. The report
includes summaries of the following attributes and covers existing transit
service and usage.
* Maps illustrating existing transit service by route
* Data on existing service frequency
* Data on existing transit ridership, including mapping of highest
boarding and alighting locations
* Land use mapping including existing and anticipated land uses,
density, major activity centers, etc.
* Mapping of existing traffic volumes and capacity on key roadway
arterials
* County's current performance against several peer cities
A "Transit Toolbox" section highlights information on key types of transit
service that are typically applied in comparable regions in the US.
* Key defining features
* Performance expectations
* General situations in which each service type may be anticipated
to be successful
* How services link to shared values and desired outcomes
* Generalized costing
Transit Choices
There are two main goals to consider: ridership versus coverage and funding
infrastructure versus service.
The first goal poses the choice between focusing service investments on
areas where the built environment and customer base will drive high
ridership and spreading service investments to reach as many people as
possible. Given a fixed level of investment, a decision to spend more on one
type of service would result in less investment in the other.
The second goal poses the choice between investing resources into transit
infrastructure versus transit service. More infrastructure investments can
save future operating costs by increasing travel speeds, improving comfort,
and shaping development. Investing in more service can provide higher
quality (frequency) of service to more people and places. Again, investing
more in one option means less investment is available for the other option.
The Transit Advisory Committee and the public will engage in considering
these choices as the next phase of the process.
Expanded Choices Report
The Expanded Choices Report, available in April, will present transit
service scenarios that are specific solutions for the County we can consider
based on public outreach and consultation with the Transit Advisory
Committee, following the meeting in March.
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