Utah County might run non-UTA buses
6 'opportunities' seen to meet traffic challenges
An 11-month independent analysis of the county's transit needs and options has resulted in Transit Vision 2030, a long-term mobility strategy unveiled Thursday night during a meeting of the Mountainland Regional Planning Committee.
A task force, headed by Provo Mayor Lewis Billings, has identified six transit "opportunities" to meet challenges of growth and traffic in the county.
One of those includes taking over local bus service from UTA, a presence in Utah County since 1985.
The county is growing rapidly, Billings said, and the planned improvements to I-15 and a proposed new highway (Mountain View Corridor) likely won't be enough to keep up with the increased traffic.
"At some point, people are going to be pushed to consider (transit) alternatives," Billings said. "If we have real alternatives, I think people will consider giving them a try."
Current transit options in the county aren't enough and definitely won't be satisfactory in the next five to 15 years, he said.
Perceived problems with low ridership of buses in Utah County led UTA in recent years to restructure its routes by focusing them near Brigham Young University, Utah Valley State College and other high-traffic centers.
UTA reports that ridership has increased by about 85 percent since those changes were made, but Billings says that has also created something of a student shuttle corridor that doesn't meet the needs of most Utah County residents.
"Our feeling is there needs to be an evaluation of more local bus deployment so people feel it will work for them," he said.
Billings said he's impressed with bus service in Logan, which has its own transit district and has provided fare-free service since 1992. The Cache Valley Transit District was established in 2000 to extend that service to surrounding cities.
The two services are coordinated to provide walkable bus-stop access within three to five blocks of every home in Logan. The system is funded through Federal Transit Administration grants and a quarter-cent sales tax.
If the MPO supports a similar service in Utah County, local jurisdictions could take control of local bus services as soon as 2008. UTA would continue to operate commuter services in the county.
The plan calls for local bus services to be coordinated by the Mountainland Association of Governments, with all planning, operations and funding falling to the local jurisdictions.
The next step is to conduct a feasibility study, which could begin as soon as August.
There are no UTA representatives on the task force, which includes state Sens. John Valentine, R-Orem, and Curt Bramble, R-Provo; Reps. Jeff Alexander, R-Provo, and Becky Lockhart, R-Provo; Utah County commissioners Larry Ellertson, Steve White and Jerry Grover; Billings and Orem Mayor Jerry Washburn.
Billings said keeping UTA on the outside allowed the group to take an "independent look" at meeting Utah County's current and future transit needs.
Also identified as transit "opportunities" for Utah County:
- An interim commuter rail service between Provo and Salt Lake City using existing Union Pacific freight line.
- Funding authorized in SB8 to identify and acquire rights of way for future transportation corridors.
- An alternative diesel light rail service from Payson to Salt Lake City.
- Regional bus-rapid transit using I-15 HOV lanes.
- Local bus-rapid transit.
E-mail: jpage@desnews.com
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