Last month, Wayfinding examined TheBus鈥 worsening slump in ridership, the challenges that Honolulu鈥檚 public transit system faces and what might be done to turn those numbers around.
Turns out Civil Beat readers have a lot of thoughts on this. Plenty of you emailed with questions about service or suggestions on how to make things better. You offered so much quality feedback that I opted to reach out to the and go another round with its deputy director, Jon Nouchi.
This time, we discussed many of the issues you raised. Here are some highlights of our conversation last week:
The Rate Commission what might happen if the city raises the $2.75 single-ride bus fare to $3. Is DTS at all concerned that raising fares will only further decrease ridership?
鈥淲e鈥檙e always worried. We know every time there鈥檚 a fare increase, ridership dips,” Nouchi said. “In that sense, if we raise fares we鈥檙e definitely anticipating a further reduction in ridership. Generally in Honolulu we tend to rebound back pretty decently.”
Why are there so many issues tracking the buses on apps? Often approaching buses disappear from riders’ smart phones.
TheBus’ fleet uses a GPS-based automatic vehicle location system, or 鈥淎VL,鈥 to transmit where it鈥檚 at. It’s the same AVL used since the early 2000s, Nouchi said.
It鈥檚 fairly old, and it relies on the radio towers around the city to receive the buses’ location data. Plus, radio coverage is spotty in certain parts of the island, he added.
There鈥檚 only so much data that can go through those radio channels at once. The system pulls location data from each bus about every minute or 90 seconds.
On fast-moving streets or highways, that interval can make a big difference. When private software apps such as or pull that data, it can add another minute to the lag time, according to Nouchi.
鈥淵ou鈥檙e not getting the freshest data,鈥 he said.
It鈥檚 not as accurate as it could be, or as it would be if the data was sent directly from each bus via broadband internet. That can lead to issues tracking those buses and predicting when they’ll arrive at a stop.
The city is currently installing mobile routers on each bus for the system鈥檚 emerging Holo card-based electronic fare system, Nouchi said.
Eventually, DTS might use those routers to transmit more timely location data as well — so long as the move doesn鈥檛 affect the fare system, he added.
鈥淲e have been experimenting with that,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e want to make sure we can test out the fare system and implement that reliably before we pile on.鈥
But it鈥檒l also be costly to upgrade — it would be like buying a data plan for every bus in the fleet, he said.
When a user sees an approaching bus disappear on a transit app, it probably means that the bus already passed by, Nouchi said.
Conversely, the bus may have gotten so delayed at an earlier stop that it was removed from the queue, he said. In other words, it may have been predicted to arrive in the next couple of minutes, but there鈥檚 an accident or some other traffic incident that鈥檚 slowing it down, so it disappears.
DTS might hire a company that could improve arrival predictions. Making them more accurate would be 鈥渕oney well spent,鈥 he said.
Can鈥檛 we get a better app for TheBus that shows where the buses are in real time on a map, akin to the apps used by Uber and Lyft?
You can actually do that now using , Nouchi said. The app isn’t affiliated with the city, but like other similar apps its free service relies on the city’s transit data feeds.
By the time the full rail system starts running, DTS aims to have in place higher-frequency bus service, where it can scrap the timetables on certain routes altogether and instead just list how frequently a bus passes.
As for TheBus losing ridership to Uber and Lyft: 鈥淚 don鈥檛 see that as a bad thing. If we鈥檙e losing a rider to Uber or Lyft, then the commuter has a choice. I know a lot of people who do take Uber and Lyft to a place where they can get transit and then use transit to go the long haul. That鈥檚 ideal. That is the direction that we as a government agency are going.鈥
But are people really hailing an Uber or Lyft ride just to get to a bus stop?
鈥淭here are people that do that鈥 in the largely rural areas outside of town, Nouchi said.
Why not add Wi-Fi to each bus?
鈥淚鈥檓 not sure what Wi-Fi gets us鈥 considering TheBus鈥 average trip lengths and the 鈥渃rowded nature鈥 of the buses, Nouchi said.
But rail is going to have Wi-Fi, right?
鈥淩ail is going to have Wi-Fi. The longest trip people could take on that is 42 minutes,鈥 he said.
It鈥檚 much harder to maintain Wi-Fi in an environment where TheBus can go anywhere other than on a fixed route such as rail, Nouchi said.
Basically, the city would be buying a plan for a mobile data router for each bus and letting everyone use it — but it would be hard to have good coverage if you store the router in the front.
鈥淚 think we have other issues that we鈥檇 like to solve than provide wireless. I think for longer trips that would be an attractor,鈥 but the buses aren鈥檛 assigned to the same route each day, Nouchi said.
Can you install more bus shelters and improve the existing facilities at bus stops?
鈥淲e generally have a program to install more shelters each year. Shelters are a little bit tricky for us鈥 because often the ideal location is either not city property or doesn鈥檛 meet ADA standards. The bench can鈥檛 take up the whole shelter — it would need to offer space for someone who can鈥檛 use the bench, he said. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a lot of places where we don鈥檛 have sidewalks, and we do have bus stops, so I don鈥檛 know how we would do that.鈥
They look for the stops in certain neighborhoods where most people are boarding to determine where to install shelters, Nouchi said.
Are there ways to make people feel safer and more comfortable when riding, while still keeping the system just as available and accessible to the public?
That鈥檚 a challenge because the system has to be very careful before denying service.
鈥淚鈥檓 not ready to speak on it right at the moment, but we will be proceeding with some potential bills to make transit and its associated facilities a safer place,鈥 both via the Legislature and the Honolulu City Council, he said. The public can expect to see measures on that in the upcoming Legislative session as well as the City Council in the coming months, he added.
鈥淲e have been working a lot with our law enforcement officers and the prosecutor鈥檚 office to make sure that if you commit a crime that is interference with the operator of a public transit vehicle, that is actually a felony misdemeanor. It鈥檚 not a small deal for people,鈥 Nouchi added.
Right now you can鈥檛 bring luggage on board TheBus. Can the buses better accommodate bulky items, such as luggage or carts for shopping?
The rail line will allow for luggage, so TheBus will eventually have to change that, Nouchi said. Right now, carts can be brought on board as long as they鈥檙e small enough to fit under the seat or on a rider鈥檚 lap.
As work on rail proceeds, DTS is currently looking at bus designs with more space to carry items — but that would also mean less seating, Nouchi said.
When it comes to allowing luggage on buses even if they鈥檙e not all designed to accommodate more space, he said, 鈥淲e鈥檙e going to have to flip the switch at some time and people will have to kind of manage that.鈥
Any update on the proposed transit lane planned for King Street?
The city is still looking to create a special lane for TheBus along King sometime next year as part of .
鈥淲e want the public to have a good feel as to how they work and how they operate,鈥 Nouchi said. The idea is to eventually add more such lanes that would feed buses more swiftly to future rail stations.
鈥淭here鈥檚 no sense in us bringing a whole bunch of people to the rail stations only to have the buses get stuck approaching the rail station,鈥 he said.
The proposed King Street transit priority lane would be a first step — “an introduction to how transit lanes operate in the city,” Nouchi said.
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About the Author
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Marcel Honor茅 is a reporter for Civil Beat. You can email him at mhonore@civilbeat.org